Amos Chapple is
a travel photographer who made the following pictures over the course
of three visits to the Islamic Republic of Iran between December 2011
and January 2013. The New Zealand freelancer said he "was amazed by the
difference in western perceptions of the country, and what I saw on the
ground... I think because access for journalists is so difficult, people
have a skewed image of what Iran is -- the regime actually want to
portray the country as a cauldron of anti-western sentiment so they
syndicate news footage of chanting nutcases which is happily picked up
by overseas networks. For ordinary Iranians though, the government is a
constant embarrassment. In the time I spent there I never received
anything but goodwill and decency, which stands in clear contrast to my
experience in other middle eastern countries. I met an American special
forces soldier in Kyrgyzstan last year who said when it comes to the
Middle East, America has the wrong friends and the wrong enemies." Below
is a selection of Chapple's recent photographs of Iran, captions
provided by the photographer.
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Palangan
Village, in the mountains near the Iraq border. Palangan, illustrative
of many of the country's rural settlements, has benefited handsomely
from government support. Many villagers are employed in a nearby fish
farm, or are paid members of the Basij, whose remit includes prevention
of "westoxification", and the preservation of everything the 1979
Islamic revolution and its leader the Ayatollah Khomeini stood for,
including strict rules on female clothing and male/female
interaction. (© Amos Chapple)
A worker
inside Vakil Mosque, Shiraz. The mosque now serves as a tourist
attraction but sees only a trickle of visitors. Although tourism is on
the increase, western tourists still make up only 10% of the total. One
tourist guide said westerners are scared away by the bloodcurdling
rhetoric of a government which is completely out of touch with ordinary
Iranians. (© Amos Chapple)
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At the
Sa'adabad Palace complex in northern Tehran, Islamic revolutionaries
sawed a statue of the deposed Shah in half. Today schoolchildren are
taken on group visits past the boots and into the palace to see the
decadence of the former Shah's living quarters.(© Amos Chapple)
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Women in
the hills above Tehran at dusk. Concealing clothing in the Islamic
Republic, including head coverings, is mandatory for women, but the
exact definition of "modest" is flexible, leading to a tug of war
between young females and the authorities each spring. Outside metro
stations female police can be seen regularly checking the passers by. If
a woman's dress is considered "immodest" she is arrested and taken into
custody. In 2010 a senior cleric in Tehran
blamed the frequency of earthquakes in Iran on women who "lead young men astray" with their revealing clothing. (© Amos Chapple)
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A shepherd leads his flock out to pasture in the mountains on the Iran/Iraq border. (© Amos Chapple)
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View of central Tehran from inside a minaret in Sepahsalar Mosque. (© Amos Chapple)
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The
Mausoleum of Ayatollah Khomeini in Tehran. Work on the unfinished
building has dragged over 23 years. With growing economic chaos in the
country, its completion is still nowhere in sight. (© Amos Chapple)
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A young
worker walks through the light of a stained glass window in the Tehran
Bazaar. Under Khomeini Iranians were actively encouraged to produce
large families. By 2009 nearly 70% of all Iranians were under 30, but
according to some reports, the country is the least religious in the
Middle East. Instead of the "armies for Islam" Khomeini had called for,
the youthful population is now seen as the biggest threat to the deeply
unpopular regime. (© Amos Chapple)
#
Detail of
Persepolis, the seat of the Ancient Persian empire. The Arab conquest
of Persia led to a an Islamification of Iran but Farsi, the Iranian
language, has remained alive. The 11th century poet Ferdowsi, described
as "Iran's Homer", wrote an epic in Farsi which was carefully crafted
with minimal Arabic influence. The "Book of Kings" has been credited
with helping preserve the Farsi language - one of the world's oldest.
