This article is from: srnnews.com
PARIS (AP) â When Iran erupted in nationwide protests at the end of 2025, Shayan Ghadimiâs mother returned to the country from Paris to see the uprising for herself.
Her absence â and the struggle to stay in touch through the bloody crackdown that followed and now the Iran war â hang over the family. Like many Iranians outside the country, they will mark the normally festive Persian new year, known as Nowruz, with heavy hearts â or not at all.
Ghadimiâs 70-year-old mother had watched the early protests on TV. âWe could see the market closed, the people in the street. She said, âI want to be there,ââ Ghadimi, 41, said as she prepared to serve lunches in the spice-scented restaurant she runs in Paris.
âNow, she is all alone at home, with no way to stay in contact, watching the sky. I cannot imagine the state she is in,â Ghadimi said.
An Iranian cultural center in Paris that last year organized music events for Nowruz says itâs in mourning. In the United States, some Iranian American communities also canceled or scaled back festivities.
Nowruz, or ânew dayâ in Farsi, coincides with the spring equinox and is celebrated from Afghanistan to Turkey. Iranians of diverse faiths mark Nowruz â which is rooted in Zoroastrian tradition dating back millennia â despite occasional efforts by hard-liners to discourage it.
Shakiba Edighoffer, out grocery shopping for Nowruz, said she and Iranian friends are on a âkind of emotional roller coasterâ as the war rages. Israel and the United States are attacking Iranâs leaders and military while the Islamic Republic fires missiles and drones at Israel and Gulf Arab states.
âYou hear news about this or that leader of the Islamic Republic being eliminated ⌠about executions or bombings,â the makeup artist said.
With communications largely severed, trying to find out how family and friends are faring under bombardments is a stressful ordeal.
âI had a friend who managed to connect very briefly on Instagram a few days ago, but I think itâs been about 20 days now since the war started, and that was really the only time I was able to speak with him a little,â Edighoffer said.
Celebrating Nowruz with family and friends âhelps us cope, at least a little, with the psychological pressure,â she said. âAll these oppressors want is for us to be sad, to forget our millennia-old Persian and Iranian traditions. We must not give them that victory.â
Some of the diners who come to Ghadimiâs restaurant for flame-grilled kebabs and spiced rice hope the war will bring a new dawn. Other canât see past the deaths and destruction wrought by Israeli and U.S. strikes.
âI have people in tears. I have people who cry for joy. They say, âDid you see? They are coming. We are going to be saved.â Others say, âOur country is being destroyed,ââ she said.
Since her mother returned to Iran in January, theyâve only managed to speak to each other twice.
âQuite honestly, I donât try anymore. Because it stresses me out, if I try calling and canât get hold of her,â she said. âMy sister calls 100 times a day and canât reach her.â
Her mother had a return ticket and had promised to be back for Nowruz.
But when they last spoke, about a week ago, her mother said those plans had changed. Having lived through the 1979 Islamic Revolution, she wants to see Iranâs next chapter.
âI am staying here until the end,â her mother told her.
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Associated Press journalist John Leicester contributed.
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