Faride Shafa’i
Faride Shafa’i
June 28th, 1987 – an ordinary summer day in the northwestern Iranian town of Sardasht. The Iran-Iraq War – started seven years earlier – was still raging along Iran’s border. But for residents, the summer was here. Schools were out. It was holiday time. Despite the war, things were ok – good, even.
That was until 4:30 pm when Iraqi fighter jets flew overhead and dropped chemical bombs. Life, for the town and its people, was never the same again.
The world has heard of the Iraqi town of Halabja – just over 100 km away – which was bombed by Saddam Hussein in March 1988. Few have heard of the same horrors, which befell the Iranian citizens of Sardasht, all victims of the same weapons.
On the 27th anniversary of the gas attacks at Sardasht, Faride Shafa’i, a survivor, shares her experiences from a woman’s perspective.
Faride had lived in Sardasht all her life. A mother of three girls, she was a schoolteacher in her home town. She was 27. On that day the sun was starting to set in the western sky.
With her daughters Shabnam (7 years), Shahla (3) and Nahid (2), Faride was celebrating the end of term over tea at her sister’s house. Her husband, Mohammad Rasoul, also a teacher, had gone off for a walk in the hills with his friends. Life couldn’t have been better.
The people of Sardasht had been accustomed to the sounds of conventional warfare. The sound of artillery and shelling from the war front, fewer than 10 kilometres away, was a constant reminder of the long-imposed war with Iraq.
“There were rumours that Saddam was planning to use chemical weapons,” said Faride, “but no one took them seriously. Why would he want to gas innocent people? It didn’t make any sense.”
Then the bombs fell. And the memories have never left her.
“There was so much panic when the bombs fell,” Faride said. Accustomed to conventional bombing, the residents of Sardasht were not expecting a chemical weapons attack. Instinct drove people to take cover and hide in their usual safe places, including basements.
“Government pamphlets had told us to seek high ground in a gas attack,” said Faride, “but we were paralyzed with fear. We ran to what we thought was safety in the basement.”
It was exactly the wrong thing to do. Mustard gas clings to the ground. And it followed them into the basement. Enveloped by a wall of garlic-smelling mustard gas, Faride and her children began to cough, their skin started to burn, their eyes became blurry. Faride’s maternal instinct kicked in, and the survival of her children was her priority. Struggling to find water, she wiped her daughters’ faces but it was too late, the damage had already been done.
Mohammad Rasoul rushed back to take his wife and children to the safety of their own home but their conditions grew worse by the minute. The effects of the mustard gas usually take around two hours to develop when serious symptoms start to appear and gradually worsen.
“I couldn’t open my eyes,” remembered Faride, “it was as if they were burning from the inside. The girls were in such pain and crying. Little Nahid was the worst. She was too little to understand what was going on. She just kept crying and crying. It broke my heart to hear them.”
They felt as if their skin was on fire. Soon suppurating, painful blisters appeared on their bodies. Breathing was difficult and then the uncontrollable vomiting started.
After an initial visit to a local doctor provided no relief, Faride’s husband took her and the children to Tabriz, where their condition was considered too severe for the facilities there.
On that afternoon, Sardasht – a city of 12,000 people – experienced the trauma of chemical attacks in two bombing runs. Four chemical bombs, each containing 250 kg of sulfur mustard, hit the densely populated town centre. Three more bombs detonated in gardens around the town.
More than 8,000 people were immediately exposed to mustard gas. Within the first hours of the attack, 20 people died. In the coming days over a hundred more fatalities were recorded. Of the 4,500 victims requiring medical attention, 600 were evacuated by air to Tehran. Faride and her children were amongst them.
Not expecting civilians to be attacked by chemical weapons, the Iranian hospitals were simply not prepared for the onslaught of casualties with such horrific injuries. On arrival in Tehran, the Shafa’i family was taken to the airport’s triage post where their injuries were assessed and hospitals were assigned according to the needs of each victim. Faride and her two older daughters were taken to the city’s Baghiatallah Hospital. However, Nahid’s condition was considered to be the most critical. And so, accompanied by her father, she went to the Imam Khomeini Hospital.
In constant, searing pain, Faride and her two older daughters underwent skin treatment for the burns and blisters.
“I can’t describe the sounds of Shahla’s screaming as the doctors treated her burns,” said Faride, “I lay in the bed next to her, unable to see, and listened to her scream in pain. I felt useless. I couldn’t do anything to help. Can you imagine what that is like for a mother?”
The following days were to bring more suffering to this small, humble woman. Four days after they arrived in Tehran, Mohammad Rasoul arrived at the Baghiatallah Hospital to help his wife and daughters. Faride was surprised to see her husband at the hospital and repeatedly asked him what had happened to Nahid. Mohammad Rasoul evaded all his wife’s questions.
Stress levels increased even more for Faride when she was told that Shahla needed to be moved immediately to another hospital with more appropriate equipment for her needs. Faride initially refused to have another daughter taken from her and strongly objected to Shahla’s transfer from Baghiatallah. Mohammad Rasoul stepped in and persuaded Faride that moving Shahla was the best thing and she must cooperate to save her daughter’s life. Faride relented and Shahla was taken to the city’s Mofid Hospital.
After Saddam Hussein’s attacks at Sardasht, many of Iran’s friends rallied to help them in their hour of need. Doctors from a number of countries offered help and many victims were evacuated to European countries including Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and Spain. Faride was told that she and her daughters were to be evacuated to Spain for medical treatment.
“I told the doctors I was not getting on any plane to go anywhere without all my daughters,” said Faride. Although reassured by medical staff that Shahla would meet Faride and Shabnam at Mehrabad Airport, Faride was still suspicious and upset.
“I was very adamant,” she said, “if Shahla was not there at the airport to meet us, then I was not boarding that plane.” Fortunately, Shahla did meet her mother and sister and together they left for Spain.
With still no word about Nahid, Faride asked if she was coming to Spain too.
“My husband told me that Nahid was in a very bad condition and the doctors could not take her off the life-support machines,” said Faride. “I was very suspicious. I had had some disturbing dreams about Nahid, but I was still hopeful for her recovery.”
Now in a different country, Faride says she remembers the looks of shock and horror when she and her family arrived at Spain’s military hospital, Gomez Ulla. The medical staff was expecting wounded soldiers from the front, not women and children. Overcoming their horror, the Spanish doctors and nurses got to work and began a remarkable recovery process, treating their patients with respect and kindness.
“It was so much easier for us women and children in Spain,” said Faride, “the nurses were so caring and affectionate to the children. They would play with them, sing to them and some would even buy toys with their own money to make them feel happy. I cannot thank them enough.”
After two months of intense but effective treatment, Faride and her daughters returned to Iran to finish their recovery in Tehran.
Arriving at Iran’s Mehrabad Airport, Faride and her daughters were met by her aunt and uncle, who took them to their home to rest. That same night, Faride’s uncle asked to have a word with her in private.