The Book of Kings ends with the Arab invasion, depicted as a disaster
for Persia. (© Amos Chapple)
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Two young twins on the Tehran Metro. (© Amos Chapple)
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In
Tehran, a collection of modern art valued at $2.5 billion is held by the
Museum of Contemporary Art. In a little-publicized exhibition in 2011
the works, including pieces by Warhol (pictured), Pollock, Munch,
Hockney and Rothko were
put on display for
the first time since 1979 when the owner of the art, Queen Farah
Pahlavi was forced to flee Iran with her husband, the late Shah of
Iran.(© Amos Chapple)
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Detail of
Persepolis. After the Islamic Revolution, hardline clerics called for
the destruction of the site, but official unease prevailed. "They
realized this would unite the people against them," says an English
teacher named Ali,
quoted in National Geographic .(© Amos Chapple)
#
A mural
painted on the wall of the former American embassy in Tehran. Murals
such as this are at odds with statistics showing that, despite American
sanctions, and the American-led coup against a elected and popular prime
minister, more Iranians feel positively about America than do Turks or
Indians. (© Amos Chapple)
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A Kurdish
man settles in for a night of guarding some roadworking machinery in
the mountains near the Iran/Iraq border. The border is rife with
smugglers who carry alcohol from Iraq (where alcohol is legal) into the
villages on the Iranian side. From there it is transported by vehicle to
the cities. In Tehran a can of beer on the black market fetches around
$10 USD. (© Amos Chapple)
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Two
soldiers being attacked inside the Tehran metro after an argument. The
soldier was punched in the head at least four times by an angry crowd of
mostly well-dressed young men. Both soldiers were forced to leave the
metro at the next station. (
Editor's note: Chapple, not fluent in Farsi, was unable to determine the exact cause of the scuffle. ) (© Amos Chapple)
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Azadi
("Freedom") Tower, the gateway to Tehran designed in 1966 by a then 24
year old Hossein Amanat. As a practicing Bahai'i Hossein was forced to
flee Iran after the Islamist government labeled followers of the
religion "unprotected infidels". He now lives in Canada.(© Amos
Chapple)
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A man in
southern Tehran, the working class region of the city. In the past 14
months, tightened sanctions have nearly halved the value of Iran's
currency and fueled soaring inflation (
source ).
Life is becoming drastically difficult for ordinary Iranians but many
feel powerless to change the situation. Said one Tehrani "we're not
naive like the Arabs to think a violent uprising will magically fix
everything. We've had our revolution... and things only got worse." (©
Amos Chapple)
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A
commemorative plate of the former Shah of Iran in an antique store in
Shiraz. The Shah was given an Authoritarian hold on power thanks to an
MI6 and CIA-backed coup in 1953 which deposed Prime Minister Mohammad
Mosaddegh and cost the lives of several hundreds of Iranian citizens.
"Operation Ajax" was actioned after Mosaddegh nationalized the petroleum
industry of Iran, thus shutting out British dominance of an industry
they had controlled since 1913. That Mosaddeqh had been a
democratically-elected leader, with wide popular support fueled
resentment at the Shah, who many saw as a brutal puppet for the west.
The anger at western intervention stoked strong initial support for the
virulently anti-western Ayatollah Khomeini. (© Amos Chapple)
#
Two
shepherds lead Palangan's flock of communally-owned sheep out to
pasture. The government's spending in some rural regions has bought them
a network of loyal followers who can be scrambled at any time to crush
trouble in the urban centers. Rural
Basij were
used as a part of the crackdown in 2009 which resulted in the deaths of
seven anti-government protestors. (© Amos Chapple)
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A group
of friends in the hills above Tehran. Many (every single one I met)
young Iranians feel deeply embarrassed by their government, and the way
the nation is perceived abroad. Zac Clayton, a British cyclist who will
finish a round-the-world cycle on March 23 described Iran as having the
kindest people of any country he cycled through. "I found most Iranians
-- particularly the younger generation -- to be very aware of the world
around them... with a burning desire for the freedoms they feel they are
being denied by an out of touch, ultra-conservative religious
elite." (© Amos Chapple)
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