Muscat Daily

Iranian maestro laid to rest beside epic poet

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the east of the capital were taken over by students, young people, artists and activists. Some of the squats were subsequent­ly legalised as housing projects.

The self-described ‘anarchistq­ueer-feminist’ building on the corner of Liebigstra­sse, with a facade covered with graffiti and banners, has been offering shelter to about 40 women, trans and intersex people since 1999.

A bar and a self-managed cultural centre helped the collective to raise part of the money needed to pay the rent.

But investor Gijora Padovicz, who owns the building, decided in 2018 not to renew the lease for Liebig34. Faced with the residents’ refusal to leave their homes, he filed a lawsuit, which he won, culminatin­g in eviction. Police removed residents one by one from the four-storey building.

Protesting against the police action, Anna Mai, whistle in hand on the edge of the police cordon, said Liebig34 was ‘a symbol of the diversity of this city which shouldn’t only belong to the rich. Berlin is dying’.

Tehran, Iran - Legendary Iranian signer Mohammad-Reza Shajarian was buried on Saturday alongside the tomb of the ancient poet Abul Qasem Ferdowsi in the northeast of the country, state news agency IRNA reported.

A national treasure in his homeland, the ‘Ostad’ - master in Persian - died at the age of 80 on Thursday in Tehran after a long battle with cancer.

His body was taken the day after to the holy city of Mashhad in the northeaste­rn Khorasan Razavi province, where he was born.

He was laid to rest in Tus city, as willed, next to the tomb of the tenth-century poet Ferdowsi, who wrote the epic ‘Shahnameh’, or the Book of Kings.

According to IRNA, a crowd of ‘almost 150 people’ consisting of his family, Iranian music icons and some of his fans were present at the burial, due to COVID19 pandemic and the necessity of social distancing.

But hundreds of others gathered outside the tomb complex and mausoleum, singing the maestro’s songs and watching the burial on large television screens, the agency said.

His son, Homayoun, thanked the participan­ts for attending his father’s ceremony ‘despite the difficulti­es’.

News agency IRNA said the police and municipal security forces were there to ‘ensure the safety’ of the burial.

Shajarian maintained difficult relations with the authoritie­s in Tehran throughout his career, first under the reign of the shah and then with the Islamic republic. Shajarian’s death made the front pages of most Saturday newspapers, both conservati­ve and reformist, and even the sports press, with some devoting exclusive front page reports to the maestro.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Fans of Iranian singer and composer Mohammad-Reza Shajarian display his photos on their phones after his death, in Tehran on Thursday
(AFP) Fans of Iranian singer and composer Mohammad-Reza Shajarian display his photos on their phones after his death, in Tehran on Thursday

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