“He told me that I should be grateful and thank God that Shabnam, Shahla and myself were fine,” remembered Faride. “I asked my uncle about Nahid and he told me that she was dead and it would be better for me now to forget her.”
Revealing her broken spirit, Faride lowered her head and wept silent tears. She took a long time to suppress the emotional pain. She then wiped her eyes and continued with her heartbreaking story.
Four months after the attack Faride had her first cornea transplant on her left eye. Several months later, a second transplant on her right eye was less successful, causing permanent impaired vision. It was three years after this second cornea transplant, when Faride was scheduled to undergo another eye operation, that she discovered that she was pregnant.
“The doctors were very worried about my pregnancy,” said Faride, “they tried to persuade me to abort the baby. They said that all the medication and the anesthesia would not be good for the baby. I refused to lose another child and said no.”
After months of close medical supervision, Faride gave birth to a daughter, Parisa. The cornea transplant operation was more successful and everyone seemed happy.
Two years after the gas attacks, German lung specialist, Professor Lutz Freitag, carried out a laser surgery operation to remove a blockage in Faride’s lungs, a consequence of the gas attack.
“When I was told that this famous professor was coming to do this operation on a number of chemical weapons victims, “ smiled Faride, “I thought he must have been a really old man. But he was so young! However, the operation did help.”
The procedure succeeded in easing her breathing difficulties, but Faride has had to grow accustomed to a life of constant coughing and dependence on nebulizers and oxygen machines.
But Faride’s medical problems never seemed to end. Recently, diagnosed with breast cancer, Faride had a mastectomy on her left breast a year ago and has just completed chemotherapy.
“Strong women like me don’t like to be sick,” said Faride, “we would give anything to be well again. However, the hardest thing for women like me to bear is not just the injuries, but the stigma.”
Constant coughing and skin discoloration from the burns have brought about soul destroying social stigma. Unable to attend social gatherings because of the persistent coughing, Faride slumped in her chair as she described how she, formerly a very socially active woman, was forced to become a near recluse.
“The worst thing for me,” she said, “was the lack of support from my own family. They would look at me sometimes as if I were contagious. They didn’t want me to come to their parties because the coughing up of phlegm disgusted them. I understand it made them feel uncomfortable but it made life so depressing for me and for my own family. We couldn’t go out anywhere. I was always very lonely.”
Faride sat pensively for a few moments, then continued, “It is not easy for women gas victims here. For men, it is different. They chose to go to war, so they knew the risks. We didn’t ask for this.”
The cultural expectations for married women in Iran made recovery even more difficult for female survivors. Faride says that the network for male victims and war veterans is vast and supportive, but very few support outlets exist for women. Tradition expects women in Iran to have the important role of keeping the family together, educating the children, cooking, shopping and cleaning. As a gas attack victim, these were things she often did not have the strength to do.
“When I am at home,” said Faride, “it seems that I have to do everything a healthy wife does. But I believe if a man is injured, the family don’t expect of him the same responsibilities they expect of a healthy man.”
But the social expectations were there. As a result there was little sympathy for women – they were simply expected to get on with their duties and not complain.
“Even my husband,” Faride said quietly, “had very little sympathy for my illness and hospitalization. It has been very difficult.”
After the long process of treatment and recovery, Faride and her family chose not to return to Sardasht to live, but to the nearby city of Orumieh. She tried to resume her teaching career, but was given very little consideration or sympathy for her injuries.
“The district authority wanted to send me to some very remote city in Anzal,” she said bitterly. “I had to ask them if they cared about my problems or not.” After months of negotiation, the district authorities accepted her doctor’s recommendation to stay in Urumieh.
“It was so difficult, but my teaching colleagues at least were supportive,” she said. “They would help me with the paperwork and allow me to work as a substitute teacher.” With the support of her colleagues she continued teaching until the statutory retirement age.
Faride’s voice speaks for the many silent women, who suffer from the consequences of chemical attacks and who feel ignored by society.
“Women need more support than men,” she said, “especially psychological support.” Explaining that women are vulnerable to oppression and strict social expectations, Faride suggested that authorities need to find a way for such women to live comfortable and independent lives.
“Maybe the government can made some centres or facilities so that these women can live together in peace,” Faride explained. “I’m not talking about a fancy, equipped centre. Just somewhere safe. Somewhere that is happy.”
Despite suffering from depression, Faride speaks out on her experiences in the hope that future generations will learn from the suffering of war and chemical weapons.
“I want to tell the people in government and politics to think about the consequences of their actions,” she said, “we need to live in a peaceful world.”
Today Faride continues to raise awareness about the atrocities of chemical weapons attacks. And the strength of this diminutive woman – and the power of her voice – speaks out to us from her heart for a world free from chemical weapons.
Oral reflection by: Faride Shafa’i
Farsi to English translation by Elaheh Pooyandeh
Written by Elizabeth Lewis
All Rights Reserved
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Alireza Yazdanpanah
ALI REZA
Ali Reza Yazdanpanah was 15 years old when he volunteered to join the front. The year was 1987 and Iraq was at war with Iran. But that single act of patriotism would change his life forever.
Ali Reza would serve at the front for only a few months and would witness bitter fighting at Khoramshahr and at Shalamcheh. In Shalamcheh he would be gassed in a chemical weapons attack. The effects of the mustard gas would forever shape his life.
Now a volunteer at the Tehran Peace Museum, aged 42, Ali Reza invites visitors to look back on his war experiences.
Many young men throughout history have answered the call to serve their country during times of conflict. And like many others, Ali Reza was under-age when he served towards the end of the Iran-Iraq War, which lasted a full eight years. It was through sheer grit and determination that he succeeded in joining up to defend his country.
“I was only seven when the Iranian Revolution occurred in 1979,” said Ali Reza. “The war started one year later in 1980 when Saddam’s army invaded Iran, and so, by 1987, we thought the war might be coming to an end. I was worried that I would never get a chance to serve my country.”
The war with Iraq had been raging for seven years, and Ali Reza had watched friends and family members leave home to defend Iran. It tore at the young man’s heart that he would miss the opportunity to fulfill what he considered his duty. So he set out to join the volunteer soldier unit – the Basij. But his father found out and – unexpectedly for Ali Reza – turned up at the training camp where Ali Reza had enrolled. The camp commander was informed that Ali Reza was far too young to fight and ought to be completing his school. Ali Reza was asked to return home. His first attempt to enlist was foiled.
Undeterred by this initial setback, Ali Reza then used more creative means of subterfuge to achieve his goal.
“Anyone can forge an ID card,” smiled Ali Reza. “Of course, the authorities can spot a fake easily, so I decided to present the correct papers. My dad was a Gendarme who patrolled outlying areas. I waited until he had gone off on duty, rushed up to my mum and breathlessly told her she had to sign some papers for school right away or I would get into serious trouble. She signed the papers and I faked my dad’s signature. It was as simple as that. I was 15 years old. I hadn’t even started to grow a beard!”
