June 10 Marks the World Handicrafts Day

June 10 is celebrated as World Handicraft Day worldwide. Iranian artists have used the occasion to draw international attention to Iran’s unique art forms, specially the Persian rug. But many believe more needs to be done to introduce Iran’s handicraft to the rest of the world.

The World Handicrafts Council was established by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and 90 countries have already joined it.

The World Crafts Council (WCC), affiliated to UNESCO, is a non-profit, non-governmental organization founded in 1964 to promote fellowship and foster economic development through income-generating craft-related activities. WCC offers encouragement, help and advice to craftsmen across the world. It is organized into five regions: Africa, Asia Pacific, Europe, Latin America and North America. The members of the WCC have marking the World Handicrafts Day (June 10) annually.

Iran is home to one of the richest art heritages and handicrafts in world history and distinguished in many disciplines, including architecture, painting, weaving, pottery, calligraphy, metalworking and stone masonry.

Persians were among the first to use mathematics, geometry, and astronomy in architecture and also have extraordinary skills in making massive domes which can be seen frequently in the structure of bazaars and mosques. Iran, besides being home to a large number of art houses and galleries, also holds one of the largest and valuable jewel collections in the world.

Persian Carpet

The art of carpet weaving in Iran dates backs to 2,500 years and is rooted in the culture and customs of its people and their instinctive feelings. Weavers mix elegant patterns with a myriad of colors.

The Iranian carpet is similar to the Persian garden: full of florae, birds and beasts. The colors are usually extracted from wild flowers, and are rich in colors such as burgundy, navy blue and accents of ivory.

The proto-fabric is often washed in tea to soften the texture, giving it a unique quality. Depending on where the rug is made, patterns and designs vary.

Some rugs such as Gabbeh, and Kilim have variations in their textures and number of knots as well. Out of about 2 million Iranians involved in the trade, 1.2 million are weavers who produce the largest amount of hand-woven carpets in the world.

 

 

 

Painting

 

Oriental historian Basil Gray believes “Iran has offered a particularly unique art to the world which is excellent in its kind”.

Caves in Iran’s Lorestan province exhibit painted imagery of animals and hunting scenes. Those in Fars province and Sialk are at least 5,000 years old.

Painting in Iran is thought to have reached a peak during the Tamerlane era when outstanding masters such as Kamaleddin Behzad gave birth to a new style of painting.

Qajarid paintings, for instance, are a combination of European influences and Safavid miniature schools of painting such as those introduced by Reza Abbasi.

Masters such as Kamal-ol-Molk further pushed forward the European influence in Iran. It was during the Qajar era when “Teahouse painting” emerged.

Subjects of this style were often religious and nationalist in nature depicting scenes from Shiite history and literary epics like Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh.

Miniature

A Persian miniature is a richly detailed miniature painting which depicts religious or mythological themes from the region of the Middle East now known as Iran. The art of miniature painting in Persia flourished from the 13th through the 16th centuries, and continues to this day, with several contemporary artists producing notable Persian miniatures. These delicate, lush paintings are typically visually stunning, with a level of detail which can only be achieved with a very fine hand and an extremely small brush.

Persian miniature is a small painting, whether a book illustration or a separate work of art intended to be kept in an album of such works. The techniques are broadly comparable to the Western and Byzantine traditions of miniatures in illuminated manuscripts, which probably had an influence on the origins of the Persian tradition.

Although there is an equally well-established Persian tradition of wall painting, the survival rate and state of preservation of miniatures is better, and miniatures are much the best-known form of Persian painting in the West.

Several features about Persian miniatures stand out. The first is the size and level of detail; many of these paintings are quite small, but they feature rich, complex scenes which can occupy a viewer for hours. Classically, a Persian miniature also features accents in gold and silver leaf, along with a very vivid array of colors. The perspective in a Persian miniature also tends to be very intriguing, with elements overlaid on each other in ways which sometimes feel awkward to people who are accustomed to the look and feel of Western art.

