Book Review: 44 Days: Iran and the Remaking of the World by David Burnett

Author: SaharPublished: Oct 16, 2009 at 9:04 pm 0 comments

The events that marked Iran at the end of 1978 and the beginning of 1979 still haunt it today. As recently as last week, yet another of the many demonstrations that started after the June 12th election demanded the same thing the demonstrations back in 1979 asked for: change. This makes the images in the book 44 Days all the more poignant.

Christiane Amanpour, CNN’s Chief International Correspondent, still lived in Iran at the time and remembers it in the following words, part of the forward she penned for the book: "In the summer of 1978, revolution was rumbling across my country, Iran. Sitting in the living room of our family home in Tehran, my father stared out of the window into the beyond, and said to me 'it’s all over; nothing will be the same again.'"

The extent of the change Iran witnessed during those days is captured in this set of pictures published, many for the first time, by the National Geographic society. And if a picture is worth a thousand words, then no review could adequately describe the over 200 pages of pictures in this book, all the more poignant that, 30 years after the events they chronicle, Iran is yet again caught in the midst of another bloody struggle that will define it’s relationship with the entire world.

In a twist of fate, perhaps, many of those demonstrating today are the sons and daughters of those who demonstrated back then. Looking at the faces pictured in 44 Days, I can’t help but wonder if I saw their sons and daughter on the news in the last couple of months.

The 1979 Revolution was the first modern Islamic revolution. It changed everything, not only inside Iran, but also outside it. The consequence of this impact can still be felt throughout the world. It inspired millions. It scared others. It resolved old conflicts and ignited new ones.

Nothing about Iran is simple. Trying to understand it is a long and arduous process. It might just be a historical consequence of a world coming together too fast, but it does make appreciating a book such as 44 Days harder.

But for those of us who either don’t understand Iran or don’t understand it entirely, the editors kindly provided us with a concise yet detailed historical background which, while only providing a nugget of Iran’s rich history, allows for a great background to put the pictures in perspective. And whatever the reader’s knowledge of Iran is, the pictures within this book will leave an indelible mark on whoever spends time perusing it — and just might inspire the reader to dedicate some time in getting to know Iran.

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Article Author: Sahar

Sahar was born the first of three siblings and the first of eight cousins. Thrust in the role of head of the brood at a very early age, she honed her imagination by creating stories and plotlines the eight of them could play to all summer long. …

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  • 44 Days: Iran and the Remaking of the World (National Geographic) 44 Days: Iran and the Remaking of the World (National Geographic)

    At a time when most Westerners fled the carnage in Iran, David Burnett was one of the few to stay and document the breathtakingly sudden fall of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in December 1978, and the ...

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