Coping with his family’s reaction proved much more difficult. Although Ali Reza’s family was proud of their son, the fear of losing him drove his mother, he said, “to inconsolable tears”. Ali Reza found it painful to watch the visible distress his mother felt at the possibility of losing her first-born son. But it was his father’s angry words about his deception that swirled in his mind. Refusing to say goodbye to his son as he marched off to war, Mr. Yazdanpanah said, “If anything happens to you, I won’t come for you.”
After two months of basic training, the young Ali Reza found himself carrying wounded soldiers as a stretcher-bearer in the 90-man-strong 21st Corps of Imam Reza. At the beginning of April 1987, his unit was involved in Operation 8th Karbala at Shalamcheh, which turned out to be one of the bloodiest battles of the war. The intense fighting at Shallamcheh was exhausting and, around April 6th, the entire unit was sent to the port town of Khorramshahr to rest. By a twist of fate, the gas attacks came down – shortly after lunch on April 10th – exactly on top of Khorramshahr.
It was a day, said Ali Reza, which he will never forget.
“All of a sudden, we heard the unmistakable sound of jet engines. Some of us younger men ran outside and looked up to the sky. There were more than ten Iraqi fighter jets circling up above us,” Ali Reza remembered.
In the confusion that followed this reconnaissance flight, some of the older veterans chastised the “young pups” for exposing themselves and giving away their location.
Sure enough, within five minutes, five Iraqi jets returned and circled overhead. Two flew off, and the three remaining jets flew low over the encampment.
“There was a deafening roar,” said Ali Reza, “and the ground began to shake. The planes were flying so low over us that we could read all the markings on them. We were unprepared for any attack, let alone a gas attack. We were scared.”
Minutes later, the jets each dropped a bomb on what appeared to be random, non-strategic locations. The bombs all landed with a dull thud. There was none of the usual explosion with conventional bombs. Hindsight would reveal to Ali Reza that chemical weapons do not contain an ordinary explosive detonator. The gas simply leaks out and then comes a strange smell of garlic in the air. There did not seem to be any massive damage to their surroundings. This left the men of Imam Reza Corps confused and even more frightened.
“You know,” said Ali Reza, “we were all a little scared and shocked. We really didn’t know what had just happened. Some of us even made jokes about the pilots. I mean what kind of idiot drops bombs without choosing a proper target?”
Unaware of the extreme danger they were in, the men returned to work. The communication lines had been damaged and wires were cut. The repairs and the cleaning up process were a priority for the unit, and they went back to work completely unaware of how their lives were about to change – irreparably – and forever.
Within two hours, a medical team from Khorramshahr, aware of the chemical attack, arrived at the camp to evacuate the men to the nearest hospitals. “We had no idea we were injured,” said Ali Reza unaware that he had been exposed to mustard gas. “We were starting to feel strange. Our skin and our eyes started to itch and burn. We were coughing a little. We figured we would just go along with these guys to the hospital, get some pills and all would be fine.”
Nothing could have been further from the truth.
As Ali Reza was moved from the military field hospital to the city hospital in Ahvaz, the effects of the mustard gas intensified. The sensation of severe burning, the inability to breathe properly, burning eyes and vomiting took over.
“It was when I was transferred to hospital, two hours after the attack that the effects of the chemical bomb started to show on my body,” recollected Ali Reza. “My whole body was burning. My face, my eyes all felt like they were on fire and even my voice had changed to a rough, rasping sound. My throat and mouth were burning. When I got to the hospital, the medics took off my clothes and burned them. My body was washed with soap and water and I was taken to a hospital ward.”
The Iranian military had not expected such large-scale gas attacks and found themselves in an impossible situation. Without the necessary medical support and infrastructure, the army and civilian doctors improvised to cope with this emergency.
Buses, with the seats removed, were used as large ambulances ferrying wounded soldiers to any available hospital. Men were packed into military cargo planes and taken to Tehran. In a mass humanitarian rallying of support for the gas victims, military personnel, civilian doctors, volunteers of the Iranian Red Crescent and ordinary people cooperated to help the sick and wounded.
“It was on the flight to Mehrabad in Tehran, “ said Ali Reza “that I just couldn’t stop vomiting. The vomit was green and smelled of the fish I had eaten for lunch. I was taken to a hospital in Tehran, but I don’t remember much. I got off the bus at the hospital and fell to the ground.”
Ali Reza was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit in the Loghmaniddoleh hospital. He was to spend three months in this hospital, where he was treated for skin burns, incapacitated lungs and loss of vision. During his stay here, Ali Reza was visited by a United Nations team of experts lead by Dr. Manuel Dominguez, involved in an investigation into Iraq’s then-alleged use of chemical weapons against Iran. Part of the UN team’s mandate was to interview victims in order to ultimately prove the use of chemical weapons in the conflict. Ali Reza is mentioned in the final report.
Before the attack, Ali Reza was an athletic young man, a keen football player and weighed a muscular 60 kilograms. Within days of being gassed, the young soldier was reduced to 43 kilograms, struggling with a voice that had changed completely as he gasped for breath. His skin, darkened by the gas, was covered in excruciatingly painful burns. His vision had gone.
Taking pity on the young man, one of the nurses spoke to him about his family. The nurse wanted his family to know what had happened to him and to come and see him.
Ali Reza remembered with a deep sense of gratitude this angel of mercy who helped reach out to his family. “Nurse Maryam was very kind to me,” he said, “she asked for my parents’ telephone number. I had to tell her that in my village there were no telephones. She used her own money to send a telegraph to one of my relatives to tell them I had been injured in a chemical weapons attack and to please come and see me.”
Two days later, Ali Reza’s father and his uncle arrived in Tehran. His father had no knowledge of chemical weapons and didn’t know what to expect. Nurse Maryam led him into the Intensive Care Unit, where Ali Reza was lying covered in an oxygen tent, a burnt shadow of his former self.
“This is your son,” said the nurse.
Mr. Yazdanpanah took one look at Ali Reza and said, “That’s impossible. This is not my son.”
“I heard my father’s voice,” Ali Reza said, “then I called his name. I heard him fall to the floor and start to cry.”
There followed months of hospitalization and treatment, which continues even to this day. Ali Reza has endured four cornea transplants and is on the waiting list for a lung transplant. Every day is a struggle with breathing. Between the time of the attack and today, Ali Reza has spent twelve years living near the Caspian Sea where the climate was considered better for his health. But this no longer helps him and he has to live somewhere with easier access to a well-equipped hospital in case of emergency. So he has returned full time to Tehran.
Life for Ali Reza is centred around daily medication intake and reliance on oxygen concentrator machines. He carries a portable oxygen maker and at night uses a BiPAP machine to prevent his lungs from collapsing while he sleeps. For Ali Reza, there is never such a thing as a good night’s sleep.
Although the scars from the burns have healed, Ali Reza has had to come to terms with deeper, emotional pain. “At first, I thought I would return to my old self,” he said. “But the days of being a strong young man disappeared the day of the gas attack. Those days will never return and I have accepted that now.”
