Preview

Prisoner Of Tehran Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1365 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Prisoner Of Tehran Analysis
The Prisoner of Tehran by Marina Nemat is a story of young girl who was born in 1965 in Tehran, Iran. Her father was a dancer while her mother was a hairdresser. Marina in her young days liked to dance, have fun at the beach and liked to spend time with her friends and crush Andre who she met in the church. She was brought up in an orthodox Christian family and went to a school with majority of Muslims in it. Religion was never a matter of concern back in the early days when Nemat went to school.
Marina Nemat was arrested at the age of sixteen as a result of Islamic revolution 1979. She was arrested because Nemat and her friends wanted to study math and history instead of the study of Koran and political propaganda in school during Islamic revolution. When Nemat protested against her teachers to teach the students math and history and not Koran the teacher asked Nemat to leave the class if she was not interested in learning, and to her surprise all her friends and classmates followed her outside class, which resulted an arrest for Nemat and her friends.
Nemat was arrested in January 1982 at the age of sixteen with other youths and taken to the prison of Tehran. She was beaten, torched and was even sentenced to death as a result of committing political crimes. The book “prisoner of Tehran” further goes on
…show more content…
She now lives in Canada and has started a new life although it’s hard for her to forget what she went through. Through this book I think the message that she is trying to bring across is the message of forgiveness. It’s not hard to hate anyone, but the person who forgives is the one that goes ahead. No person is evil or engage in bad practices by birth; it’s always the circumstances that change the person. By forgiving the people that held her captive and beat her to death Nemat showed the power of love and forgiveness over evil and

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    During Aamer’s time at Guantanamo Bay, there were many allegations of torture. In letters Aamer wrote, he described the forcible cell extraction team, who would “beat him up ” while Aamer was suffering kidney trouble. The cell extraction team, took his medical necessities, such as a blanket to lessen his rheumatism, a back-brace, pressure socks, his toothbrushes, sheets, shoes, his legal documents and his children drawings. There were also allegations that Aamer was made to sleep on concrete when he was sent to solitary confinement. And while in solitary confinement, a 22 stone soldier would sit on his back, while others would pin his arms and legs to the floor, all to leave him one plastic bottle of water. All of these statements were made…

    • 322 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    On page 194, she dreams of some good memories but mostly bad memories from Iran and says she wishes her past would disappear. She is showing that she often dwelled on the past and bad memories are often most prominent to her. She is showing the readers that Iran haunted her even after she left. She views herself as oppressed and surrounded by haunting memories. Her bad memories became the depression that she would fall into.…

    • 322 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The cause behind the story 's central conflict lies in Nea 's devotion to Sourdi, which in turn was caused by a distant memory. "Once upon a time", Nea recalls, "Sourdi had walked across a minefield, carrying me on her back" (Chai 140). With the terrible war background on the Khmer Rouge-era in Cambodia as an exposition, Nea recalls her sister Sourdi carrying her across a field by stepping on countless dead bodies to avoid the mines. This is something that Nea views as secret between just her and her sister, one she will never reveal to another soul. It is because of this single incident that Nea vows to "walk on bones" and "rotting flesh" to "save Sourdi," which itself foreshadows events to come (Chai 140). It is this event that defines Nea and motivates her actions throughout the story. It is because Nea 's identity is derived from this debt to her older sister that causes Nea to respond in such a haphazard manner. Not only do her responses create tension in the story, but they further develop Nea as a character.…

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Changes In Persepolis

    • 259 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Marjane faced many person vs. society conflicts. There were many changes being made in Iran due to the revolution. It was made mandatory for girls and women to wear the veil. Marjane and her friends did not understand why they had to wear the veil. Also, boys and girls were separated at school. Marjane…

