Concert Cancellations Continue in Mashhad Due to Intolerance by Religious Conservatives
A concert by the popular
Persian pop band Hoorosh was canceled by judicial order an hour before show time on
February 20, 2019, in the city of Firouzeh, northeastern Iran, after a powerful
local ayatollah pressured the authorities.
In Semnan, 110 miles east of
Tehran, some journalists were also prevented from covering a concert by another
band, Rastak, because a state official believes their music is too “happy.”
Abolfazl Hakimpour, the acting
governor of Firouzeh, told the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) on February
20 that Hoorosh’s concert was canceled even though “all necessary permits had
been obtained and there was no problem for the performance.”
With a population of 43,000,
Firouzeh is located 91 miles west of Mashhad, the capital of Iran’s
Khorasan Razavi Province, where powerful religious conservatives have repeatedly blocked officially licensed
musical events by claiming they violate Islamic principles.
“Islam forbids the kind of vain
and pointless music that spreads vulgarity,” said Ayatollah Ahmad
Alamolhoda, the ultra-conservative Friday Prayer leader of Mashhad, in a
meeting with directors of self-billed “authentic” Persian music institutes on
January 31, 2019.
“The problem is the way the
music is performed,” said Alamolhoda, adding that he does not oppose music
“that is not vain.”
“But we must keep in mind that
bullies throughout history have used music to spread vulgarity,” he said.
Reformist lawmakers have
criticized Alamolhoda for working to block musical events that have received
approval by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance.
“In a meeting we had in Mashhad
last month, it was agreed that we should set procedures for concerts staged
everywhere in the country… and once permits are granted, no one can stop
them,” said Fatemeh Zolghadr, a
member of the parliamentary Committee on Cultural Affairs, in August 2018.
But to date no such procedures
have been put in place and Mashhad remains a concert-free zone.
Between January 13-14, 2019,
popular pop singer Ali Zand
Vakili was scheduled (with a permit from the Guidance Ministry) to
hold four performances in Mashhad’s Borj Sefid (White Tower) Hotel. But all the events were suddenly
cancelled for unknown reasons.
“Given the climate surrounding
this concert, its obvious why it was canceled but I can’t disclose the
reasons,” said event producer Vahid Mahmoudi.
In Semnan, the deputy director
of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, Sima Rajabi, said media
coverage was not allowed during a concert by Rastak at the 34th Fajr Music Festival on February 20 because he
interpreted their performances as too cheerful.
“This band performs happy music
and if clips from their performance are published on social media, the enemy
will take advantage of it,” Rajabi said in an interview with IRNA on the day of the concert.
“Also there are women who play
instruments in this band and therefore members of the media are absolutely
forbidden from taking photos or filming,” she added.
However, at least one state-controlled
media outlet, the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA), did end up
publishing photos of the concert.
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