1920s Turkish rug, newest in my collection.
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1920s Turkish rug, newest in my collection.
Il Balochistan non è meno della Palestina
Il Balochistan, è una vasta regione dell’Asia sud-occidentale, politicamente suddivisa tra Iran (ad ovest), Afghanistan (a nord) e Pakistan (ad est). È popolato dall’antica etnia dei Beluci (in inglese Baluch, o Baloch).Il Pakistan e l’Iran hanno perpetrato continuamente il genocidio dell’etnia Beluca (o Baluca) durante l’occupazione illegale del Belucistan rispettivamente nel 1928 e nel 1948.…
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A kinship between the Kurds and the Baluchi people, with women playing a crucial role
The Kurds and Baluchis have both been fighting for statehood for generations, while targeted by oppressive regimes.
Most Baluchis and Kurds are Muslim, but the so-called Islamic State of Iran overwhelmingly targets both minority groups. Iranian Kurds and Baluchis are working together to challenge the regime.
Two Years After the Murder of Jina (Mahsa) Amini, the Suppression of Nationalities in Iran Continues
Over in Pakistan, the government is conducting "forced disappearances" in Balochistan. Protests against this ethnic cleansing are led by women like Dr Mahrang Baloch.
Share postRobin Fleming The Baloch people, who number some ten million, have long been denied a state of their own. Divided between Iran, Pa
Racism of the Islamic Republic regime
Something that has been neglected in topics of protests in Iran is racism. It is often left out of discussions by those of us in or outside of Iran who weren't the direct victims of these antihuman crimes. There's a huge difference between human rights violations in central Persian cities and border non-Persian ones. Persians and other ethnic groups who live in central areas are the targets of enough antihuman acts by this regime that shows the terrorist face of them, just imagine how everything is ×100 worse in non-central areas. Here are some examples:
Arabs in the south: it is estimated that more than 2 million Arabs live in iran. This ethnic minority is severely oppressed and violated. The regime has been capturing and executing Arabs and Arab activists with no clear reason other than being criminal dictators themselves, like how they've been violating and killing Kurds and Balochs in the past 4 decades. Many Arab families have been forcefully moved and pushed to corners, literally in a geographic sense. Racism exist in the Iranian populations like any other country and nation in the world. But it is promoted and supported by the regime. Jina revolution has brought this issue to attention and social activists are doing anti racist activism now, something that wasn't addressed enough before.
Kurds in the west: people of Kurd never accepted the authority of this regime and fought their forces with all their might. Many Kurds citizens and Kurd activists have been the victims of government murder or long imprisonments simply for being freedom fighters. Also, kurds are denied many legal and social rights in Iran, for example not getting hired by governmental organizations, unless they sell their souls to the regime. Because of this many highly educated Kurds can't find a job and they're forced into doing unrelated or illegal labor that often gets them killed. To understand the severity of this issue I recommend you read this article "koolbars new slaves" thoroughly.
Balochs in the east: people of Baloch are victims of the IR regime's racism towards our neighbors, Afghans and Pakistanis. The regime refuses to provide ID papers for Balochs with the excuse that they might be Afghan and not Iranian. The Balochistan province is kept extremely underdeveloped by the regime to the point that many people don't have drinking water there. Kurd and Arab cities are also kept underdeveloped even though most of those areas are rich with natural resources that could easily be used for development. Since many Baloch people are denied id papers they have no legal rights and the regime often gets away with whatever human rights violations, like executions, r*pe, and torture, they do there. Other than the issue of legal rights, the islamic republic had been very successful in isolating Balochistan and keeping the rest of the world including the rest of Iran of knowing who Balochs are and what is really going on in that region. Jina revolution has also brought the issues in Balochistan to attention.
Aside from these intentional neglects, the language and culture of these ethnicities are under attack by the regime.
Other ethnic groups in Iran face discrimination to different degrees by IR. One thing that plays a great role in the level of racism by the regime is religion. Sunni Muslims are very hated and suppressed by the Islamic Republic here. Therefore kurd cities with a majority of Sunni Muslim population face a worse fate than the majority of shia cities. The regime also spreads a lot of hate towards sunni Muslims by accusing them of fanaticism and animosity which used to work on the old shia religious population. Kurds, Balochs, Arab and Turkmens in Iran have the majority sunni Muslim population. They are also the most repressed. Apart from sunni Muslims, Jewish, Zoroastrian, Baha'i and christian believers face discrimination in different ways by the regime.
The only way a war against big criminal bullies like the Islamic Republic can be won is by coming together and unite as people regardless of race, religion, sexuality and gender. Something that seemed not possible 2 years ago but Jîna revolution showed us that it is very much a possibility. We still have a lot of work to do but people took the first step in unity and solidarity. I recommend you read the article below twice to see the dept of what's going on in Iran and why the Islamic Republic overthrow and this revolution is vital to many marginalized people:
The recent protests have seen unprecedented solidarity between the country's diverse Persian and non-Persian communities
Balochi Traditional Clothing
Source: 1, 2
Iran. Iranian Baluchi women from Zehedan, 1968/1969.
Teresa Battesti.
Tribal and Village Rugs
The Definitive Guide to Design, Pattern and Motif
Peter F. Stone
Thames & Hudson , London 2004, 352 pages
euro 70,00*
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Drawing on the rich weaving traditions of the Near East and Central Asia, the clearly presented text is divided into six major regional and tribal groupings, covering Anatolian, Baluchi, Caucasian, Kurdish, Persian and Turkmen motifs. These are further subdivided into more precise attributions and motif types, examining the derivations and uses of medallions, field repeats and borders and the relationships between them. Pattern recognition has long been used to determine the origin and age of rugs, and this detailed analysis of designs and their component elements provides a vital key to accurate attribution. Striking diagrams illustrate the way in which individual motifs may be adapted and reinterpreted over time, their evolution crossing historical, cultural and geographic boundaries.
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