PROLOGUE

On the evening of 20 June 2009, at approximately, 7pm GMT a brief video-clip was posted on YouTube and Facebook. Within minutes it had been picked up and broadcast globally by virtually every news channel. A mere 47 seconds of film shook the world.

It shows a young woman, shot in the chest and bleeding, fall to the ground. As she falls, dying, she gazes unknowing into the lens of a casual camera-phone in the crowd filming events around her. It is this accidental clip that millions around the world witness.

‘Stay, Neda! STAY WITH ME!’ a voice cries out in the background.

Her name is Neda. In Persian, Neda means ‘the call’, ‘the voice’.

In a few days, Neda became the symbol of Iran’s Green Movement. On that day of her death, millions of Iranians had rallied in the streets of Tehran to protest against the widespread fraud used to rig the recent presidential elections, in which people had invested their hopes for a better future, in favour of the incumbent president. People called these demonstrations ‘rallies of silence’ in the belief that the sound of silence would echo their frustrations better than any shouts or slogans.

Then, Neda, ‘the call’, ‘the voice’, who was killed alongside hundreds of other silent protesters, became their symbol.

Neda continued to haunt the world’s media and politicians: U2 and Bon Jovi sang in homage to her and in solidarity with the Iranians; in London, The Times pronounced her its ‘2009 Person of the Year’; US President Barack Obama called her death ‘unjust’ and ‘heartbreaking’; the ‘unnamed people’ who captured her death on camera and made it public were chosen as winners of a George Polk Award, the first time the journalism prize had honoured an anonymous work. UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, showing the photo of her lying on the street, said: ‘What we see unlocks what we cannot see. What we see, unlocks the invisible ties and bonds of sympathy that bring us together to become a human community…’

There is someone else in that video, a man in jeans and a white shirt who is exerting pressure on the wound in a fruitless attempt to stop the bleeding.

I am that person. I was there when she died. I tried to save her but failed. It was a friend who captured the tragedy on his camera-phone; it was I who sent it out anonymously. I saw her gaze before she passed, and that gaze was the gaze of the gazelle that has been running from the hunter for many hours and now lies on the ground, exhausted and with an arrow deep in its side. She sinks down in her own, still warm blood. From where she lies sprawled on the ground she watches the murderous hunter approaching with a knife in his hand. Her gaze reflects neither hope nor despair. She has no desire. At this moment, a vague perception of life creeps into her veins, runs into her soul and spreads through her mind.

How can I name her feeling in that last moment anything other than the Gaze of the Gazelle.

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The government of Iran first claimed that the video was fake and that Neda was alive; then they alleged she had been shot by the BBC’s correspondent in Iran. Later still they accused the CIA of shooting her ‘in the head’.

I left Iran a few days after this incident, and when I realised how far the government was ready to go to cover its crimes, I decided to speak up. In two interviews–with the BBC on 25 June and with The Times on 26 June–I told the story of her death to the world. My interviews travelled across the world’s media as fast as the original video. Since then, video and interviews have joined together in exposing the hidden face of one of the most violent and treacherous governments in the world.

But the story is not yet over. Even while I am still immersed in the effects of that bloody scene and the mesmerising gaze of that innocent girl, while I can still hear the shouts on the street and feel forever the intolerable burning in my eyes left by the teargas, I look back. It is hard to believe that this is Iran, a broad, rich country that was once the cradle of civilisation. Its culture is as old as human civilisation itself, it is the land of Scheherazade of One Thousand and One Nights and was once the fountain of poetry and science whose poets and scientists set the scene for the global blossoming of mathematics, medicine, astronomy and literature.

Iran has always been at the centre of world attention. In its thousands of years of continuous history, it has played an important role in international affairs, first as the greatest empire in the world, then when it opposed the Arab invasion in the seventh century, today as the home of one of the most hated governments in the world, one that propagates hatred above all else.

Iran is the world’s fourth exporter of oil and sits on possibly the world’s biggest natural gas deposits. With its high mountains and vast deserts, green fields and endless seas, and located on a strategic communications highway, Iran has been declared one of the 13 ‘enemies of the Internet’. In a land where its most revered sage, Zarathustra, once preached that redemption is only achievable through Good Thought, Good Deed and Good Word, the police and militia are massacring their own people, the government has been accused of sponsoring global terrorism, hundreds of reporters, writers, intellectuals and scholars are being tortured in prison cells, and young people under the legal age are being executed daily. This is a country that practises one of the most sophisticated censorship systems, where millions of people are suffering from absolute poverty and where drug addiction and prostitution have become common in the cities. Those with the courage to stand up for lost dreams are falling to the ground like the last remaining leaves of a dying tree.

How did it come to this?

There were no camera-phones back when everything started but Neda’s gaze is working as one now, opening old scars, these gaping wounds that have worked as my own camcorders. I guess now is playback time.

I have already shown and told your story to the world, Neda; millions of people know how you were murdered, just because you wanted to have a voice. You are the martyr, people are chanting your name all over the world like a mantra, crystallising the accumulated hopes and dreams of the Iranian nation.

I have lost everything because I told your story; my career, my country, my family, my security… and the worst part is that I cannot be healed myself; not until I tell my own story, the story of a generation that was there to see everything, bear everything and lose everything. I need simply to be able to bear witness to an era full of dark hatred and bright hopes. I am tired of seeing and saying nothing. Your death has become my business. I had to be there at that particular time and place. I was the only person among those there who had access to the technology and contacts that could take your story out to the world and I was the only one who could leave Iran to bear witness to your unjust death. It is as if all my life’s achievements, failures, horrors, advantages and trivial experiences were destined to lead me to that particular time and place. I didn’t believe in destiny before and I am still trying not to. But it’s proving hard given all the events I have been through. You are the sum of my life Neda; the sum of the life of my entire generation.

We were part of a generation that was later called the Burnt Generation–the generation known in the United States as ‘Generation X’. We were between seven and 15 years old at the time of the Islamic Revolution. We were the generation that witnessed the murder of its uncles during the Revolution and the execution and imprisonment of its parents afterwards; a generation that was doomed to spend the best years of its life amid the horrors of the Iran–Iraq war, either on the frontline, running on landmines to open up a path through them for the troops, or at home, dreading the return of a friend from the front in a casket and the participation in the funeral procession that set out from the school yard. A generation that entered puberty while being trained how to use AK-47 assault rifles, were not permitted to have any contact with the opposite sex and were not allowed to dance or party. Boys who were not allowed to have any kind of hairstyle resembling ‘deviant westerners’, girls who were not allowed to wear anything but a certain form of approved Hijab and a long coat that covered their bodies from neck to ankle. A generation that was taught not to trust anyone, even friends, lest they be government spies, and who were afraid to speak lest their words be used against them. A generation that dreaded even its own shadow and saw too much, far more than anyone should be forced to witness in a lifetime.

But also a generation that for lack of anything else to do spent its time learning. We were the true witnesses of our nation. We were the hunted, but in the course of the parallel evolution of the hunter and the hunted, we evolved faster. We survived to bear witness to what we had endured for the next generation: Neda’s generation.

Arash Hejazi