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Avant-garde mosque angers hard-liners in Iran

In this Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, photo, Reza Daneshmir, right, gestures as he talks with his wife Catherine Spiridonoff, both architects of Vali-e-Asr mosque, while they walk on one of the mosque's ramps, in Tehran, Iran. The architects behind the Vali-e-Asr mosque dispensed with the traditional rounded domes and towering minarets, instead opting for a modern design of undulating waves of gray stone and concrete, which they say complements the surrounding architecture and evokes the austerity of early Islam.   | Photo Credit: AP

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A newly built avant-garde mosque in the heart of Iran’s capital has infuriated hard-liners, who see it as part of a creeping secular onslaught on the Islamic republic.

It has also emerged as the latest battleground in a culture war between hard-liners and Iran’s vibrant artistic community, which has hoped for greater openness since President Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate, was elected in 2013.

The architects behind the Vali-e-Asr mosque, which is to open to the public in the coming months, say that instead of traditional rounded domes and towering minarets, they opted for a modern design of undulating waves of gray stone and concrete.

An editorial posted on the Mashregh news website compared the curvature to that of a Jewish yarmulke, accusing authorities of “treason” for approving it.

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Printable version | Feb 25, 2018 3:46:16 PM | http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/avant-garde-mosque-angers-hard-liners-in-iran/article22849269.ece