• Home
  • Bio
  • Lipstick Jihad
  • Iran Awakening
  • Contact

Azadeh Moaveni

Journalist and author of Lipstick Jihad

Feed on
Posts
Comments
« Iran’s Caesarean Section Craze
How We Learned to Love the Veil »

Raising a Child in Iran’s Cultural Divide

Oct 25th, 2006 by azadeh

My friend’s eight-year-old son brought a DVD home from school the other day, a 10-minute collection of “highlights” from his third-grade class. As far as I could tell he wasn’t attending an Iranian elementary school so much as one of those scary Pakistani-type madrassas, where rows of boys sit on the floor memorizing the Koran and the alumni all died at Tora Bora. The first minutes captured the class making ritual ablutions before prayer, followed by scenes of them actually praying together in the classroom, and finally, a lively segment of them practicing the call to prayer. Noting my horrified look, my friend explained that “public schools here are really much better these days.” Much better, apparently, means that alongside Islamic indoctrination, kids also receive an hour of music lessons a week, their textbooks include color pictures, and teachers no longer say “raise your hand if your parents drink alcohol at home.”

Read more …

Posted in TIME

Comments are closed.

  • Navigation

    • Bio
    • Lipstick Jihad
    • Iran Awakening
    • Contact
  • Categories

    • Journal (15)
    • New York Times (1)
    • Sheekamou (1)
    • TIME (6)
  • Archives

    • June 2008 (1)
    • March 2008 (2)
    • February 2008 (1)
    • January 2008 (2)
    • December 2007 (2)
    • November 2007 (1)
    • October 2007 (1)
    • September 2007 (3)
    • June 2007 (1)
    • May 2007 (1)
    • April 2007 (3)
    • March 2007 (2)
    • February 2007 (1)
    • October 2006 (1)
    • September 2006 (1)
  • Tags

    Alaa al-Aswany Food Iranian Music Lotfi New York Times Novels TIME Yacoubian Building

© 2006-2008 Azadeh Moaveni. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by WordPress | WordPress Themes