Pottery and Ceramics

Prominent archeologist Roman Ghirshman said, “The taste and talent of these people [Iranians] can be seen through the designs of their earthenware.”

Of the thousands of archeological sites and historical ruins of Iran, almost every one of them can be found to have been filled, at some point, with earthenware of exceptional quality.

Thousands of unique vessels alone were found in Sialk and Jiroft sites.

The occupation of the potter (kouzehgar) has a special place in Persian literature.

Calligraphy

Persian calligraphy has several styles. The style initiated by Darvish was emulated by his contemporaries–Mirza Hassan Isfahani, Mirza Kouchek Isfahani and Mohammad Ali Shirazi.

After his death, the Shekasteh style fell into stagnation until it was revived in the 1970s.

Says writer Will Durant: “Ancient Iranians, with an alphabet of 36 letters, used skins and pen to write instead of earthen tablets.”

Such was the creativity spent on the art of writing. The significance of the art of calligraphy in works of pottery, metalwork and historical buildings is such that they are considered deficient without the calligraphic adorning.

Illuminations, especially in the Qur’an and works such as Shahnameh, Divan-e Hafez, Golestan and Boustan, are recognized as highly invaluable because of their delicate calligraphy alone.

Vast quantities of these are scattered and preserved in museums and private collections worldwide such as the Hermitage Museum of St. Petersburg and Washington’s Freer Gallery of Art among many others.

Tilework

Tilework is a unique feature of the blue mosques of Isfahan. In the old days, Kashan (kash + an literally means “land of tiles”) and Tabriz were famous centers of Iranian mosaic and tile industry in the past.

Since centuries, Iranian art has developed particular patterns to decorate Iranian crafts. These motifs can be:

– Inspired by ancestral nomad tribes (such as geometrical motifs used in kilims or gabbehs).

– Islam influenced, with an advanced geometrical research.

– Oriental based, also found in India or Pakistan.

Khatamkari

Delicate and meticulous marquetry has been produced since the Safavid period. In fact, khatam was so popular in the court that princes learned this technique alongside music and painting.

Khatam means incrustation and Khatamkari refers to incrustation work. This craft consists in the production of incrustation patterns (generally star shaped) with thin sticks of wood (ebony, teak, zizyphus, orange, rose), brass (for golden parts) and camel bones (white parts).

Ivory, gold or silver can also be used for collection objects. Sticks are assembled in triangular beams, themselves assembled and glued in a strict order to create a cylinder 70 cm in diameter, whose cross-section is the main motif: a six-branch star included in a hexagon.

These cylinders are cut into shorter cylinders, and then compressed and dried between two wooden plates, before being sliced for the last time, in 1 mm wide trenches.
These sections are ready to be plated and glued on the object to be decorated, before lacquer finishing. The trench can also be softened through heating in order to wrap around objects.

Many objects can be decorated in this fashion, such as jewelry/decorative boxes, chessboards, pipes, desks, frames or some musical instruments.

Khatam can also be used in Persian miniatures, making it a more attractive work of art.

Based on techniques imported from China and improved by Persian know-how, this craft has existed for more than 700 years and is still practiced in Shiraz and Isfahan.

Minakari

Enamel working and decorating metals with colorful and baked coats are one of the distinguished artwork in Isfahan.

Although this course is of abundant use industrially for producing metal and hygienic dishes, it has been paid high attention by painters, goldsmiths and metal engravers since a long time.

Worldwide, it is categorized as follows:

1- Enamel painting
2- Charkhaneh or chess-like enamel
3- Cavity enamel.

Enamel painting is practiced in Isfahan and specimens are kept in the museums of Iran and abroad, indicting that Iranian artists have been interested in this art and used it in their metalwork ever since the rule of Achaemenian and Sassanid dynasties.

Since enamels are delicate, we do not have many of them left from ancient times. Some documents indicate that throughout the Islamic civilization of and during the Seljuk, Safavid and Zand dynasties, there have been outstanding enameled dishes and materials.

