- Ali Dashti
Ali Dashti (Persian: علی دشتی [IPA|æˈliː dæʃˈtiː] ) (born 1894 - died
January 16 , 1982) was an Iranianrationalist of the twentieth century. Dashti was also an Iranian senator.Life
Born into a Persian family in
Dashtestan ,Iran in 1896. Ali Dashti received atraditional religious education . He studied Islamic theology, history,Arabic and Persian grammar, and classical literature inmadrasas inKarbala andNajaf (both inIraq ) He returned toIran in 1918 and lived in Shiraz, Isfahan, and finally inTehran , where he became involved inpolitics of the day.Rather than becoming a cleric, he became a journalist and published a newspaper (Shafaq-e Sorkh) in
Tehran from 1922 to 1935. He was a member ofMajlis at various times between 1928 and 1946.His criticism of allowing the Tudeh party into the cabinet and concessions to the
Soviets landed him in prison in 1946. He was appointed aSenator in 1954 until the Islamic revolution in 1979.An Iranian newspaper reported his death in 1982.
Writing
In the book,
23 Years , Dashti chooses reason over blind faith:Belief can blunt human reason and common sense, even in learned scholars. What is needed is more impartial study.
Dashti strongly denied themiracle s ascribed to Muhammad by the Islamic tradition and rejected the Muslim view that theKoran is the word ofGod himself. Instead, he favors thorough and skepticalexamination of all orthodox belief systems. Dashti argues that the Koran contains nothing new in the sense of ideas not already expressed by others. All the moral precepts of the Koran are self-evident and generally acknowledged.The stories in it are taken in identical or slightly modified forms from the lore of the
Jews and theChristians , whoserabbis andmonks Muhammad had met and consulted on his journeys toSyria , and from memories conserved by the descendants of the peoples of Ad andThamud .Muhammad reiterated principles which
mankind had already conceived in earlier centuries and many places."
Confucius , Buddha,Zoroaster ,Socrates ,Moses , andJesus had said similar things. Many of the duties and rites of Islam are continuous practices which the paganArabs had adopted from the Jews."Bibliography
* Dashti on Persian Classics:
Naqshi az Hafez (1936), on the poet
Hafez (ca. 1319-1390).Sayri dar Divan-e Shams, on the lyric verse of the poet Mawlavi Jalal od-Din
Rumi (1207-1273).Dar Qalamraw-o Sa'di, on the poet and prose-writer Sa'di (1208?-1292).
Sha'eri dir-ashna (1961), on
Khaqani (1121?-1l99), a particularly difficult but interesting poet.Dami ba Khayyam (1965), on the quatrain-writer and mathematician
Omar Khayyam (1048?-1131); translated by Laurence P. Elwell Sutton, In Search of Omar Khayyam, London 1971.Negahi be-Sa'eb (1974), on the poet Sa'eb (1601-1677).
Kakh-e ebda', andishaha-ye gunagun-e Hafez, on various ideas expressed by
Hafez * On Ethics, Theology and Philosophy:
Parda-ye pendar (1974 and twice reprinted), on
Sufism (Iranian-Islamicmysticism ).Jabr ya ekhtiyar (anonymous and undated, contents first published in the periodical Vahid in 1971), dialogues with a
Sufi aboutpredestination andfree will .Takht-e Pulad (anonymous and undated, contents first published in the periodical Khaterat in 1971-72), dialogues in the historic Takht-e Pulad cemetery of
Esfahan with a learned 'alem who sticks to the letter of theQur'an and theHadith .Oqala bar khelaf-e 'aql (1975 and twice reprinted, revised versions of articles first published in the periodicals Yaghma in 1972 and 1973, Vahid in 1973, and Rahnoma-ye Ketab in 1973, with two additional articles), on logical contradictions in arguments used by
theologians , particularly Mohammad ol-Ghazzali (1058-1111).Dar diyar-e Sufiyan (1975), on
Sufism , a continuation of Parda-ye pendar.Bist o Seh Sal بيست و سه سال [Persian transliteration of "twenty-three years"]
23 Years - anonymous and without indication of place and date of publication, but evidently not later than 1974 and according to Ali Dashti's statement printed in Beirut), a study of the prophetic career of Mohammad.* Novels:
Ali Dashti sympathized with the desire of educated Iranian women for freedom to use their brains and express their personalities; but he does not present a very favourable picture of them in his collections of novelettes:Fetna (1943 and 1949), Jadu (1951) and Hendu (1955). His heroines engage in flirtations and intrigues with no apparent motive except cold calculation. Nevertheless these stories are very readable, and they provide a vivid, and no doubt partly accurate, record of the social life of the upper classes and the psychological problems of the educated women in Tehran at the time.
*Newspapers:He succeeded in establishing his own newspaper at Tehran, Shafaq-e Sorkh (Red Dawn), which lasted from 1 March 1922 unti1 18 March 1935. He was its editor until 1 March 1931, when Ma'el Tuyserkani took over.
*Political Works Collected Articles:
Awam-e Mahbas (Prison Days)Panjah o Panj (Fifty Five) on major and influential political personalities of
Iran *Translations into Persian:
Edmond Demolins's A quoi tient La superiorite des Anglo-Saxons
Samuel Smiles 's Self-Help translated into Persian from ArabicReferences and notes
External links
* [http://www.kavehsara.com/books/23years/23years_ali_dashti.pdf Dashti's book "23 years: A Study of the Prophetic Career of Mohammad" in Persian] Free online edition
* 23 years: A Study of the Prophetic Career of Mohammad in English [http://www.the-absent-truth.org/books/twentythreeyears.pdf PDF download]* HTML versions of "23 years: A Study of the Prophetic Career of Mohammad" [http://ali-dashti-23-years.tripod.com/ in English] and
* [http://ali-dashti-23-years.tripod.com/23-y-p.htm In Persian]
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