
Every town has its own traditions of commemoration. About the customs of Abyaneh one can read in detail here or here. The inhabitants of the town
gather in the mosque on the previous evening, in order to keep vigil on the night of Tasuʿa, the ninth day, just like Hussein and his companions kept vigil before the decisive battle. The imam called on his followers to leave him without the sin of betrayal before certain martyrdom of the next day, until only the seventy-two remained. In Abyaneh, however, it would bring shame to anyone who stayed away from the night vigil. During the mourning ceremony called zakeri, they sing mourning songs and read poems, and the women keep the participants awake with wooden rattlers. The next morning, the women roam the village with rattlers, and enter each house where someone has died since the previous year’s Ashura to sing. In the meantime, the men decorate the nakhl, the “palm tree”, the symbolic catafalque of Imam Hussein, which
waits the entire year on the balcony of the house of the confraternity for this day. They bear the heavy structure on their shoulders, and walk with it through the village for several hours. In Abyaneh – as in the other towns of the Iranian desert – there are several nakhls, and each one has its own confraternity, ceremony and route, in a manner very similar to the Catholic Holy Week processions of Spanish and Italian towns, about which we have written here and here.In Abyaneh – as in Spain –, the procession is also a kind of a tourist attraction, and visitors come from across Iran to see it. We illustrate the ceremony with the photos of Mohammed and Hossein Sâki which can be found in the Persian net.

Ashura-day mourning song about Abolfazl, the brother of Imam Hussein, who was killed along with his brother at Kerbala.


This year, Ashura falls on October 23, when we will be in Iran. If all goes well, we will be there in Abyaneh for the big event, inshallah.






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