Life was, indeed, never the same. Chronic illness and repeated hospitalization have prevented Ali Reza from being able to hold down a permanent job. Because of the embarrassment of continuous coughing in classes, he was unable to take advantage of the educational opportunities offered to war veterans.
“I admit I was a bit of a lazy student,” he said, “but I really liked going to school. The problem was that I was always coughing in class. I couldn’t help it, and each coughing bout went on for a long time. It disturbed the other students and they didn’t like it. Once I was coughing so badly, I was sent away from school in an ambulance.”
Without a job, Ali Reza sank into depression and loneliness. His condition meant that he had to rely on family members to help him complete basic every day tasks. “The pressures of being an invalid in the family made life difficult and distressing for everyone,” he recalled.
“For a long time,” he said, “my mother had to wash me. I felt so ashamed.”
Now, Ali Reza is a new man, full of confidence, restored dignity and with a purpose to live. At the Tehran Peace Museum, he has found support for chemical weapons victims and made new friends. He has travelled to Japan and visited Hiroshima and shared his story with others who have had similar experiences.
“My medical condition is a part of me now,” he explained, “it has shaped me to become who I am. I am a poster for my country. I want to show myself to the world, to show the effects of these horrible weapons. It is my wish that this will stop people from fighting, stop people’s first instinct to reach for weapons. It is my mission, until my last breath, to share my story and hope people will understand it is important to live a life of peace.”
Ali Reza is a man on a mission. His mission is to contribute in some way to achieving peace in this world.
Oral reflection by: Alireza Yazdanpanah
Farsi to English translation by Elaheh Pooyandeh
Written by Elizabeth Lewis
All Rights Reserved
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The oral History of CW victims in Tehran Peace Museum website
From now on, you can read the memories of the victims of CW here. These victims share their experiences as a victim of CW after being exposed to CW. But they also have message for people around the world, which is Peace and Friendship. They wish a world of in which, nobody suffers from the use of a prohibited weapon.
The oral history of these victims is not only a first-hand source of understanding the inhuman characteristic of CW, violence of war and its consequences, but they also can help the interested people, researches and students in their researches.
You can send us your feedback and ask your questions from these victims through our email address: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
A Brief History of Chemical Weapons
Although chemical weapons have been described in ancient historic texts, it was during the First World War from 1914-1918 that they were used deliberately in conflict. At Ypres, in 1915, gas attacks took place in the trenches leading to many painful deaths and to horrendous casualties. It was at the end of the Great War that politicians and international organizations collaborated to see an end to the use of such weapons in combat.
In 1925, the Geneva Protocol was signed under the auspices of the League of Nations. This Protocol was a significant step forward in prohibiting the use of asphyxiating, poisonous and other gases as well as other bacteriological forms of warfare. Over 130 countries, including Iran and Iraq, signed the Geneva Protocol. Unfortunately, the protocol had a limited effect, as it did not prohibit the stockpiling of either chemical or biological weapons.
In World War II, there is evidence that both the Allies and the Axis powers possessed chemical weapons. The war came to an end with the dropping of the nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. In the post-war period, a number of countries have continued to stockpile chemical and biological weapons.
In Iran’ recent history, it was during the war with Iraq from 1980-1988, that military personnel and civilians alike were exposed to chemical weapons used by Iraqi forces. Although the first gas attack was recorded in 1983, most attacks occurred during the last two years of the Iran-Iraq War.
According to a report by UNMOVIC, Iraq deployed almost 1,800 tonnes of mustard gas, 140 tonnes of tabun, and 600 tonnes of sarin. Of the approximately one million people exposed to mustard gas, 100,000 required medical care and today 75,000 continue to be chronically ill.
In 1992, after 12 years of negotiations in the so-called “Disarming Conference”, participating states delegations finally agreed on the text for inclusion in the Convention of Chemical Weapons. In 1993, more than 130 countries signed the convention, which finally came into force on April 29th, 1997.
Sadly, chemical weapons continue to be used and stockpiled today. But, here at the Tehran Peace Museum, you will find committed peace activists campaigning for an end to chemical weapons.
Ali Asgaari
Ali Asgaari
“In war, if a bullet hits you, it will either kill you or wound you. The physical effects normally don’t last forever. But the effects of chemical weapons cause problems for generations. The world needs to know more about these weapons.”
Wounded in a chemical weapons attack in 1988 on Iran’s western front during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), Ali Asgaari talks about his injuries, his medical treatment and the social stigma incurred by his wounds.
Ali Asgaari at the Tehran Peace Museum, April 2014 |
Driven by pride in his country and a sense of responsibility to his fellow Iranians, Ali Asgaari joined up as a volunteer soldier to fight in the Iran-Iraq War. The year was 1983. He was 17 years old. After five years of loyal service, during which he received some brutal injuries, Ali had recovered and found himself in the mountainous region of Suleymania Province, south of Halabja, on Iran’s western border.
It was shortly after the Iranian New Year festival of Now Ruz, early in the morning on the 25th of March 1988. It was the day Iraqi fighter jets dropped a mustard gas bomb within 10 metres of the position where he and his comrades were huddled. It was a day Ali Asgaari will never forget.
In less than two hours after the attack, Ali had been rushed to the decontamination zone at the Rajensi medical post. With the exception of some slight burning on his skin, Ali was at this point still unaffected by the mustard gas. When he saw the medical staff dressed in specialized suits and gas masks, he was amused by what he thought were strange and unnecessary outfits.
“We laughed at all those people,” Ali says, “to us they just looked crazy. We shouted at them, ‘Look at us. We just came from a chemical war zone. We are all ok – see how we are dressed!’ We had no idea what had happened to us.”
It didn’t take long for the effects of the chemical weapons to start. Severe vomiting, burning skin and blurred vision afflicted Ali, and he soon lost consciousness. Suffering from third degree burns, Ali was again evacuated by air to the Feiz Hospital in Esfahan.
Ali as young volunteer soldier |
“The treatment at Feiz was crude and painful,” Ali remembers. “The doctors gave us baths and scrubbed us with rough exfoliating gloves. Then they cut off our blisters with a surgical knife. It was absolute torture. It has left me with terrible scars on my body.”
At this point, Ali’s family in Tehran took matters into their own hands. Ali’s brother hired a private ambulance and drove to Esfahan to collect Ali and bring him back to Tehran.
“My brother had no clear plan,” Ali says, “we arrived at Tehran’sLabbafiNejad hospital in the early hours of the morning without any referral papers… nothing. But my brother begged the doctors to admit me and they did.”
In Tehran, Ali underwent two months of concentrated treatment for his burns. Daily baths in sterilized water and antiseptic followed by careful application of silver sulfadiazine burn-ointment soon helped Ali’s skin to improve. To maintain privacy, female nurses were not permitted to assist the soldiers in this process and Ali’s his childhood friends came from his village to help him.
One later bout of septicemia resulted in him being placed in an isolation room. Even as he describes the torturous treatment, Ali manages to maintain his insuppressiblesense of humour.
