Nowruz The Iranian New Year
Transcription
Nowruz The Iranian New Year
Nowruz The Iranian New Year MARCH 20, 2013 07:01 a.m. EST 06:01 a.m. CST 05:01 a.m. MST 04:01 a.m. PST Where is IRAN? • Historically known as Persia. • Located in Southwestern Asia. • Borders, by land, the countries of Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Pakistan, Turkey, and Turkeministan and by water, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). • You cross the Atlantic Ocean, fly over Europe, and arrive in IRAN. • It is about 650,000 square miles (1.65 million sq km) – the same size as Alaska. • There are over 75 million diverse people living in IRAN. © PAAIA 2013 Let’s find IRAN on the map! Here is where we are © PAAIA 2013 Here is Iran How old is IRAN? • The earliest human presence, the inventors of spears, in the Zagros Mountains of IRAN, date back to 35,000 years ago. • The earliest human settlements in IRAN are dated back to over 10,000 years ago. • IRAN has sustained a form of government and a written history for the past 5,000 years. • Under Cyrus the Great, (around 530 BCE or some 2,500 years ago), IRAN was the largest world empire stretching from India to Africa to Europe. – Today the same area is comprised of 28 countries. © PAAIA 2013 Historical contributions/discoveries of Iranians • First charter of human rights • Algebra, Trigonometry, and Algorithm • First teaching hospitals in the world • First postal couriers • Games of Chess, Backgammon, and Polo and the musical instrument, the lute • First banking and taxation system • First bottles of wine, bowls of ice cream, and refrigerators were found in ancient IRAN (Persia) • Many flowers (such as tulips, roses, pussy willows, and herbal species) and fruits (such as grapes, figs, dates, pomegranates, rice and wheat) were first domesticated in IRAN © PAAIA 2013 What does IRAN look like? Spectacularly Breath-taking! IRAN has sovereignty over the southern part of the largest enclosed body of water in the world, called the CASPIAN SEA. © PAAIA 2013 IRAN has beautiful mountains. The tallest is the DAMAVAND MOUNTAIN (over 5 km above sea level). IRAN has beautiful RICE FIELDS. IRAN is home to the Persian Gulf. IRAN has one of the hottest and largest deserts in the world – DASHT-E-LUT. © PAAIA 2013 IRAN has four contrasting seasons… Spring Fall © PAAIA 2013 Summer Winter • IRAN has the only calendar that aligns with the seasons. • It is one of the only countries that has consistently used a purely solar-based calendar. • Nowruz is a major annual celebration from a group of four seasonal celebrations: • Spring: Nowruz • Summer: Tirgan • Fall: Mehregan • Winter: Yalda © PAAIA 2013 IRAN also has beautiful monuments and buildings…. © PAAIA 2013 Persepolis (Shiraz) Mosques (Esfahan) Massouleh (Rasht) Bridges (Esfahan) IRAN was the first country to build arches in its buildings. Tarikh Khaneh (Damghan) Masjed-e-Shah Mosque (Isfahan) Ivan-e Kasra (near ancient town of Ctesiphon) © PAAIA 2013 What is the official language of IRAN? People in Iran speak Persian. It is written like this: فارسی Let’s try some words in Persian: – Hello - SALAM or DOROUD – Are you well? – KHOOBI or CHETORI? – Thank you! – MERSI or SEPAS – What is your name? – NAMAT CHEEST? – Bye – KHODA-HAFEZ or BEDROUD © PAAIA 2013 What is Nowruz? • Nowruz, literally, means the “new day” of the New Year in IRAN and many of its surrounding neighbors. • It has been celebrated for thousands of years. • Just like we begin a new year on January 1st of every year, Iranians begin the new year on the first day of spring or • THE VERNAL (SPRING) EQUINOX. • Usually this day falls on or about March 20th. • This year, vernal equinox and Nowruz happen on Wednesday, March 20th. • The celebration begins on this day and lasts for almost two weeks ending on Sizdah Bedar (April’s Fools Day). © PAAIA 2013 Where do they celebrate Nowruz? • Nowruz is not unique to Iran. • It is also celebrated in Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Iraq, Turkish Kurdistan, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkmenistan,Uzbekistan, Kashmir, Kyrgyzstan, Western China, and some parts of the southern Persian Gulf states. • It is also recognized as a day of celebration by the United Nations, the United States, and Canada. © PAAIA 2013 Shabeh Charshanbeh Soori • Prelude to Nowruz, Charshanbeh Souri is celebrated on the last Tuesday evening (eve of Wednesday) of the year. • Charshanbeh = Wednesday • Soor = Celebration or feast around fire • People make bonfires and jump over them, saying: “my sickly yellow paleness is yours. Your fiery red color is mine!” • It means you want the fire to take your paleness, sickness & problems and give you its redness, warmth, and energy. • Food, such as nuts and pastries (ajill) and refreshments are served. © PAAIA 2013 Getting ready for Nowruz…. • Families clean their homes from top to bottom, in and out. • Children and adults buy new clothes and shoes. • Families plan on visiting each other, especially paying tribute to the elders. • Families set a Nowruz Table, called Sofreh Haft-Sin. © PAAIA 2013 The Nowruz Table: “ Sofreh Haft Seen” • The family sets the table together. • The colorful table includes seven natural organic items whose names begin with the letter S (seen) in Persian. • In Persian, it’s called HAFT SEEN (Seven S’s). • Each “Seen” symbolizes a yearning (something you wish for). • There are also other items on the table that don’t begin with the letter S but have a special meaning. © PAAIA 2013 The Seven “S” of the Haft-Seen Table Apple or SEEB (beauty or health) A spice called SUMAC (beauty or health) © PAAIA 2013 Garlic or SEER (medicine) Dried fruit of oleaster (wild olive) tree or SENJED (beauty or health) Hyacinth or SONBOL (nature) Vinegar or SERKEH (age & patience) Wheat or barley sprout or SABZEH (nature) © PAAIA 2013 Other things included on the Haft-Seen Coins or SEKKEH (wealth) Holy book or book of poetry (faith) Lit candles (enlightenment & happiness) © PAAIA 2013 Mirror (cleanliness & honesty) Eggs (fertility) Goldfish (life within life) Traditional Iranian pastries (sweetness) Iran’s national colors (patriotism) Rosewater or GOLAB (believed to have magical cleansing powers) © PAAIA 2013 Here is a picture of a Haft-Seen table © PAAIA 2013 What Happens During Nowruz? • Families gather around the Haft-Seen table and countdown to the New Year. • They hug and wish each other a good year • They recite poetry from the traditional poetry books. • They eat sweets. • They spend the day visiting family and friends, beginning with the elders who give the younger family members freshly minted currency. © PAAIA 2013 Sizdah Bedar • Sizdah Bedar usually occurs around April Fool’s Day! • Sizdah = 13 in Persian (considered not to be a lucky number) • Bedar = sending / giving away or going outside • On 13th day of the New Year, families go on a picnic outdoor in the orchards, hillsides, or by the lakes or rivers. They eat and drink, play games and sing songs. • Sabzeh, the green sprout from the Haft Seen table, is thrown into flowing water for continuity of good life wishes. © PAAIA 2013 HAPPY NEW YEAR! (SALEH- NO MOBARAK) NOROOZETAN PEEROZ! •نوروز پیروز © PAAIA 2013