The Persian Square

@PersianSquare

The Persian Square eBook by Iran Davar Ardalan on Apple iTunes and Amazon Kindle.

Joined December 2012

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  1. Retweeted
    1 Oct 2015

    Iranian-American Women Breaking The Barriers of Exile by member //

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  2. Retweeted
    22 May 2015

    The Woman Who Read Too Much "chronicles the haunting, rebellious lives of Qajar women"—see 's book review →

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  3. Retweeted
    22 May 2015
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  4. Retweeted
    22 May 2015

    Set in the 19th-century world of monarchs, THE WOMAN WHO READ TOO MUCH chronicles the haunting lives of Qajar women.

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  5. Retweeted
    14 May 2015
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  6. Retweeted
    25 Mar 2015

    Lucky to be heading back to in Westwood named so by the LA City Council in 2010

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  7. Retweeted
    10 Mar 2015

    Check out NPR Producer 's newest book, , created on .

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  8. Retweeted
    10 Mar 2015
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  9. Retweeted
    8 Mar 2015
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  10. Retweeted
    20 Feb 2015
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  11. Retweeted
    19 Feb 2015

    spans extraordinary range of self expression. Share your story!

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  12. Retweeted
    16 Feb 2015

    Iran's struggle for a lawful society and more stories:

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  13. Retweeted
    16 Feb 2015

    Iranian-Americans: a thriving minority profiled in by author Iran Davar Ardalan :

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  14. Retweeted
    15 Feb 2015

    In 1927, my great grandfather Ali Akbar Davar was the architect of Iran's modern legal system

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  16. Retweeted
    14 Feb 2015

    “Little attention has been given to the contributions of Persia itself to civilization."

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  17. Retweeted
    13 Feb 2015

    This “Persia Pavilion” based on the King’s Mosque in Isfahan, Iran was built in Philadelphia in 1926.

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  18. Retweeted
    12 Feb 2015

    Millspaugh: "When I arrived, almost every Persian... leveled a withering indictment at all Persians except himself." (3/3)

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  19. Retweeted
    12 Feb 2015

    Millspaugh: There seemed to be a deliberate conspiracy among Persians to blacken the reputation of their countrymen... (2/3)

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  20. Retweeted
    12 Feb 2015

    Economist Arthur Millspaugh wrote "The American Task in Persia" in 1925. Observing Persian psychology he wrote... (1/3)

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