Abadan and Khorramshar: Iran and Iraq try to make out
2 December 2006
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Nevertheless, I'm happy my grandparents left. Really, there's very little to see in Abadan. There's a huge refinery which, at least at one time, was the largest in Asia. Built by the Brits, the nearby employee housing is completely out of place in Iran as, with no walls around the individual compounds and the different building style, the bungalows would seem more at home in a remote part of the UK or, indeed, in South Africa or Zimbabwe.
That's not to say Abadan is unpleasant. In fact, outside the city centre it's one of the greenest Iranian towns I've seen so far and the girls are very attractive, extremely cute. But every free wall space, and then some, is covered in paintings of martyrs from the Iran Iraq war.
I suppose that one needs an explanation. The Iran Iraq war, initiated by Iraq, for the record, was a defining period for modern Iran. Shi'a Muslims have a strong fascination if not admiration for suffering, originating with the martyred emam which defined the schism between Sunni and Shi'a islam (Wikipedia explanation) some 1200 years ago. Shi'as believe the religious leader should be a descendent of Mohammed, while Sunnis don't think so. In theory, that's all that separates the two, although over the years many more practical differences have cropped up, not in the least said fascination for martyrs. Some generations after the death of Mohammed, the ultimate battle between the two camps took place, which was hugely in favour of the supporters of the Caliph, the Sunnis. Emam Ali a descendent of Mohammed, was hugely outnumbered and was killed, heroically, of course. For Shi'as, that event was so important that, even now, they revere that man like close to a god. You can not stay in Iran without, every day, seeing multiple images of the man, everywhere. And what's worse, it's always a copy of the very same image, even though no one knows what he looked like.
So Ali's death, because of his beliefs, this martyrdom, became a central value for the Shi'a Muslim faith. In the Iran Iraq war, Khomeini decreed that any Iranian soldier killed in battle would die a martyr, meaning he'd go straight to paradise and be surrounded by hordes of virgins, who'd, strangely, remain a virgin, after every fuck (while, in fact, more recent scholars believe this view to be a mistranslation, these forty virgins actually being forty different types of grapes). Saddam Hussein (who incidentally, during the war, was surrounded by Iranian forces in the city of Khorramshar and quite miraculously escaped, adding to his rather mythical status in Iraq) at first figured he could make use of the rather chaotic situation in this country but didn't count on a martyr's appeal and gave up after some eight years.
Anyway, back to the martyr-covered walls. Abadan, so close to the Iraqi border, saw its fair share, and then some, of Iranian martyrs. Most, if not all Iranian cities have a particular place, in town, to remember their war-dead, on walls or posters (and the sections of the cemeteries where these martyrs are buried are generally the most elaborate parts and also the only sections where the graves can go 'up'). Abadan, meanwhile, has their martyrs on display everywhere.
And Khorramshar? Well, it's about the same as Abadan, but seems to have less martyrs on the walls.
We visited Khorramshar, and also the river separating Iran and Iraq with everyone from the house we were staying at. In true Iranian style, we fitted no less than NINE PEOPLE in one car.
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The homecoming tour 
- Back in the R.S.A. (19 December 2006)
- In Budapest (17 December 2006)
- On Hotel Reservations . com (16 December 2006)
- On yet another train (14 December 2006)
- So not funny (11 December 2006)
- On the train (10 December 2006)
- What Iran needs (8 December 2006)
- Final notes (7 December 2006)
- An assault of the senses (6 December 2006)
- 3 reasons not to visit Iran... now (5 December 2006)
- 10 reasons to visit Iran... now (4 December 2006)
- I've seen Iraq and it's not a pretty picture (3 December 2006)
- Abadan and Khorramshar: Iran and Iraq try to make out (2 December 2006)
- Bushehr (1 December 2006)
- Mashhad: taking the trophy home (30 November 2006)
- Sarakhs and Kalat: lesser wonders of Iran (29 November 2006)
- What one Khomeini buys you (26 November 2006)
- One year on (24 November 2006)
- A quicky on the Dutch elections (23 November 2006)
- Qom: shrine and hamburger (19 November 2006)
- Esfahan: half the world (18 November 2006)
- Kashan and Abyaneh: elegant houses (16 November 2006)
- Yazd: windtowers and firetemples (15 November 2006)
- Kerman and Mahan (12 November 2006)
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- From Turkey to Tehran (3 November 2006)
- Last day in Turkey (31 October 2006)
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- So many rocks (26 October 2006)
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- Running around (23 October 2006)
- Train trip to Istanbul (22 October 2006)
- Unstoppable (19 October 2006)
- A drink, a bite, ... (18 October 2006)
- The homecoming tour (17 October 2006)
Who's been sharing the love
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- Iran Iraq war pictures (Google)
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- Abadan Transport Abadan Iran (Google)
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After obtaining an M. Sc in maths, Babak Fakhamzadeh started with an office job at a major blue chip company but soon realised he'd do better on his own. Babak is a traveling web guru with a penchant for doing good and a love for visual and experimental art. Together with Ismail Farouk, he won the prestigious Highway Africa new media award in 2007 for