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by kombizz

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I was born and brought up in Iran, a beautiful country full of history. I started taking photos at an early age of my life with a Lubitel, a Russian twin lenses camera. Most of my photos in those days were black and white. It was a very nice camera that my parents gave me when I was 15 years old.

I always loved to see images. I remember that I would spend time in the library for hours and hours looking at the different photos in Life Magazine, National Geographic and other photographic journals and books. Also I always loved nature, and the different patterns made in it. I remember because of my Entomology studies, I would spend hours in the laboratory looking into microscopes at those beautiful and perfect structures that God created in those different tiny flowers, plants, tiny nematods, animals and insects. Then after I finished university in Iran, I left to do on my M.Sc. in California, the Golden State. There I was witness to even more of the beauties that nature held in each different moments of time. I remember I was always walking and trying to absorb all the scenes in my mind and memory as well as recording them on film. I forgot to say that I received another precious gift from my parents. That was a Canon camera with a fixed lense (G-III QL17). Then after I finished my studies, I returned to Iran for work. I consider myself an artist photographer.

At present I have a lovely Minolta Dynax 7, Mamiya 7II with few lenses. I still love and adore nature and all aspects of it. As a result I love macro photography, landscape, architecture (old and new), and many other categories like artistic abstracts, travel, people, fashion, and photo journalism.

In February 2008, I was delighted to be one of the Amateur UK Photographers short-listed in the Sony World Photography Competition 2008. http://www.worldphotographyawards.org/shortlist/amateur-AB.html

> I have a vast numbers of printed photos, slides and thousands of negatives which all are archived in many folders.

I love to share my observations through my photos with those people who love and appreciate.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kombizz/


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The First Asian Caravan .....

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The First Asian Caravan in Solidarity With Gaza

AsiatoGaza is a movement that intends to break the illegal siege of Gaza in a peaceful manner.
17 Asian countries joined the caravan from India and traverse through 6 Asian countries before it sails to break the siege of Gaza in December 2010.
AsiatoGaza consists of non governmental organizations as well as people from various Asian countries like India, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, New Zealand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Kuwait, UAE and various religions like Muslims, Christian, Jews, Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists. In coordination with other activists all over the world, AsiatoGaza has arranged a caravan from India to Gaza with the participation of several Asian countries. This caravan will start in first week of December 2010 from India through Pakistan, Iran to Turkey and from Turkey toward Gaza.
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Amit(moliveri-at-yankees-dot-com) says:

please excuse the ditsugsing antisemites here, yonira; you're quite right: people should reorder their priorities.Consider how well-prioritized these Israelis were in 1979, as Israel's Iranian cookie jar was suddenly snapped shut by Ayatollah Khomeini: On Jan 1, 1979, Erwin Muller, [a zoo director in Iran] sat beside the gates of two magnificent animal cages, now open and empty, and wept. Brigadier General Yitzhak Segev, the Israeli military attache in Tehran, stood next to him and tried to find words to console him .Khomeini's mobs were taking control in Iran. The royal family was on the run and not all of their royal pets could survive. Four years earlier, the director of Israel's National Parks Authority, General Avraham Yaffeh, had had the idea of recreating herds of the animals that had roamed the country in biblical times, among them the fallow deer. Such animals, he discovered, could be found in Iran. The narrative describes how Yaffeh made a deal with the brother of Shah Reza Pahlavi: in exchange for a pair of fallow deer, Abdul Reza would be permitted to hunt an ibex in the Negev desert [sidenote: of course, Bedouin live in and on Negev, so what difference was it to an Israeli if animals important to the Bedouin ecosystem were traded for a fantasy?] Abdul Reza bagged his ibex in 1974, but For budgetary reasons, Israel never collected its fallow deer. On November 28, 1978, as rioting in Iran approached a crescendo, the [Israeli] Parks Authority sent a crew to Tehran. With vehicles and security provided by Segev, they travelled to a nature preserve on the shore of the Caspian Sea, picked up two pairs of fallow deer and returned to Tehran, where they hoped to lodge the animals in the local zoo until a flight to Israel could be arranged. Muller at first refused to permit the deer to leave Tehran, but later relented, or rather, negotiated, allowing the release of the deer if the Shah's royal tiger and lion were included in the shipment. Zoo director Muller was fearful that the angry mobs might harm these symbols of monarchy, and had arranged to send them to safety in Holland.After applying a great deal of pressure on El Al Airline managers in Tehran and a flood of phone calls from Israel, space was allocated on the next flight out for the four deer and the lion and tiger, at the expense of some Jewish passengers and the cargo of carpets they wanted to ship out. Alas, the space was acquired too late to save the Iranian cats, but the fallow deer did, indeed, board the El Al flight to Israel and were eventually turned loos in a nature preserve near Haifa. (The Secret War with Iran, Ronen Bergman, pp 23-24)So please excuse the insensitivity of the brutes on this forum who have no appreciation for the reality that at least Israelis prioritize acquiring animals, even if they ship them on magic-carpet El Al flights rather than through tunnels.

2nd May 2012, 19:34

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