    • 259 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The relationship between the American people and their government drastically changed in the 1970s. The people began to distrust their government after The Watergate Scandal, oil prices, and the falling economy. President Jimmy Carter, elected in 1976 was seen by the public as an honest man that was working for the people not for the evils of Washington DC. Carter, being an outsider, grew very popular with the American people. His lack of insider perspective became troublesome when he could not explain his clear motives and direction he was taking America. This not only caused tension within his own administration, but also caused the American people to regain the feeling of mistrust they once felt with Nixon during the Watergate scandal. Carter was unable to help with the economic problems nor properly able to negotiate the release of the American hostages in Iran, sealing his fate for a second term. Taken Hostage written by David Farber gives an adequate and well-researched report on the Iranian Hostage Crisis. He explains exactly how and why the hostages were taken as well as many of the issues of the time. One of these issues included the people’s portrayal of President Carter as incapable and ill equipped to help improve American life style as well as his powerless attempts at negotiating for the American hostages. Farber also discussed the reactions of both the American and Iranian people during the crisis, and how the media played up these reactions and events in order to get people more hyped and involved in the crisis.…

    • 967 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The past 15 years, Neshat has created provocative expressions drawn on her personal experiences, and the widening political and ideological rift between the West and Middle East. She’s the most famous contemporary artist to emerge from Iran. Her frequent visits to Iran after the revolution led to the creation of a body of work which rocketed Neshat’s artistic career. Due to the controversial nature of her art, Neshat has not been able to return to her country since 1996.…

    • 946 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Reading Lolita in Tehran

    • 991 Words
    • 4 Pages

    We always take for granted what we have in the United States; criticizing every little thing that doesn’t go our way… the women in Iran had everything they loved taken away. We all have dreams of being able to do what we want. The first and most prominent difference Iranian women had to endure would be that they were forced to wear a chador, under all conditions no matter how unbearable the weather was. Women in Tehran had little or no freedom outside of their houses. Azar Nafisi (author) was taking a huge risk with her seven women students, she invited them into her house to discuss literature, if caught she could be put in jail because books they discussed were banned; fearing that they would cause a conspiracy. When heading to University the women would have to step aside and be checked to make sure they didn’t have anything ‘illegal’ on them , often making them late for class, while the men just walked right on in not a word was said. If the women attending university were not veiled they would not be allowed inside, losing their right to education (Nafisi was expelled for not wearing the veil). Mr. Bahri, a co-worker of Nafisi’s was in a meeting with one of her students and asked her why she would want to put the revolution at risk…

    • 991 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In relation to the second point from Marina’s story that most interested me, in 1979, when the Iranian Revolution occurred, it seemingly began to unravel Marina’s sense of normalcy. Building on that, the trauma of her arrest, imprisonment, torture, forced conversion, forced marriage, and subsequent rapes shattered it all together. While reading about these experiences of Marina’s, and how she continued to survive, was when the word ‘resilience’ began dominating my thoughts. Questions which came to the forefront of my mind that I would want to explore with Marina in a therapeutic relationship included, where did she find the strength the stand up against the regime, in her classroom to her teacher, and in prison when she was getting her feet…

    • 400 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    For most Americans, the story begins in 1979 with the Iranian Hostage Crisis, when a group of revolutionary university students took over the American Embassy in Tehran, Iran, and held 52 American diplomats, intelligence officers and Marines hostage for 444 days. But for most Iranians, and to fully understand the repercussions of this aforementioned event, the story begins almost three decades prior, in 1953. This was the year that the United States overthrew the recently established democracy in Iran, led by Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh. He had become very popular in the country for having the ambition to finally take advantage of the wealth that Iran needed to grow by nationalizing his country’s oil supply, which was for the previous 50 years under the control of the British Petroleum company. By proving that Mossadegh’s regime was relying on the communist party of Iran for power, and in turn not wanting to lose Iran as an ally in the Cold War against the Soviet Union, England was able to persuade the U.S. to assist in engineering a coup d’état against the new Iranian democracy and return Iran to its previous Pahlavi dynasty. Through what was named “Operation Ajax”, the CIA and MI6 reinstalled the Shah and instituted a pro-U.S. dictatorship of Iran that was willing to comply to Western interests in regards to the vast oil supply that the “British and American corporations had controlled the bulk of almost since their discovery” 1.…

