Thursday, December 27, 2012

Iranian-Americans Seek Heros to Save a Life

This piece originally appeared on Global Voices

Screen Capture of the original piece on Global Voices with Nasim Rad's
picture from Project Marrow Official Website


Iranian netizens are looking for a hero. Not for a revolution or a war, but to save a life. Nasim, a young woman from Northern California of Iranian decent is in need of a bone marrow transplant. Several Iranian celebrities have stepped up to help spread the word to save her. They are using social media to find a hero to give a bone marrow donation.
A project was born to solve this kind of challenge in 2003: Project Marrow. According to its Facebook page, Project Marrow was founded by an Iranian-American, Behnoush Babzani, who herself was once diagnosed with a rare blood disorder in 2003. After being treated with marrow donated by her brother, the special experience gave her unique insight into the lives of patients whose health depends on marrow transplants from people with marrow types matching theirs - usually found in individuals of similar ethnic backgrounds.
The campaign initiated by Behnoush has now apparently come to save other patients suffering from diseases like marrow cancer by reaching out to fellow Iranian-Americans for help. 21-year-old Nasim is one of those patients. Her story has moved people to an extent that community members and celebrities alike have stepped up to try to help to save her. They have posted video messages on Youtube, donated marrow samples and tried to raise awareness through social media. This Facebook page is one example.
In their video message, famous Iranian-Americans, such as actor Maz Jobrani and athlete Ehsan Hadadi, have pleaded to their fellow Iranians for help repeating the motto “I am Nasim” over and over again in the clip.
The video closes with these lines:
If you're lucky enough to match to be able to help and save this girl's life… then they will contact you and it's just a very quick process… it doesn't… they don't rip you open… there's nothing… it's very easy!
We're not asking for money, we're asking you to consider joining the registry.
To be able to donate something from my body…

that would help somebody else would be the greatest gift 

So let's come together!
Save Nasim,
Save Nasim
Save Nasim NOW!

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Alia strips again, this time here in Sweden


This is what happened a few days ago here in Sweden. Alia Majed El-Mahdi -whom you most likely know by now- took her protest to the frozen streets of Sweden and the very doorstep of the Egyptian embassy in Stockholm. Alia shed her clothes along with two fellow-activists to denounce what is being done unto her people back home in Egypt. She protested a Muslim-Brotherhood's darling, Mohammad Morsi, for having started to sound much like the notorious Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini lately referring to his powers as "divinely-sanctioned and blessed". 

In my perspective, regardless of how brave and courageous Alia was in at least standing up and doing what she could, this was made possible thanks to this benign and benevolent Swedish nation. What the Swedes have achieved as the fruit of the sweat and blood of thousands of people through generations has resulted to the betterment of not only themselves but many people like Alia. Like us who have taken refuge here in this land. This is added reason why I honestly believe that constructive patriotism should eventually evolve into globalism: You can only have a good neighbourhood if you-first and foremost- take good care of your own residence.

All throughout the years I have never relinquished my unfathomable love for my plagued motherland.  In my mental journey I came a long way from ethnocentrism and blind nationalism to a reformed nationalism to patriotism in the sense just elaborated, - also reflected in the very title of this blog. But today I say proudly that just as I will always remain grateful to my beloved Iran, my second homeland is definitely this very wonderful Sweden.

I love Iran and would do whatever humanly possible for her, but it is Sweden that makes it possible for me to do what I need to do. It is Sweden that allows me to write freely now and indulge myself in these very basic freedoms for which people lose their lives in my homeland. 