Ali (bottom row, second from left) with comrades |
“I was in the isolation room covered in a plastic tent,” Ali laughs, “when my family came to see me they had to look at me through a window. I felt like a fish in an aquarium!”
Ali’s hands were severely burned and the debridement – the surgical removal of dead or damaged skin – and initial treatment was excruciatingly painful for him.
“My hands were in a really bad state,” he recalls with what seems like a misplaced grin, “and the treatment was excruciating. There was this big, tough nurse helping me and I begged her to stop. I am ashamed to say I even cursed in front of her. She told me that if she stopped the doctors would have to amputate my hands. I told her to cut off my hands. You know what she did? She got the doctors to send for my father to lay down the law!”
Map of Suleymania Province, courtesy of Google Maps. The red dot marks where the chemical bomb was dropped near Ali. |
There followed two years of complex skin-grafting procedures and plastic surgery to heal Ali’s hands.
“The doctors grafted skin from my leg,” says Ali, “and stitched this skin onto the wounds on my hands, covering them with layers of dressings. It was complicated and very painful. I couldn’t bend or stretch my hands or fingers. For a long time, my hands were in splints. My hands felt like large pieces of leather.”
Describing the discomfort of his wounds Ali tells us how difficult life was for the first few years after the chemical attack.
Ali (right) with comrades in Suleymania Province |
“I hardly ever left the house,” Ali recalls, “and sat in front of the air conditioner in nothing but my underwear. Clothes would cause my skin to itch and I would scratch and cause more scarring. For the first six months of being at home, I couldn’t use my hands for risk of infection. I had to get help to go to the bathroom. It was so embarrassing. No grown man should have to do that.”
In the immediate aftermath of the chemical attacks, doctors focused almost exclusively on Ali’s burns and the damage to his lungs and eyes were left largely ignored.
Ali has severe breathing problems and any kind of physical exertion is difficult. A walk of more than 100 metres exhausts him and he has a constant heavy cough.
“I cough all the time,” Ali says, “and I have trouble with a lot of phlegm. I have to cough it up all the time. It is most unpleasant, especially for people around me. But my eyes have given me more trouble than my lungs.”
Ali suffered from typical temporary blindness after the attacks, but it was only after he was discharged from hospital after his skin treatment that Ali and the doctors noticed that the sclera – the white part of the eye – began to change colour to yellow and grey. His eyes were red and inflamed and he began to feel pain and burning.
Ali being treated for chemical weapons burns, 1988 |
Ali visited a number of ophthalmologists in the years following the gas attacks, but none of them made any connections between his eye problems and the mustard gas. It was not, in fact, until 1992, when Ali enrolled in the ShahidBeheshti University in Tehran to study economics that his eye problems worsened considerably and he was introduced to a doctor who understood the consequences of chemical weapons on the eye.
“I finally found the doctor I really needed in Professor Mohammad Ali Javadi,” Ali says with a great sense of pride. “Professor Javadi treated me for two years and operated on my eyes to cauterize the tear ducts to keep the water inside my eyes. It helped a little, but I still had problems.”
Professor Javadifinally recommended Alito go and see Dr. KhosroJadidi, the pioneering eye surgeon who had already carried out stem cell transplants on many chemical weapons survivors. In the year 2000, Ali underwent stem cell surgery to improve his vision.
“Dr. Jadidi took some healthy conjunctiva tissue from my brother’s eye,” Ali says, “and transplanted it into my eyes. For gas attack victims, stem cells do not function properly and so they cannot regenerate. For my brother, it was no problem at all.”
The success of the stem cell surgery meant that Ali could become a candidate for corneal transplants. He has already had one successful cornea transplant on his left eye and is on the waiting list for a cornea transplant to his right eye.
While Ali continues to struggle with lung and eye problems, he relates that one of the most difficult challenges for recovering chemical weapons victims is the social stigma brought about by public ignorance of their injuries.
“Not everyone looks at you and sees a war hero,” says Ali.
With shoulders drooped and a sense of despondency, Ali continues to relate the perspectives of soldiers wounded on active duty by mustard gas.
Ali being treated with silver sulfadiazine burn ointment, April 1988 |
“I cough a lot because of my lung injures,” says Ali, “and so it is really difficult to be in public places like cinemas or theatres or at speeches. Once I start to cough, it is difficult to stop and people in public have no patience for it. People are disgusted by my need to spit up phlegm and ask me to leave. It is embarrassing for me, and of course for my wife and family.”
Ali’s constant train-like coughing was one of the reasons he dropped out of university.
“The other students in the classhad no patience with my coughing,” Ali recalls. “It was especially difficult in the wintertime. My chest would hurt and I would need to cough. Usually, I had to get up and leave the class.”
So, reluctantly, Ali left university. He then found a job at the Ministry of Economy, but the daily drive to work by motorbike and the city’s pollution caused more problems for his already overstrained eyes. Pain and headaches would mean that on his return home from work each day, Ali would have to lie down in a dark room for several hours to relieve the stress.
Ali’s discoloured and scarred skin has also caused him much public humiliation.
“I have friends,” he says, “and members of my own family who won’t even shake my hand. They are repulsed by my injuries. People don’t understand what I’ve been through. I once drank from a public water fountain. I washed the cup and put it back, but the person next to me looked disgusted and refused to drink from the same glass.”
Ali explains that the public does not know what has happened to chemical weapons survivors, which results in little or no sympathy and disappointing prejudice.
“I have had to learn to cope with my appearance,” Ali says, “but the problem is how do I communicate with people about the way I look. When I was going through my skin-grafting treatment my hands were in splints. I got into a taxi and the woman next to me asked what had happened to my hands. I told her a dog bit me! How could I explain to her everything that had happened to me?”
Ali shows the burns to his skin, April 1988 |
The holy month of Ramazan is a particularly difficult time for all chemical weapons victims. Unable to fast due to their physical condition and the need to take constant medication, many survivors facethe unkind judgmental behavior of others, causing severe embarrassment and a loss of self-respect.
“Once, during Ramazan,” remembers Ali, “I was visiting a graveyard and began to feel ill. I needed to drink some water, so went off somewhere discreet where I thought I wouldn’t be seen. The mother of one of the soldiers killed in action saw me. She was very angry and began to curse me for not fasting during Ramazan when all these other men had died for my freedom. It was a very troubling experience.”
Ali now feels it is his responsibility to raise awareness about the medical treatment for chemical weapons victims. Having suffered terribly and undergone extensive medical treatment himself, he is passionate about the need to share information about the treatment of gas attack survivors with the medical community at large.
“Survivors can’t just see a normal doctor when they get sick,” Ali explains. “We have to see specialists for our lung, our eyes, and our skin. If we go to an ordinary doctor when we have a cold or another illness, they do not understand our war injuries. It is not that they are bad doctors. Not at all! Their lack of awareness of the needs of chemical weapons survivors causes them to prescribe the wrong medication and treatment.”