Most of the enameled dishes related to the past belong to the Qajar dynasty during 1810–90.

Bangles, boxes, water-pipe heads, vases and golden dishes with beautiful paintings in blue and green colors remain from that time. This art stagnated for 50 years due to World War I and the social revolution.

However, this art was fostered in terms of quantity and quality by Master Shokrollah Saniezadeh, the outstanding painter of Isfahan, for 40 years.

Since 1992, this art has begun to thrive after many distinguished artists began working in this field.

Ghalamkar

Ghalamkar (Qalamkaar, also qalamkar, kalamkar) fabric is a type of Textile printing, patterned Iranian Fabric. The fabric is printed using patterned wooden stamps. It is also known as Kalamkari in India which basicaly is a type of hand-painted or block-printed cotton textile.

Termeh

Termeh is a handwoven cloth of Iran, primarily produced in the Yazd province.

Weaving Termeh requires a good wool with tall fibers. Termeh is woven by an expert with the assistance of a worker called “Goushvareh-kesh”. Weaving Termeh is a sensitive, careful, and time-consuming process; a good weaver can produce only 25 to 30 centimeters in a day. The background colors which are used in Termeh are jujube red, light red, green, orange and black. Termeh has been admired throughout history: Greek historians commented on the beauty of Persian weavings in the Achaemenian (532 B.C.), Ashkani (222 B.C.) and Sasanidae (226-641 A.D.) periods and the famous Chinese tourist Hoang Tesang admired Termeh.

After Islam’s arrival in Iran, the Persian weaving arts were greatly developed, especially during the Safavie period (1502-1736 A.D.), during which time Zarbaf and Termeh weaving techniques were both significantly refined. Due to the difficulty of producing Termeh and the advent of mechanized weaving, few factories remain in Iran that produce traditionally woven Termeh. Rezaei Termeh is the most famous of the remaining factories.

Kilim

Kilims are flat tapestry-woven carpets or rugs produced from the Balkans to Pakistan. Kilims can be purely decorative or can function as prayer rugs. Recently made kilims are popular floor-coverings in Western households.

Kilims are produced by tightly interweaving the warp and weft strands of the weave to produce a flat surface with no pile. Kilim weaves are tapestry weaves, technically weft-faced plain weaves, that is, the horizontal weft strands are pulled tightly downward so that they hide the vertical warp strands.

When the end of a color boundary is reached, the weft yarn is wound back from the boundary point. Thus, if the boundary of a field is a straight vertical line, a vertical slit forms between the two different color areas where they meet. For this reason, most kilims can be classed as “slit woven” textiles. The slits are beloved by collectors, as they produce very sharp-etched designs, emphasizing the geometry of the weave. Weaving strategies for avoiding slit formation, such as interlocking, produce a more blurred design image.

The weft strands, which carry the visible design and color, are almost always wool, whereas the hidden warp strands can be either wool or cotton. The warp strands are only visible at the ends, where they emerge as the fringe. This fringe is usually tied in bunches, to ensure against loosening or unraveling of the weave.

 

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Iran’s First Mud-Hut Hotel
Iran’s first hut hotel was recently opened for tourists in the city of Qal’e Ganj in southern Kerman province, southeast Iran. The hotel can host up to 60 guests in its 31 huts. All goods, equipment and handicrafts used in the huts are produced by local inhabitants and craftspeople. The project was undertaken by the charities Iran Mostazafan and Janbazan (foundations for the oppressed and disabled).

Visitors now have the chance to experience traditional Iranian desert dwellings, but without missing out on the luxuries of a modern hotel.

 

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Sobatan’s Alpine Valleys
Sobatan is a beautiful region located near Neor Lake in Iran’s northern province of Ardebil. Its beauty and peace attract many local visitors and foreign tourists each year, as its cool climate offers an escape from the summer heat of the plains. The region is also renowned for its livestock farming, producing some of Iran’s best quality meats and dairy products.

