(Jewish Group) He captured rare images of Jewish life in Iran. Then he fled, fearing for his safety.
Two young men walk in a Jewish neighborhood in Shiraz, Iran. On the wall behind them, a derogatory term for Jews is written in graffiti. (Hassan Sarbakhsian)
Jewish prayer in a mosque. Hookah smoke in a kosher kitchen. Hebrew school study under portraits of ayatollahs.
When former Associated Press photographer Hassan Sarbakhshian spent almost two years between 2006 and 2008 among the Jewish communities in Iran, those are some of the images he collected for a book project. The photographs offer a rare look inside Jewish homes, synagogues and other spaces, which the Jewish community normally keeps fairly locked down to outsiders.
In Iran, a nation whose post-1979 revolution government regularly calls for the violent destruction of Israel, Jews are famously allowed to practice their religion freely and feel a strong connection to their country. There is a permanent Jewish representative in parliament.
But when Sarbakhshian submitted the book to Irans culture ministry for publication, he ran up against the countrys pervasive anti-Zionist culture.
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