Finding the correct medication is a serious problem for chemical weapons survivors in Iran. The UN Security Council Resolution 1696 has imposed crippling sanctions on the Iranian economy. For chemical weapons survivors this means the inability to access necessary medication and equipment and when medicine is available, the price is often prohibitive.
“Some of our medication is manufactured in Iran,” Ali says, “but a lot of it is imported and because of the sanctions it is difficult to find and, of course, it is expensive.”
Ali is also convinced that not enough credence is given to the role of traditional medicine in helping survivors. He feels that doctors should take herbal medicines into account when treating the whole patient, not just the symptoms of their injuries.
Ali at Hiroshima Memorial Park in August 2014 |
“The whole body needs to be treated,” says Ali, “not just one part. Everyone is unique and needs their particular prescription to suit their specific needs. Traditional medicine practitioners look at a person’s whole body and treat the problem accordingly. More people should adopt this approach.”
While Ali wishes to share his story with people outside of Iran to aid understanding of the plight of chemical weapons victims, he also stresses the need for Iranians to share their vast medical expertise with others.
“I think it is important,” Ali says, “that we in Iran share the medical knowledge and experience we have gained from treating gas attack victims. We can share our understanding with other countries so that they can help to save the lives of other people too, no matter what country they live in.”
Ali ends his interview with a strong message.
“I want doctors and the medical community to understand that when you see a chemical weapons victim, you need a holistic approach to solving their medical problems. It is not enough to just look at one organ in the body. Doctors must heal the whole body, because after exposure to mustard gas, the whole body is damaged.”
Oral reflection by: Ali Asgaari
Farsi to English translation by Elaheh Pooyandeh
Written by Elizabeth Lewis
All Rights Reserved
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Young Reporters at The Tehran Peace Museum
Young Reporters at The Tehran Peace Museum
The Tehran Peace Museum’s new Young Reporters project brings the city’s teenagers to ask questions about war and chemical weapons, and also to write about peace.
With Iran’s school children getting a full three months for their summer vacation, many parents struggle to find things to keep their young people busy. Part of the answer may be found in what a group of young teenagers from eight of Tehran’s public schools may have the answer.
Young Reporters Group at Tehran Peace Museum. Standing (from left):Ms. Saidian, Ms. Gilani, Ali, Aryan, Ali Khateri, Ms Rashid (Saghar's mother), Ms. Babai. Kneeling (from left): Mohammad Mahdi, Ms Pooyandeh, Saghar, Zahra, Yas |
At the beginning of the summer holidays, the Tehran Peace Museum, in association with a number of teachers from local schools, began a pilot project called Young Reporters.
The main objective of the project is to encourage Iran’s younger generation to discover their history through interviewing those veterans who served in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988) – some of whom were victims of chemical weapons attacks.
Ms. Kuniko Yamamura Babaei, supervisor of the museum’s Iran-Japan Cultural Exchange Project, initiated the idea for the youth programme following a similar example she witnessed at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum.
“If it is only the old people who talk about their own stories,” says Ms. Babaei, “this will never be the answer for the younger generation. They have their own questions to ask. We can help young people to understand about peace by teaching them about war.”
“We can help young
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As a result of the collaboration, a group of students have become actively involved in in the work of the Tehran Peace Museum and are interacting with the museum’s extended community of friends.
Overcoming stereotypical perceptions of how war veterans are perceived was the first step in “humanizing” this brutal and “imposed” war.
“Before I came to the museum,” says a young Mohammad Mahdi, “I had always thought that all war veterans were very religious – stern– unhappy people. I got this image from watching movies and from what adults I know used to tell me. But when I met the survivors, they were really friendly and laugh and joke just like ordinary people. I now share their stories with my own family.”
The young students spend their time voluntarily at the museum and interview chemical weapons survivors from the war period. They learn about the medical consequences of the attacks and become much more knowledgeable about the horrors of chemical weapons. They report on the survivors’ dedication to creating a culture of positive peace.
Young Reporters inspired by Mahatma Gandhi |
“After I visited to the museum and after I met the guides,” says Aryan, “I think I really came to understand what the consequences of chemical weapons were and why these weapons should be forbidden. I came to feel powerfully that it has to be a crime to use them.”
For the chemical weapons survivors it has also been a challenging project, which has brought them into greater contact with the youth of today.
Hassan HassanSa’di, a war veteran who was the victim of a chemical weapons attack near Faw in 1986, is now a volunteer guide at the museum and an eager peace activist.
“You know, the young people ask us really difficult questions,” says Hassan, “things we had never really thought about before. But we respect their perspectives and we have to think about what is important for them to know.”
“The young people change a lot after coming to the museum,” continues Hassan, “they are frightened of us at first. But they soon overcome this and find out that we are friendly, after all. They also realize we are a first hand source for vital information about chemical weapons.”
The students all agree that their perception of war and the veterans has changed entirely though spending time at the museum and their eager faces reflect a determination to share ideas about peace.
“After my first day here,” says Yas, “I explained everything to my parents. We talked about war and how the absence of war is the first step to peace.”
As well as learning to become volunteer guides, the students have made video presentations about the museum and plan to write information leaflets specifically targeted towards the younger generation. Following the Learning-by-Doing method of understanding, the students are implementing quizzes for young visitors to learn about peace.
Young Reporters and chemical weapons survivors at entrance to the Tehran Peace Museum |
“When you spend time here at the Tehran Peace Museum,” says 16 year old Ali Khateri, “you start not liking the images of war. You learn that people here – those who have actually lived through war – are more interested in the concept of peace.”
The Young Reporters are an enthusiastic group of young people, keen to get involved and share their ideas about peace with others. The project, although only in its early days of existence, has proved to be successful in raising awareness against weapons of mass destruction and listening to the young voices of peace.
Farsi to English translation by Elaheh Pooyandeh
Written by Elizabeth Lewis
All Rights Reserved
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Hassan Hassan Tabar
Hassan Hassan Tabar
Burnt, blistered skin. Blindness. Chronic lung disease. Depression. These are but a few of the effects on Iranian survivors of the chemical weapons attacks during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988).
Hassan Hassan Tabar, an army commander, shares his experiences of the chemical attacks in Khorramshahr in 1986 and how he has found the strength to survive.
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Hassan Hassan Tabar was born in Babol, near the Caspian Sea, in November 1965. He was a high school student majoring in economics in 1980, when Iraq invaded Iran over a territorial dispute. This series of events caused Hassan to make a choice that would change the course of his own life forever.
“The year was 1980,” says Hassan, “and I enlisted as a volunteer soldier. I didn’t have my parent’s permission of course. But I was big for my age and I was quite fit, so no one suspected that I was not really 18 years old.”
Hassan then embarked upon a military career that saw him serve three years as a volunteer soldier until 1983 before he joined the regular army. In 1985 he returned to Babol to his young wife and family but only stayed a brief six months before returning to the front.
“I wanted to get back to the front,” Hassan says, “I even asked the army to send me back. In fact, I was sent back to the front with two of my brothers-in-law. We were stationed in Ahvaz. I was one of five commanding officers in our corps.”