 

 

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Qeshm Geopark to Become Tourist Destination


The Director of Qeshm Island Geopark announced that the park will be added to the list of global Geoparks when it is registered by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

Hamid Reza Mohsenpour made the announcement while talking to reporters on Saturday June 11. Recorded as the only Geopark in the Middle East, the Qeshm Geopark has capacities which will turn it into an Iranian tourism brand, the official said.

The 7th International UNESCO Conference on Global Geoparks, which is to be held in Britain in September, 2016, will discuss the issue of Qeshm Island Geopark, the official said.

Two inspectors from the Global Geoparks Network will travel to Iran about two months before the Conference to compile a final review of the situation in this southern Iranian island. After discussion at the UNESCO meeting, the green card will be awarded to Qeshm, Mohsenpour noted.

Located in the strategic region of the Perisan Gulf in south of Iran, Qeshm Island Geopark holds a special position.

 

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Iran, Switzerland Opt for Broadening Mutual Cooperation
TEHRAN (FNA)- Senior Iranian and Swiss officials in a meeting in Bern on Tuesday underlined the need for the further expansion of relations between the two countries.

During the meeting in Switzerland’s capital today, Deputy Head of Iran’s Trade Promotion Organization Sadeq Ziayee Bigdeli and Director General of International Cooperation from Swiss Ministry of Economy Ms. Julia Levi explored avenues for reinvigorating and bolstering of bilateral ties.

The two sides reviewed the latest status of economic ties and the projects available for joint venture investment in Iran.

Ziayee Bigdeli and Levi exchanged views on Iran’s possible membership in the World Trade Organization and the convention on intellectual property rights.

Bigdeli pointed to the improved economic indices in Iran and said Iran would be an important market for Swiss companies to have access to 80 million population market of Iran and the several hundred million markets of regional countries.

Levi, for her part, said that the Swiss government welcomes implementation of Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

She expressed pleasure with resumption of banking ties between the two countries to cover trade interactions and declared her country’s readiness to support Iran to join WTO and the convention on intellectual property rights as well.

Regular consultations on economic ties between Iran and Switzerland was initiated upon a roadmap drawn by Swiss president during his visit to Iran in February 2016.

In relevant remarks in late February, Swiss President Johann Schneider-Ammann said his country supports Iran’s membership at key international economic and trade organizations.

“Iran should join the multilateral economic organizations to develop and grow. We support Iran’s membership bid,” Schneider-Ammann said in a meeting at Tehran’s Chamber of Commerce.

Noting that he is accompanied with representatives of 40 Swiss companies, Schneider-Ammann asked his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani to bring 400 Iranian traders to Bern in his future visit, given the fact that Iran has a bigger population than Switzerland.

He referred to the current trade ties, and said, “The removal of sanctions will pave the way for Iran’s economic development. Some 140 trade delegations from different countries have visited Iran before and after the nuclear deal to find market and trade opportunities.”

Schneider-Ammann said the two sides could now cooperate in various fields, such as industry, tourism, medicine, and water resources.

“In addition to the trade delegation, a scientific and research group is accompanying me to cement ties with their Iranian partners,” he noted.

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Halal tourism: a growing trend for Muslim travellers
Hotels are the choice places to stay for those travelling to different countries. Some Muslims may not be bothered by seeing beer stocked in their hotel room’s fridge or that there may or may not be separate swimming pools for men and women. However, for others, it is a concern that they must face when booking a room which is why a new movement has emerged in halal tourism.


Halal, which refers to Islamic rules that deem what is permissible and what is not, is a term that has just recently become associated with tourism.

Earlier this month, the second international halal tourism conference was held in Konya, Turkey. In December 2015, the Islamic Conference of Tourism Ministers announced Konya to be the capital of Islamic tourism for 2016.

