Mohammad Farrokhi Yazdi

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Mohammad Farrokhi Yazdi
Mohammad Farrokhi Yazdi portrait, 1930s.jpg
Born1889
DiedOctober 18, 1939(1939-10-18) (aged 49–50)
Qasr prison, Tehran
NationalityIranian
Occupationpoet, journalist and senior politician
Political partySocialist Party[1]

Mirza Mohammad Farrokhi Yazdi (Persian: میرزا محمد فرخی یزدی‎; 1889 – October 18, 1939) was an Iranian poet, journalist and senior politician of the Reza Pahlavi era.

Biography[]

Born in Yazd and his father was Mohammad Ebrahim Yazdi, he started his preliminary education in Yazd until the age of 16 when he was expelled from school for his poems against school teachers and principal.

By the age of 16, he had already started writing poetry and gradually became active during the Persian Constitutional Revolution and was imprisoned because of writing material in opposition to the infamous 1919's Anglo-Persian Agreement. In prison, he protested that “He whose only offense is love of the motherland / No creed would condemn to a dark cell…”.

Farrokhi Yazdi composed a poem criticizing , the ruler of Yazd, and in response Zeigham al-Dawla ordered to sew his mouth with thread and needle and throw him in prison.[2] In 1921, he published the political newspaper Toufan (storm), winning fame for his poetry and constant attacks against Reza Pahlavi in his editorials.

Farokhi Yazdi clink

Finally, in 1939, he was arrested, sentenced to prison at Tehran's Qasr prison, and died by air injection under Dr. Ahmad Ahmadi[citation needed].

He has written a poem related to British politician, Lord Curzon:

Lord Curzon has gotten angry
He is going to write a lament;
We don't exchange dignity with abasement
We don't obey embassy;
O' Curzon, abandon us
You can't exploit the country of Jamshid;

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. p. 153. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
  2. ^ FARROḴĪ YAZDĪ, According to one well known story, on the occasion of the Persian new year celebration in 1908, he recited a poem demanding an end to the injustices of Moḥammad-ʿAlī Shah. The poem so shocked the officials gathered at the assembly that Żayḡam al-Dawla Qašqāʾī, governor of Yazd, supposedly ordered Farroḵī to be imprisoned and his lips sewn together with thread and needle


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