On the 9th of February 1986, Hassan was involved in the operation known as the 8th Valfajr, when the Iranian army succeeded in capturing the strategic port of Faw from Iraq. After the successful operation had been completed, Hassan crossed back over to the Iranian side of the Arvand River separating Iran from Iraq, and went to visit his brother-in-law, Mohammad-Ali.
On arrival at the military base, Hassan remembered hearing the sound of Iraqi fighter planes overhead. Spotting close to 20 airplanes, Hassan, his brother-in-law and five other comrades, took cover near some sandbags as Iraqi aircraft began aerial bombing. Iraqi ground forces also started pounding the Iranians with artillery from across the river.
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“We were being hit from across and from above,” recalls Hassan, “so my comrades and I took cover near a wall of sandbags. One of the airplanes dropped a bomb about six metres away from us. We heard the bomb sort-of explode. But it was not like a normal explosion. The bomb just opened up. So we hid under cover of the sandbags. Of course, we now realize that was the worst thing we could’ve possibly done.”
Within 15 minutes, the entire area was permeated with a strange garlic-smelling gas. Hassan and his colleagues ran to put on their gas masks.
But, it was too late.
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Half an hour later, the effects of the mustard gas began – weeping, burning eyes followed by itching and burning skin. Fortunately, the men had access to a military vehicle and all seven drove as fast as they possibly could to the medical emergency unit, where doctors sent them to the already overcrowded field hospital at Al-Zahra.
After initial treatment of cool showers and the removal of their contaminated clothes, Hassan and his brother-in-law were sent by ambulance bus to Ahvaz. Their symptoms worsened and were compounded by violent vomiting.
“At the beginning of the journey,” says Hassan, “Mohammad-Ali didn’t appear to have symptoms like me. He sat next to me, stroking my arm and saying comforting words. But in no time at all, Mohammad-Ali began to vomit until all he was throwing up was blood.”
Hassan’s memories of his hospital treatment in Ahvaz tell of a time of confusion and pain. The mustard gas had caused the blood to stop circulating regularly, and after receiving an injection of some medicine from a doctor, he soon lost consciousness.
“I don’t remember anything after that,” says Hassan, “I really don’t. About 20 days later, I regained consciousness. I was in a dark room in some hospital. I couldn’t even pick out images one metre from my face. When I came round, there was a nurse sitting near me. She was wearing a strange uniform, different from anything I had ever seen in Iran. When I regained consciousness, she shouted to a doctor in a language I didn’t understand.”
Hassan had been evacuated to Belgium and was being treated in the University Hospital of Ghent under the supervision of Professor Aubin Heyndrickx, the renowned toxicology expert. Professor Heyndrickx and his team of colleagues were responsible for the treatment and recovery of many Iranians who fell victim to the most severe effects of chemical weapons during the Iran-Iraq War.
Suffering from terrible lung injuries, Hassan was placed in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of the hospital for more than three weeks.
Hassan (left) as a young volunteer soldier in March 1980 |
He was only able to breathe by means of a ventilator. The doctors kept him under permanent sedation during this period to alleviate the excruciating pain. The medical staff took extreme precautions to protect the blisters on his skin to prevent scarring. His eyes, also severely damaged, were treated daily and covered with bandages. Hassan could see little or nothing.
“I have no idea how long I stayed like this,” says Hassan, “after a while my condition began to improve and the doctors removed the ventilator tubes. I was able to breathe using an oxygen mask and was sent to another room where the treatment for my burned skin started.”
As Hassan describes the painful skin treatment, the memories are clearly reflected in his weary eyes.
“I couldn’t wear any clothes or even a hospital gown,” remembers Hassan. “I had to be naked and doctors spread the ointment on bandages. Then they draped the bandages carefully over my body. The ointment was so cold that, even though the room was warm, I would shake uncontrollably for about 10 minutes. I was in so much pain all the time. I couldn’t think about anything, not even my family.”
During this period, Hassan’s pain and suffering absorbed his whole attention and he spoke regretfully that neither his wife nor family entered his thoughts. Far away from home in an unfamiliar country, Hassan found, however, that he was not alone. Staff from the Iranian Embassy in Belgium, including the chargé d’affaires, came to visit Hassan and other survivors being cared for at the university hospital.
Iranian students living in Belgium volunteered to come to the hospital and, operating in a roster of three shifts, they acted as interpreters for the patients and the medical staff.
Hassan (left) in Kurdistan Province, July 1982 |
It was, in fact, through the intervention of the Iranian chargé d’affaires in Belgium that Hassan’s family finally found out where he was and that he was still alive and recovering. About two weeks before his return to Iran, the chargé d’affaires arranged for Hassan’s family to speak to him by telephone.
“My family knew I had been sent to Belgium,” Hassan says, “but my wife didn’t know if I was dead or still alive.”
At the same time, the chargé d’affaires arranged for Hassan to speak to his brother-in-law, Mohammad-Ali, who had been sent to a hospital in The Netherlands.
“It was the last time I spoke to him,” says Hassan sadly. “Mohammad-Ali never returned to Iran. He died seven months later. He was only 18.”
During his time in hospital in Belgium, Hassan, through the help of one of the Iranian volunteer students, began to listen to the inspirational tapes of one of Iran’s renowned clerics, Haji-Kafi. Hassan’s faith began to give him the strength to recover quickly in order to return home to Iran and his family.
“I was determined to go home,” reflects Hassan with pride, “but the doctors said that I must stay in Belgium as I was not ready. I told them that I would take full responsibility for my decision. I didn’t mind what the consequences were. I just wanted to go home.”
When Hassan returned to Iran, however, his appearance had changed so drastically that his own father couldn’t recognize him. An athletic young man weighing 73kgs before the attacks, he returned to Iran as a 40kg invalid with burned and discolored skin.
“I was standing one metre in front of my father,” says Hassan, “but he couldn’t pick me out from the crowd. When he saw it was really me, my father broke down and cried.”
Although Hassan was expected to go immediately to hospital in Tehran to continue his treatment, his father insisted that he return home to Babol first and see his wife and family. Hassan’s father secured medication and sedatives from doctors at the airport and then took his son home by private car on the long and winding road through the Alborz Mountains to Babol.
“I arrived after sunset,” Hassan remembers, “and when my family saw me they all started to cry. My older son ran away from me. He couldn’t recognize me as my skin was so very dark.”
Unable to tolerate light and the touch of his wife and relatives, his homecoming was a sad affair.
Hassan (left) with comrade near Ahvaz, February 1983 |
“I had been wounded before,” says Hassan, “but it was not the same as this. My family looked at me differently. They couldn’t believe what they saw and they all found it very difficult to take it in. But they were happy I was home.”
Afterwards, Hassan embarked on a long treatment process for his eye and lung injuries. One of the consequences of a mustard gas attack on the eyes is permanent damage to the tear ducts, which naturally lubricate the eyes. In one operation, surgeons stitched Hassan’s eyelids together at the corners to keep the eyes moist and protect the cornea.