I will always love you Iran. I sure will do. But allow me this once to rephrase the opening sentence of this post and say: This is what happened a few days ago here in Sweden, my second homeland.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Till embryonic research does us part!*



The borderline between “humane” and “evil” turns hazy when it comes to issues such as embryo research, cloning and genetic engineering. In so far as abortion remains to be a hot subject in political campaigns, these issues, too, appear not to have a good prospect of bringing the pros and cons to a conclusive agreement any time soon.
Something that makes the debate prevalent among US and EU politicians alike and even more complex, is that both sides involved in the debate claim their point of contention to be ‘life’ itself!
The opponents majorly base their argument against embryo research upon article three of the United Nations human rights declaration: “Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.” Even the Vatican delegation espoused this article rather than taking a more religious stance during the UN 58th general assembly:

If human rights are to mean anything, at anytime, anywhere in the world, then surely no one can have the right to do such a thing [clone human embryos]. Human rights flow from the recognition that human beings have an intrinsic dignity that is based on the fact that they are human. Human embryos are human, even if they are cloned. If the rest of us are to have the rights that flow from the recognition of this dignity, then we must act to ban cloning in all its forms.
To the better or the worse, the key phrase “the right to life” has opened up an ample space for ambiguous interpretations. Just as seen from the abovementioned quotation the right to life is entitled to embryos at their prenatal stages — a stage that could also be defined as an organismic life stage. Based on that, proponents reason that advancements within the realm of genetic engineering and embryo research can assist humanity in fighting terminal diseases and save millions of lives albeit at the cost of destroying hundreds of thousands of embryos. In his book titled “The Coming of the Body” Le Monde columnist Herve Juvin writes:

When it is possible, or soon will be, to eliminate in advance from a child’s makeup any “leprous” genomes, so called because they carry a tendency to particularly serious illnesses (hemophilia, cancers, asthma, Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s Chorea, muscular dystrophy, diabetes…); when future management of health insurance depends to a notable extent on the capacity to conceive and bear children protected against any hereditary illness or defect, and thus on the elimination of the most serious and expensive illnesses; when all these things are with us, only an error of vocabulary can explain why the word “reproduction” is still applied to the human species, in  the way it is applied to animal species in the wild.

As stated, the debates have not remained limited to the UN general assemblies and national and international policy-making bodies have also been addressing the subject, too. The European Union is an interesting case in point having two extremes of the debate in its spectrum: on one side The Vatican State (not an EU member per se, but geographically in the EU) and on another side Scotland where Dolly the Sheep was successfully cloned and lived to be 6.

Funding researches on embryo research seems to be the subject of discussion (or a lever against such projects) as far as EU’s stance towards the said issue is concerned. This matter has raised some serious arguments in EU such as when Astrid Thors, the then- Finnish Liberal MEP and currently-Finnish-Minster of Migration and European affairs strongly criticized EU’s ban on Embryo Research funding in 2001 and expressed her dissatisfaction for EU to be “on a par with the Bush administration.” according to Europeansources website.

In 2002 the debates were hot as a row broke out between European Parliament and Council of Ministers over a temporary ban on stem cell and human embryo research. Things started to get even more complicated for pros against the cons in 2003 as MEPs introduced even more limiting amendments to the already-existings-curbs. David Bowe a UK Labour deputy lamented: "Regrettably, the religious right managed to pass a series of amendments which, if they ever become law, would have serious consequences for stem cell research in Europe; they [the MEPs] are very Catholic and very regressive."

Just as the debate was ongoing among EU members, in 2006 President Bush went far enough to use his veto power to limit federal funding for the research according to a BBC report. The same report lists the “keen” and “not keen” countries in about stem cell research in EU as follows: 

·NOT KEEN: Austria, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Poland, Slovakia
·KEEN: Belgium, Finland, France, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, UK

Just recently as the a new repercussion of the EU’s legislation on embryonic research, a court in Germany ruled that “totipotent cells carrying within them the capacity to evolve into a complete human being must be legally classified as human embryos and must therefore be excluded from patentability.” That single sentence would arguably delay developments towrds reaching a promising cure for many terminal illnesses in the near future.

All that said, it does not appear perceptible for the European Union to take a different direction in regards to the embryonic research and how it could be addressed given all the legal aspects and the diversity evident within the various member states of the EU. So far the score results show 1-0 in favor of the Pope’s team against Dolly’s!

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* This article was written in fulfilment of an academic module requirement in 2011