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Azar Nafisi

Family Secrets in Tehran

Article Page - Nafisi Secrets In Tehran - Book Cover In an exclusive excerpt from her new book, Things I’ve Been Silent About: Memories, Azar Nafisi, the author of Reading Lolita in Tehran, examines her parents' troubled marriage, riven by secrets, regrets, and political drama. Plus, The Daily Beast's Salameh Nematt talks with Nafisi.

I have often asked myself how much of my mother’s account of her meeting with her first husband was a figment of her imagination. If not for the photographs, I would have doubted that he had ever existed. A friend once talked of my mother’s “admirable resistance to the unwanted,” and since, for her, so much in life was unwanted, she invented stories about herself that she came to believe with such conviction that we started doubting our own certainties.

In her mind their courtship began with a dance. It seemed more likely to me that his parents would have asked her father for her hand, a marriage of convenience between two prominent families, as had been the convention in Tehran in the 1940s. But over the years she never changed this story, the way she did so many of her other accounts. She had met him at her uncle’s wedding. She was careful to mention that in the morning she wore a flowery crêpe-de-chine dress and in the evening one made of duchess satin, and they danced all evening (“After my father had left,” she would say, and then immediately add, “because no one dared dance with me in my father’s presence”). The next day he asked for her hand in marriage.

When his family proposed to my mother, they conveniently neglected to tell her that he was ill. She discovered it on her wedding night.

Saifi! I cannot remember ever hearing his last name spoken in our house. We should have called him—with the echo of proper distance—Mother’s first husband, or perhaps by his full title, Saif ol Molk Bayat, but to me he was always Saifi, good-naturedly part of our routine. He insinuated himself into our lives with the same ease with which he stood behind her in their wedding pictures, appearing unexpectedly and slyly whirling her away from us. I have two photos from that day—more than we ever had of my own parents’ wedding. Saifi appears relaxed and affable, with his light hair and hazel eyes, while my mother, who is in the middle of the group, stands frozen like a solitary centerpiece. He seems nonchalantly, confidently happy. But perhaps I am wrong and what I see on his face is not hope but utter hopelessness. Because he too has his secrets.

There was something about her story that always bothered me, even as a child. It seemed not so much untrue as wrong. Most people have a way of radiating their potential, not just what they are but what they could become. I wouldn’t say my mother didn’t have the potential to dance. It is worse than that. She wouldn’t dance, even though, by all accounts, she was a good dancer. Dancing would have implied pleasure, and she took great pride in denying herself pleasure or any such indulgences.

All through my childhood and youth, and even now in this city so far removed from the Tehran that I remember, the shadow of that other ghostly woman who danced and smiled and loved disturbs the memories of the one I knew as my mother. I have a feeling that if somehow I could understand just when she stopped dancing—when she stopped wanting to dance—I would find the key to my mother’s riddle and finally make my peace with her. For I resisted my mother—if you believe her stories—almost from the start.

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January 10, 2009 | 9:00am
Comments ()
Websearcher

Shocking! Your family was dysfunctional? Welcome to the real world. I have yet to meet a fully functional family. Obviously they do exist, but I have yet to meet one.

Anyway, why is this book excerpted? Nothing seems to happen but for some fibs that her mother threw out about her early year. Lying about her age? Gasp! Lying about the romance in her life? Double Gasp! Nope. No one does that at all. Jeez...10minutes of my time that I will never get back...

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11:02 am, Jan 10, 2009
msdancer

We are all different people when we are young; we later become a person that we no longer recognize. That could be true of her mother.

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10:50 am, Jan 11, 2009
Xelene

Websearcher, you might want to think about the fact that the write is from a different land, where the customs and traditions and practices are so different to what you may have been used to.

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1:44 pm, Jan 12, 2009
DevilsLawyer

I read Reading Lolita in Tehran with pleasure, and Nafisi is as compelling a writer here as I remember from that book. Tiresome and jaded commentators notwithstanding, the ones who think a sarcasm and bile are adequate substitutes for substantive discussion (the Daily Beast seems to get a good number of those), Nafisi's newest memoir will be as nuanced and illuminating as her old one if this excerpt is anything to go by.

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6:36 am, Jan 13, 2009
hannanne

I actually read this book. It is a self-indulgent whine-fest. Nafisi is a spoiled, entitled member of the Elite, and has the good fortune of having previously published a book which allowed her enough popularity to push this drivvel.

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7:41 pm, Oct 30, 2009
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Family Secrets in Tehran

by Azar Nafisi

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