    • 1868 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Iran Awakening

    • 1335 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Her story begins as a child, before the revolution. She grew up in a very liberal home. Both parents were very intellectual. Her mother was forced to marry, therefore could not attend college and her father was a deputy minister working under the popular government of Prime Mister Mohammad Mossadegh. She grew up in a special household where her parents did not treat her or her brother different. They met their attention, affection, and discipline equally. She was raised thinking this was a perfectly normal environment when in reality, in most Iranian households it was the male children that enjoyed an exalted status, female relatives spoiled them, and their rebellion was overlooked or praised. As children grew older the boys’ privileges expanded while the girls’ lessened so they remained “honorable and well-bred”.…

    • 1335 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Incendies Worksheet

    • 501 Words
    • 2 Pages

    She does this through forgiveness; forgiveness for herself and forgiveness for her son. She allows her children to bury her with a gravestone and hoped for a reassured sense of peace for Nihad.…

    • 501 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Nafisi

    • 1633 Words
    • 7 Pages

    From merely the last two decades, women have begun to show out in society with their vast achievements and accomplishments. In the early days of the Iranian revolution, a young woman named Azar Nafisi started teaching at the University of Tehran. However, in 1981, Nafisi was expelled from the University of Tehran for refusing to wear an Islamic veil. Seven years later, however, she did indeed resume teaching but soon resigned in protest over the increasingly cruel punishments of the Iranian government toward women. She dreamed of working with students that carried a great passion for learning. In Reading Lolita in Tehran, Azar Nafisi and her seven students join together every Thursday morning at her home and discuss classic texts of Western literature that have to do with prominent figures. In the conditions Nafisi lived in , however, it was illegal for women to form small study groups that didn 't have to do with what the government wanted them to learn about. Nafisi, herself, knew the risks and how dangerous it would be to betray the laws of the Iranian government. At that time, women were forced to live by dreadful laws; laws that made women dress a certain way when being seen in public. They were only allowed to dress up in black robes and head scarves, only their face and hands being uncovered. With the conditions that Nafisi and her students lived under, it is more dangerous to withdraw into their dreams rather to resign themselves to a disturbing reality because of how restricted the laws were forced upon the citizens of Iran.…

    • 1633 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Iran Hostage Crisis

    • 1993 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Although she had lived alongside her family in America for years, her life was thrown into discord after a group of insurgent student in Iran took over the American embassy and held those inside hostage. As soon as America became aware of the news, life for Iranians in America became far more difficult. Due to the crisis, her father was fired from his job and unable to find a new one and her mother had to lie about being Turkish in order to protect herself and her family from the rampant hatred towards Iranians. The actions of people thousands of miles away radically changed her life; people’s connection of the author’s family with the radical groups in Iran was unfair because they also believed that the events of the hostage crisis were equally terrifying and wrong, yet they were still ostracized for something they couldn’t help: their…

    • 1993 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Best Essays

    The Gay Rights Movement

    • 3319 Words
    • 14 Pages

    "Omid, a memorial in defense of human rights in Iran - Iran Human Rights Memorial." Human Rights in Iran - Human Rights & Democracy for Iran. 27 Apr. 2009 .…

    • 3319 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    persepolis essay

    • 818 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Imagine being born with a stamp on your forehead that defines where you'll fit in society for the rest of your life. The book Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi, greatly deepens the readers understanding of iran and iranian women by the illustration of Marjane's childhood all the way through adolecense while living in Iran at a time where gender, nationality, and social class defined one's identity the most. Persepolis greatly deepens the reader's understanding of Iran and Iranian people by explaining the hopeful life of an iranian woman, providing plenty of demonstrations against the strict government, and by showing the hardships for all social classes; and because of these circumstances, Marjane had a difficult time finding her identity.…

    • 818 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays