27 Apr 2024
Wednesday 5 April 2017 - 15:44
Story Code : 256106

Why Iran-Iraq war is still a minefield for artists

Al-Monitor | Zahra Alipour: The second longest war in the 20th century began on Sept. 22, 1980, when forces led by former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded Iran. The conflict ended eight years later, in 1988, with the adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 598, which called for a cease-fire. Irans then Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini famously described approval of the decision as more deadly than taking poison, adding, I submitted myself to Gods will and drank this drink for his satisfaction.

Up to 1 million people are estimated to have lost their lives in the conflict, which has come to be known in Iran as the Imposed War or the Holy Defense. The Iranian state has used this terminology to describe the conflict and its cultural, social, political and economic impact on Iranian society ever since the war began. The term Holy Defense has even turned into a genre in Iranian cinema and literature.

Holy Defense productions are often accompanied by an ideological, religious and propaganda angle aimed at forging heroes and portraying the war as sacred. This is while some independent artists have depicted the conflict as an unpleasant and destructive phenomenon on the front lines, cities and society as a whole. However, these works, some of which became the most lasting works of art in Iran, were unsuccessful in winning the support of the establishment when trying to obtain the necessary permits or at the production and distribution stage.

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