The Pencil as a Weapon against Dictatorship
Internet media have been involved in organising the mass protests in Iran following the controversial presidential elections in June 2009, and disseminating information and footage throughout the world. The web comic strip "Zahra's Paradise" is also a child of this media revolution. Susanne Schanda spoke to its creator
His mother and his brother, a blogger, go in search of Mehdi. The first place they go to is Freedom Square, the scene of violent clashes between security forces and demonstrators the previous day. Then they trail from hospital to hospital, see a great deal of blood and badly injured people. But there's no trace of Mehdi anywhere, not even at the notorious Evin prison for political detainees. It's after dark, and the tall buildings of Tehran are bathed in artificial light. There are numerous men and women standing on the rooftops, their arms stretched up towards the sky, defiantly calling out the words "Allahu Akbar".
The Islamic Republic – a failed experiment
"Religion was always very important to the Iranians," says Amir, the author of "Zahra's Paradise", during a telephone interview. An Iranian national now living in the US, he had just turned 12 when he and his family left the country during the Islamic Revolution in 1979. "My experience of religion in Iran was marked by a loving grandmother, and it was of course a part of our culture. But Islam as it is being indoctrinated in Iran today, is tainted and corrupt. I view the 30-year-old Islamic Republic as an experiment just as Marxism was, and the experiment has failed," he says firmly.
Since February, "Zahra's Paradise" has been appearing every Monday, Wednesday and Friday in 10 languages on the Internet. There are plans to publish the comic in book form next year. It is Amir's first comic strip volume. He has already completed the rough draft, but is also always working in parallel on the individual pages of the comic series with the Arab illustrator Khalil (who will also only divulge his first name).
Persian-Arab-Jewish cooperation
The comic strip novel is to be published by the Jewish-American comic strip author and publisher Mark Siegel in New York. This Persian-Arab-Jewish cooperation is a statement per se against the conventional formula of hostility in the name of religion. "I'd been pondering the idea of an Iran comic with Khalil for a long while already, and I'd also spoken to Mark Siegel about it," says Amir. Then came the elections and the wave of protests, the images charged with energy and hope for change. Then we knew instantly that we couldn't let this story pass us by."
Amir's work as a journalist often involves fragments of reality, he says. The comic strip allowed him to develop a story that feeds off reality, but with parts that go together to make up a whole, says Amir: "A sort of collage." The title is a reference to the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in southern Tehran, where numerous victims of state violence are buried; among them the student Neda, who has become a symbol of the resistance movement.
For Amir, Behesht-e Zahra is not just a cemetery "but also a garden where the world will be reborn." He is convinced: "The dead are only dead if we forget them. If we think about them, on the other hand, we sense the power and energy they emanate."
Women with civil courage
The heroes of these web comic strips are actually heroines. Zahra, the mother, searches for her son for hours through the streets of Tehran at night, and is not afraid to challenge a high-ranking official outside Evin prison; Zahra's friend Miriam, who likes to smoke and drink, has no time for prohibitions, religious or otherwise. When Zahra tells her that when Mehdi was born, it felt to her like a gift from God, Miriam responds sarcastically: "Well, God also gave us Khomeini. Now I really need another Scotch."
Role model Marjane Satrapi
With "Zahra's Paradise", Amir and Khalil are following in the footsteps of the Iranian artist Marjane Satrapi, who lives in Paris. In her comic strip novel "Persepolis" from the year 2000, which has since been made into a film, she created an artistic documentation of the Islamic Revolution by drawing on her own biography. Amir is a great admirer of Satrapi's work, and regards her as a role model and source of inspiration.
"She can be credited with creating a comic strip that showed Iranians working on change behind the official façade of the Islamic Republic, committed, intelligent people who are never talked about in the West," he says.
But while Satrapi made her own life story central to the narrative, "Zahra's Paradise" relates fictional events against the backdrop of recent political occurrences that have not even been brought to any conclusions yet – and almost in real time. As a journalist Amir knows how quickly political events fall out of the media spotlight. "Our comic strip aims to help ensure that people remain aware of the most recent events affecting the lives of Iranians."
Susanne Schanda
© Qantara.de 2010
Translated from the German by Nina Coon
Editor: Lewis Gropp/Qantara.de
http://www.qantara.de/webcom/show_article.php?wc_c=310&wc_id=789
--
Asadullah Syed
No comments:
Post a Comment