
Last week the World Tour visited Iran in order to witness, first hand, a country that has been at the center of controversy over the last 50 years. Just two weeks after the election that sparked riots around the nation (and 18 months after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited Columbia University), we embarked on an adventure would change our lives forever.
When we told our friends and co-workers that we were going to Iran, almost everyone was worried that we would end up dead or locked in prison. When I asked what we had to be afraid of the common response elicited images of anti-American terrorists, shooting guns and taking hostages. However, what we found instead was a progressive culture with a long-standing history of peace and tolerance, and a young generation that simply disagrees with their current regime.
The reality is that Iranians are some of the most friendly people I have encountered anywhere in the world. One of our future classmates, Ali Reza Sadeghian ’11, is joining us directly from Tehran and offered to be our host for a week. We visited Tehran, Isfahan, Yazd and Shiraz and were consistently asked by Iranian students to deliver a message to our friends back home: 1) Don’t believe everything you see on television, 2) Don’t judge all Iranians based on the political rhetoric of our leaders, and 3) “There is nothing to fear here in Iran, you are always welcome to visit.”
The political landscape is yet to be determined, but with a young population of 70 million people, Iran will begin to play an even larger role in global economics.
Photo courtesy of John Shoaf ’10
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