Poging GOUD - Vrij
Iran’s resilience has been forged by adversity
The Observer
|March 08, 2026
The Cyrus cylinder, inscribed with the earliest form of writing, Babylonian cuneiform, demonstrates that Iran's national story goes back more than two and a half millennia to Cyrus the Great.
Now in the British Museum, it has often been referred to as “the first bill of human rights”. The Persian ruler’s benevolence towards the Jews is celebrated in the Old Testament in the Book of Isaiah.
While Cyrus did, at one stage, control almost half the known world, Iran's history of at least the last two centuries has been that of one defeat after another, and of exploitation by foreign powers, principally Russia, the UK and the US. As a result, victimhood is powerfully embedded in the psyche of Iranians, both in terms of their religiosity and their pride in their nation.
I’m far from sure whether the US president, Donald Trump, or his advisers understand this: or the way in which this gives the people of Iran an unusual capacity for endurance.
The two are related, of course — but they are also separate.
Most Iranians are, formally, Shia. On the death of the prophet Muhammad in 632, his followers split. The majority - the Sunnis - chose his father-in-law. The minority argued that the successor caliph had to be a blood relation. There followed a long and bloody succession crisis. This ended in 680 when the Shias’ leader, the prophet’s grandson Husayn ibn Ali, was cut down along with 72 of his followers. Victimhood — “martyrdom” - thus became a key tenet of Shia Islam.
Dit verhaal komt uit de March 08, 2026-editie van The Observer.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN The Observer
The Observer
Across the globe, internet blackouts are a new tool for autocratic regimes
Iran’s record-breaking information shutdown is over. But governments, including Russia and China, are increasingly using access as control. Liz Cookman reports
6 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
Downsizing isn't yet in Richard's interest. That needs to change
‘Retirees in comfortable houses and who refuse to downsize’ aren’t helping the housing crisis. Policy must make it worth their while
3 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
Ben & Jerry's co-founder takes a bite out of Magnum for putting social mission on ice
Still campaigning at 75, Ben Cohen tells Barney Macintyre about his search for investors to buy back the company he set up in a Vermont service station in 1978
4 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
What if there's no king of the north? Burnham's Makerfield bid on a knife edge
Weeks after local elections in which every ward went to Reform, Burnham’s supporters tell Ceri Thomas that even they fear he will lose the byelection
4 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
The longest journey: thief hands back Forster’s stolen nameplate after 56 years
An anonymous former student has returned the Cambridge door plaque he unscrewed after the writer's death
3 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
'No way' Everest group should have left sherpa on mountain, says top climber
Kenton Cool says confusion and flawed planning were to blame for Dawa Sherpa being abandoned, and his six-day ordeal on the world’s highest peak, writes Poppy Bullard
3 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
Dawkins evolves into a novelist to pen tale of early humans' return
Richard Dawkins once complained that Nobel committees had rarely awarded the literature prize to non-fiction writers, and never to a scientist. Science is “the poetry of reality”, he wrote, in defence of fact.
2 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
A cage fight at the White House puts the Trumpian world-view on show
The brutal scenes set to unfold on the South Lawn to celebrate his birthday (and 250 years of US independence) sum up the president better than anything, Rory Smith writes
4 mins
June 07, 2026
The Observer
Gold in them thar central banks
Gold has overtaken US Treasuries as the top global reserve asset held by central banks. Cue newspaper editorials that suggest central banks have started to \"diversify away from the dollar\".
1 min
June 07, 2026
The Observer
Wes Streeting: ‘I don’t want Farage walking into No 10 on my conscience’
The ex-health secretary and leadership hopeful tells Rachel Sylvester that Labour must heed warnings from voters to see off threat of Reform
5 mins
June 07, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