Halal tourism is a concept developed due to the high demands among Muslim tourists travelling for business or leisure that need to adhere to the requirements of halal. This includes an assortment of things, such as hotels serving halal-only food and no alcohol, private beaches and swimming pools for women, conservative uniforms for the working staff, and for rooms to be equipped probably with what Muslims need in order to perform their daily prayers.

Although the requirements are not that complicated, there is a significant shortage in halal-friendly hotels in almost all touristic destinations, including in the Middle East and Muslim countries.

Turkey’s minister of culture and tourism Mahir Ünal officially opened the world’s biggest international halal tourism conference in Konya. The two-day conference was titled “Developing Halal Tourism Industries” with the aim of shaping the future of a sector currently worth $150bn.

The event featured a number of high profile guests from across the globe, including Bandar Fahad Al-Fehaid, a delegate from the Arab Tourism Organisation of the Arab League, Irfan Onal, the director general of Turkey’s Ministry of Tourism, Tahir Akyurek, the mayor of Konya, and Muammer Erol, the governor of Konya.


Hundreds of delegates from over 30 countries with over 110 buyers attended the conference, including the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Croatia, Singapore, UK, USA, Malaysia, Indonesia, South Africa, Kuwait, and Qatar. This is in addition to the attendance of tourism boards, travel agencies, tour operators, and hotels and airlines that attended the opening day of the conference, which brought together some of the world’s leading names in the travel industry.
The opening day featured a number of keynote speeches on topics such as “Technology and its benefits to halal tourism” and “Muslim traveller’s needs”, along with panel discussions and workshops.

At the conference, Onal said: “We are delighted to host this conference on this historic day. As a minister of tourism, I will continue to support this kind of tourism and our aim as a tourism destination is targeting 50 million tourists into the country. We would like to thank the delegates who have come to this event and have shown how we can all grow together.”

Al-Fehaid said: “We are delighted to be part of a global conference and representing the Middle East. An event like this is very important and shows how we can unite the world through tourism.”
Alongside the conference, there is also a three-day exhibition featuring businesses from across the world.

Onal told the audience at the conference: “Our target is to reach 15 million Muslims by 2020. Our tourism has been greatly affected by terrorism. We lost 12% or our revenue. We are working hard to make people feel safe again and we want to announce that Turkey is a safe country so we can have all tourists return. We want to promote new destinations like Konya, Azmier, and the Turkish Riviera, and introduce new types of tourism. One of them is the halal tourism industry. Now we have over 40 hotels in Turkey, and in the government we are dedicating three different ministries working together to reach more than 100 hotels across the country in 2017. Turkey, being a cultural centre in the heart of Europe, has the potential to increase its share of halal tourism and become a pioneer in the industry.”

A recent study has revealed that in 2015 the estimated number of Muslim tourists were 117 million, representing close to 10% of the entire travel economy. This is forecasted to grow to 168 million visitors by 2020 and 11% of the market segment with a market value projected to exceed $200 billion.

This is the second time the event is being held in Europe, following the success of the inaugural event in Andalucía, Spain.

Comparing the first and second halal tourism conference, organiser Domah, from CM Media based in UK, said: “This year we have worked to evolve the conference from where it was in terms of the content. We have developed the content from just an introduction to more of a developmental strategy providing people with more information of the needs of the Muslim traveller, and what we are able to do to help them with the type of the delegates we choose. We aim to bring the halal industry forward and thankfully it is growing year by year.”

Domah added: “We chose Turkey this year, because of what Turkey has to offer in terms of heritage and history and the important role that turkey has to play in the halal tourism industry. They have halal resorts and they were one of the first countries along with the UAE and Malaysia to start working with that concept and created the standard to provide more for the Muslim traveller. We aim to hold the conference annually. We want to showcase as many destinations as possible. I also don’t think it is a good idea to showcase in only Muslim countries, because it won’t be helping our cause. We want to start bringing people together, make Muslims travel to new worlds and explore new cultures, because in Islam we are told to live in this world as if we are travellers.”

