Ehsan Tabari
Ehsan Tabari | |
---|---|
Born | 8 February 1917 |
Died | April 28, 1989 | (aged 72)
Political party | Tudeh Party |
Ehsan Tabari (1917–1989) was an Iranian philosopher, and a literary giant who played a major role in modernization in literature and cultural enlightenment in twentieth century in Iran. He was also instrumental in fostering deep understanding of Marxist philosophy in Iran. A founding member and theoretician of the Tudeh Party of Iran, he was an active participant in advancement in the political process whose aim was social progress and elimination of economic disparity in twentieth-century in Iran.
Tabari was born in 1917 in Sari, Mazandaran, Iran. Tabari was fluent in eight languages, he wrote and translated poetry and did research in linguistics.
He returned to Iran in 1979 after the overthrow of the Shah, but was arrested in 1983 along with other leaders of the Tudeh Party of Iran. In May 1984, after being subject to barbaric physical and psychological torture in prison, including months of solitary confinement, and without the benefit of being represented by a lawyer, Islamic republic of Iran presented a broken man to the world, claiming to have made Tabari to "convert to Islam". Disbelief about the sincerity of the Tabari's conversion has been fed by the fact that after giving a confessional speech to other political prisoners at Evin prison he was asked by the prison warden "to deny outright the rumor that he had cast himself into the role of a `Galileo,`" Tabari gave not a clear denial but a "long convoluted response;" and that after his "confession" he remained "not only incarcerated but also total isolation - even from his own family".[1]
Tabari died on April 29, 1989 of kidney and heart failure, under house arrest in Tehran.
References
- ^ [source: 56: M. Faraz, "Prison Memoirs" Ettehad-e Kar 20 (June 1991); 16-17]; Abrahamian, Tortured Confessions, (1999), (p.208)
Further reading
- "Eshan Tabari". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. 1 May 1989. p. 8BCE. Retrieved 1 June 2010.
- Vahdat, Farzin (2001). God and juggernaut: Iran's intellectual encounter with modernity. Syracuse University Press. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-8156-2947-4. Retrieved 1 June 2010.