A pilgrimage to Iran
Boston.com
Most of the Iraqi pilgrims don’t speak Farsi, the language of the Persians who are the majority in Iran. But they can communicate with the many Iraqi merchants who settled in Qom over the past two decades, after they were thrown out by Saddam Hussein in various purges of Shi’ites – like this man, who was selling dates, a traditional symbol of welcome.
Most of the Iraqi pilgrims don’t speak Farsi, the language of the Persians who are the majority in Iran. But they can communicate with the many Iraqi merchants who settled in Qom over the past two decades, after they were thrown out by Saddam Hussein in various purges of Shi’ites – like this man, who was selling dates, a traditional symbol of welcome.
(Zohreh Soleimani for The Boston Globe)