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Persian Gulf Marine Tourism: Neglected Opportunities
Despite covering most of the northern coasts of the Persian Gulf (not to mention a fair portion of the Sea of Oman), Iran has only just started to tap into its potential for marine tourism, hoping to claim a stake in the lucrative marine tourism sector.
After months of negotiations, Iranian officials launched a cruise shipping line between Khasab in Oman and Qeshm Island earlier this year for Omani tourists, allowing them visa-free entry to the key Persian Gulf Island, CHTN reported.
The emirate of Dubai in the UAE aims to attract over 1 million marine tourists by 2020. According to local officials, all relevant bodies are coordinated to help facilitate the entry of tourists via cruise ships. It has so far increased the number of its cruise ships by 22%, which has helped increase the number of sea passengers by a whopping 33% last year to 500,000.
Dubai’s Port Rashid is the number one cruise terminal in the MENA region, in terms of traffic and infrastructure, according to Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, chairman of the emirate’s Ports, Customs and Free Zone Corporation.
“Our goal now is to go all out and make the passenger-friendly facility the best in the world. To that end, we have joined hands with all authorities present at the port, including Dubai Customs, the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs, and Dubai Police to deliver expedited, top-notch services to cruise tourists,” he said.
Qatar is also preparing to take full advantage of Iran’s inertia and has set the goal of making its capital, Doha, a key marine destination in the Persian Gulf by mid-2017.
It is also adding 30 new cruise ships to its small fleet this winter, which means a 300% growth in the tiny Arab nation’s fleet of cruise ships.

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Boeing : Iran buying 100 Boeing aircraft


 It’s a deal! The Islamic Republic of Iran is set to buy 100 American-made Boeing civilian airliners for a price tag of almost US$25 billion. The sale, which has been quietly in the works for some months now, can be directly linked to last summer’s Iran nuclear accord reached in Vienna by the United States and five other powers, which in effect trades Tehran’s presumed nuclear transparency for a lifting of stifling economic sanctions on the Islamic republic. Why am I not surprised?

So here we see the business bottom line to the nuclear accord; opening Iran’s alluring marketplace to the flood of commerce from America, Europe and the Far East. The final step came back in January after the Obama Administration gave a green light to formally lift sanctions on sales to Iran’s civil aviation.

The landmark agreement is the biggest business deal between Iran and the U.S. since 1979 when the Islamic Revolution of Ayatollah Khomeini toppled the reformist rule of the Shah, installing a radical anti-American regime whose heirs remain in power to this day.

The aircraft are slated for the national airline Iran Air, the oldest airline in the Middle East and a once top notch civilian carrier whose fleet has aged and needs serious renovation. Most of the new planes will be short haul 737 and longer haul 777’s. Currently most of Iran Air’s fleet consists of older pre-1980 Boeings and twenty newer but second hand Airbus craft.

Naturally, Chicago-based Boeing adds the usual legal caveat, “Boeing will continue to follow the lead of the U.S. government with regards to working with Iran’s airlines, and any and all contracts with Iran’s airlines will be contingent upon U.S. government approval.” Washington’s Key Objectives

But let’s be frank: opening the lucrative Iranian market, especially the near the U.S. dominated aircraft sales sector, was one of Washington’s key objectives in last year’s nuclear agreement between five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany, in which the Islamic republic purportedly stopped its nuclear weapons program in return for a lifting of sanctions. The European consortium Airbus also plans to sell planes to Iran.

Why expansion now? Iran Air is now looking to widen its route network beyond the Middle East and Europe to include the U.S., Canada, and Australia. Plans include serving the huge Iranian diaspora which fled after the 1979 revolution and are numerous in California and New York as well as an expected surge of other American tourists, who are expected to visit this ancient land once relations improve. Though there’s a growing potential among Iranian-Americans based on nostalgia, there’s little doubt that Iran Air, which brands itself as “the Airline of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” may need to remake its image at the very least.

Iran Air continued to fly its routes to the U.S. even after the revolution, but service was suspended after Islamic militants seized and trashed the American Embassy in Tehran in November 1979, leading to the subsequent hostage crisis during the Carter Administration.

