In a vast plain at the foot of high mountains, in a green oasis next to Zayandeh River, there is an old Iranian city with oriental architecture with mosques, a market of camel caravans and full of people with oriental clothes, a city with rich people ...
In a vast plain at the foot of high mountains, in a green oasis next to Zayandeh River, there is an old Iranian city with oriental architecture with mosques, a market of camel caravans and full of people with oriental clothes, a city with rich people, men with turbans on its streets. They walk in white and green, and tent women walk quietly by the walls. This is a description of Isfahan in the fourth decade of the 20th century, behind its walls there were twenty-one Polish institutions with very different lifestyles. These were Polish boarding schools where children learned their lessons and adults worked there; where they kept the customs of Poland, while the muezzin read the call to prayer from the minaret of the mosque, Polish children started the morning with religious hymns for Hazrat Maryam; They were waiting to return to their homeland. Among the oriental aromas and flavors, Polish children ate barley soup and stuffed cabbage, and the only goal of children in that life was to learn love. The best Polish book published outside Poland in 1987, the award of the Union of Polish Writers Abroad, prepared in the association of former students of Polish schools in Isfahan and Lebanon.
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