“If you look closely at my eyes,” says Hassan, “you can see where they are still stitched at the corner edge. I still can’t open my eyes completely. I have had so many operations. In fact, in 1989 I went completely blind.”
Hassan’s chronic lung problems have resulted in low functioning lung capacity. After an angiography sealed a leak in one of his veins, Hassan’s breathing difficulties have improved although he still coughs up blood clots and a common cold can cause severe breathing difficulties.
But, perhaps, the most difficult wounds to heal were the unseen ones.
“There was a heavy toll too on my psychological state of mind,” says Hassan. “I would get very sad and depressed and of course that just worsened my physical condition.”
One unfortunate consequence of mustard gas exposure in men is sexual dysfunction and the loss of libido. The sense of impotence has adverse psychological effects on survivors, particularly those like Hassan who have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Often, during sexual activity, these men suffer panic attacks from shortness of breath and indigestion resulting in periods of self-doubt about their manhood.
Hassan near Faw in December 1985 |
“I usually don’t say this because I am ashamed,” Hassan says, “but shortly after I returned to Iran I felt that I wasn’t a real man. I felt emasculated. I would tell my doctors that I had this problem that I couldn’t make love with my wife, but they said this was the effect of the gas and it would go after a while.”
After months in hospital, when Hassan returned to his hometown, he was also faced with cruel social stigma, resulting from ignorance over the cause of his coughing and his awkward bumping into things caused by his blindness. It brought more depression and seclusion from friends and society.
“The social stigma was – and still is – hurtful,” says Hassan, “and has made life difficult for me and my immediate family members. I was blind and clumsy. My coughing would irritate people at parties. There was very little sympathy or understanding for my condition. So I stopped attending social events. Can you imagine how difficult this was for my wife and children?”
But, in 1999, Hassan was given an opportunity that would start turning his life around. Hassan met Dr. Khosro Jadidi, an ophthalmologist who has specialized in restorative surgery for chemical weapons survivors. During their consultation, Dr. Jadidi explained to Hassan that he could help to restore his sight with a relatively new surgery involving stem cell transplants. Dr. Jadidi explained that if Hassan agreed, it would be the first time such a procedure would take place in Iran.
“Dr. Jadidi sounded very positive,” says Hassan, “and explained how simple the operation was. I needed a family member between the ages of 18 to 40 to volunteer to have some healthy tissue removed from their eye and transplanted on to mine.”
For Hassan, however, the possibility of a successful operation to regain his sight was coupled with the dilemma of asking someone in his family to volunteer.
“I had learned to live with my blindness,” explains Hassan, “but I didn’t want to put any of my family members at risk to save my eyesight.”
Sensing his son’s distress, Hassan’s father asked what was wrong and when he discovered there was a possibility for Hassan to see again, he called a family meeting to discuss the matter. Hassan’s younger brother volunteered and the two brothers left for Tehran to the Baghiatallah Hospital.
Hassan’s brother donated the tissue and was well enough to leave the hospital the following day. For Hassan, however, it was much more difficult.
Hassan (right) with oxygen machine and sunglasses to protect his eyes from light photophobia, a complication related to mustard gas exposure. Hassan is being interviewed by a local television station (Mazandaran Channel) in 1999. |
Due to the chronic state of Hassan’s lungs, the operation proved to be rather complicated. After seven hours, and using special instruments to help Hassan breathe, Dr. Jadidi completed this groundbreaking procedure on Hassan’s eyes. After six months of recovery with weekly visits to Tehran to have the dressings changed and his eyes checked, Hassan went for one last visit to have the final dressings removed.
“I was quite nervous,” remembers Hassan, “but as soon as the bandages were removed, I felt the light and I realized the operation had been successful. I could finally see the difference between day and night and slowly, slowly, I could see first one metre then two metres in front of me.”
The success of the stem cell transplant meant that Hassan was now a candidate for a corneal transplant. One year later a successful cornea transplant brought positive changes to his life and started to lift his depression.
“It was a blessing,” he said, “to see the faces of my wife and children after almost eight years of blindness. I could help my wife again. I could do things for myself and start to exercise. I could even begin to drive during the day. Every man likes to do things for himself. It was an amazing feeling.”
Hassan (centre) with his son, Mahmoud (left), and nephew Ali (right), December 1998 |
With renewed sight and energy, Hassan resumed a regular exercise programme and immediately began to see an improvement in his mental health. Discussing the importance for him of a healthy mind in a healthy body, Hassan felt that his renewed ability to get involved in sport gave him the strength and motivation to live a happy and full life. A keen football fan, Hassan now coaches a local second league team as well as coaching rifle shooting.
This was not so, unfortunately, for many of his comrades.
“I tried not to think of myself as an invalid,” he says. “All my other friends who were exposed to chemical weapons in the same operation – they are all dead now. They saw themselves as really sick people. I kept pleading with them to get outside and do something, to be more active. But my friends never left their homes, staying close to their oxygen, and the psychological pressures of their illnesses overwhelmed them. I am sad about that.”
Hassan (left) at the Hiroshima Nuclear Bomb Memorial, August 2014 |
Hassan’s positive energy along with the devotion of his wife and family has helped to give him an optimistic outlook on life despite his difficulties. He is now a peace activist with a powerful message.
“As a victim of chemical weapons myself,” he concluded, I want to share this message that we need to eliminate all wars. We must open the doors of dialogue and negotiation. We must abolish chemical weapons.”
Oral reflection by: Hassan Hassan Tabar
Farsi to English translation by Elaheh Pooyandeh
Written by Elizabeth Lewis
All Rights Reserved
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Tehran peace museum
Tehran peace Museum is a member of the International Network of Museums for Peace. the main objective of the museum is to promote a culture of peace through raising awareness about the devastating consequences of war with focus on health and environmental impacts of Chemical weapons.
Currently housed in a building donated by the municipality of Tehran within the historic City Park, the Tehran Peace Museum is as much an interactive peace center as a museum.
On June 29, 2007, a memorial for the poison gas victims of the Iran-Iraq War (1980–88), along with a Peace Museum, was completed in a park in Tehran, the capital of Iran. These facilities were established by the Society for Chemical Weapons Victims Support (an Iranian NGO), the city of Tehran, some other NGOs, and individuals and groups in Hiroshima.
The museum coordinates a peace education program that holds workshops on humanitarian law, disarmament, tolerance, and peace education. At the same time, it hosts conferences on the culture of peace, reconciliation, international humanitarian law, disarmament, and peace advocacy.
Additionally, the museum houses a documentary studio that provides a workspace wherein the individual stories of victims of warfare can be captured and archived for the historical record. The museum’s peace library includes a collection of literature spanning topics from international law to the implementation of peace to oral histories of veterans and victims of war.
Permanent and rotating peace-related art exhibitions displaying the work of amateur international and Iranian artists and children's drawings are also housed in the museum complex. Finally, the Iranian secretariat for the international organization Mayors for Peace is housed in the Tehran Peace Museum.
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