Not surprisingly, there’s growing opposition to a Boeing deal with the national airline of a state sponsor of global terrorism, a supplier of troops and weapons to the regime side in the Syrian civil war, not to mention a flagrant persecutor of its own people.

Congressman Peter Roskam stated that members of Congress from both Illinois and Washington State where Boeing has its manufacturing facilities nonetheless oppose the deal and will try to block it. “If this moves forward, Boeing and terror will be intertwined,” he stated adamantly.

Congressman Roskam added, “It’s tragic to watch such an ionic American company make such a terribly short-sited decision. If Boeing goes through with this deal, the company will forever be associated with Iran’s chief export: radical Islamic terrorism.” In his “No Dollars for Ayatollahs Act,” introduced by Representative Roskam, the congressman stresses in a statement, “My bill will prevent Iran from accessing U.S. dollars in any manner by imposing a 100-percent excise tax on any transactions which directly or indirectly enable the Islamic Republic to make financial transactions in American currency.”

The U.S. State Department continues to list Iran as a “State Sponsor of Terrorism.”

Naturally, there’s plenty of rationalization in the Obama Administration about creating American jobs and exports never mind assisting what Washington likes to see as a reformist Rohani government in Tehran as trying to open to the West after years of sanctions and isolation.

Yet there’s a touch of irony too for any new Boeings flying to Iran; they will be landing at the Imam Khomeini International Airport in Tehran.

 

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Mideast’s tallest suspension bridge inaugurated in Meshkinshahr
The tallest suspension bridge in the Middle East was inaugurated on Saturday in a ceremony attended by the Head of Iran Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization Masoud Soltanifar.

The bridge stands over Khiyo Chaei River in Meshkinshahr,


Tourists can view the beautiful scenery of Sabalan slopes from a height of 80 meters.


It is 325 meters long and two meters wide. The bridge was built in Khiav Tourism Zone at a cost of 400 billion rials.
The Khiyo resort which has been promised to be immediately built around the bridge covers an area equal to 1300 hectares and is the most major tourism project in Ardabil province.


Among amenities the resort will offer are: guest entertainment salons, residential suites, air balloon and other air sports sites, rotating restaurant, handicrafts market, amusement park, and other services and attractions, in addition to offering a magnificent view to the Mount Sabalan from an altitude of 80 meters, which is an exceptional attraction for mountaineers, since in addition to a very beautiful lake at the summit, the Mount Sabalan being a dormant volcano.


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The One Country That Completely Shocked author, and television personality Anthony Bourdain

Travel enthusiast (and chef, author, and television personality) Anthony Bourdain has seen a lot in his adventures across the globe. But that doesn’t mean he can’t still be surprised.


When Travel + Leisure asked Bourdain what off-the-grid destination surprised him the most during his travels, he was quick to respond with Iran.

“I was really knocked sideways by how well we were treated in Iran and how delicious the food was and how hospitable ordinary people were to us,” he told T+L. He echoed this sentiment many times in his Parts Unknown episode to the Middle Eastern country, too.

“Iran does not look, does not feel the way I expected,” Bourdain said upon landing, noting that there’s a “much bigger picture” than what you see on television.

The warmth with which he was greeted by locals was completely unexpected.

“I am so confused,” he admitted. “It wasn’t supposed to be like this.”

Many intrepid travelers are now discovering this beautiful country, which landed on T+L’s list of the year’s best places to travel. Elaborate mosques, contemporary art, the gardens of Shiraz and (as Bourdain would tell you) the food — fluffy saffron rice and meatballs stuffed with eggs — are more accessible than ever thanks to improved relations with the U.S. and new-found political stability.

For more insight from Bourdain — including the one hotel he could spend the rest of his life in (willingly) and the one dish worth traveling for — check out our full interview with him. And if you’ve got Iran on your radar, here’s everything you need to know about visiting the country.

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