You are welcome to your opinion. The Iranians deserve to worship who they believe in. Not who they are forced to. For a millenium.
They gave the world the oldest monotheistic faith. Yet today they worship a faith of the invader. En masse.
A faith which took from the Christians. Who in...
Khudaavand (Lord of Creation).
In Gujarati we say Khodaiji. Or O Khodai!
Why do you want our love?
Where was your love in 1947?
Jo mila usse chup chaap khush raho aur raasta naapo.
Tumhare shukriyada ki zaroorat nahin hamme.
There is another who calls himself Ahura Mazda as well. Though I do wish he would not abuse while carrying khodai's name. :)
I do not understand it man. Sure Zoroastrians and Persians have god reason to be critical of Arabs and Islam.
But so do Hindus. Or Christians. Or Jews.
Yet if you see...
I am not attacking anybody, least of all Iran, so please understand the context before jumping in with your BS views about India.
Iran and its women have a long and chequered history. They stood side by side with their men in many a war, without the nee to cover themselves in an Islamic...
Could equally well speak for the fact that the 900 million fought, resisted, and then pushed back and absorbed.
Well, all humans are Muslim to start with. Islam is the oldest faith. And adam and eve were Muslim. Created by Allah. And all she had for her lower privates was a fig leaf. Bossoms...
Could it equally well have been that the weak got culled, and for once Islam came up against an immovable ancient faith?
A fig leaf is so hedonistic. tut tut
Islam give or take a century here or there has been on the subcontinent for around a thousand years.
Of these, for around half that timespan, Islam has been the dominant faith of the rulers to the North.
Today a thousand years later, we still have twice the number of Hindus as Muslims...
Not surprising.
What is surprising is how it has taken this long.
And why do we not hear more of it.
Like India, Persian women have historically been Lionesses. The mullas should take a hint.
Kaveh Farrokh » The Persian Lioness: Iranian Women in History