Inside Iran: journalist Houshang Asadi reads in Berkeley tonight

Iran's authoritarian regime still gets away with locking up artists and intellectuals for their opinions. (The renowned Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi spent three months in prison this year for speaking his mind in public.) The contours of this system of political persecution come to the fore in the most personal and riveting of terms as longtime Iranian dissident, journalist, and author Houshang Asadi talks about (and reads from) his new memoir, Letters to My Torturer: Love, Revolution, and Imprisonment in Iran, in conversation with journalist and author Jonathan Curiel (Al’ America: Travels Through America’s Arab and Islamic Roots) at Berkeley Arts and Letters. The event is co-sponsored by the National Iranian American Council, Amnesty International, the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, and the Graduate School of Journalism at UC Berkeley.
Asadi, who as a committed journalist had faced arrest and repression under the Shah, was arrested in 1983 under the then-new Islamic Republic in a wave of repression against opposing political parties and speech. He spent a harrowing and deeply scarring six years in prison, two of those in solitary confinement. His eye-opening and moving memoir, detailing conditions inside Iran's penal and justice systems for himself and other political prisoners, chronicles a crucial period in recent Iranian history with inescapable relevance for today. Told in epistolary form, the memoir highlights the perverse relationship with Asadi's torturer while in prison, "Brother Hamid," now an ambassador for Iran.
Asadi, who among much else was for a time the editor of leading Iranian film magazine Gozaresh-e-Film (Film Report), has lived in exile in France since 2003. You can find more information about the new book at his website.
Thurs/21
7:30 p.m., $6-15
Hillside Club
2286 Cedar, Berk
1-800-838-3006
Also from this author
Exhibitionism abounds as spying and lying take a cue from Big Brother in FWD: Life Gone Viral
Cutting Ball's docudrama Tenderloin explores its own backyard
Iranian playwright Nassim Soleimanpour marks his Bay Area debut — by proxy — in White Rabbit, Red Rabbit at SFIAF
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- gag - May 23, 2012
- Education - May 23, 2012
- Awww no mention of Dark Room - May 23, 2012
- its not up to YOU to know, - May 23, 2012
- Chrome, you're naughty, but I like you. - May 23, 2012
- What's a "ciswoman?" - May 23, 2012
- If a tranny has a colostomy bag - May 23, 2012
- Is that what you got out of - May 23, 2012
- It's entirely possible that he/she/it doesn't know either. - May 23, 2012
- Yes, but one could equally well argue that Lee needs to - May 23, 2012










