TEHRAN, April 25 - Iran has inaugurated the biggest tourism event of Muslims states in the northwestern Iranian city of Tabriz to mark the recognition of the city as the tourism capital of the Islamic World in 2018.
TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) – On Tuesday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani inaugurated the Tabriz tourism gala, where dozens of representatives from several Muslim countries, including ministers and diplomats, participated.
A key location on the Silk Road and a gateway to Europe and East Asia, the Azeri-speaking city was named as the 2018 tourism capital of Islamic countries by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) during its meeting in Niger’s capital city of Niamey.
In its candidacy for the title, Tabriz received 90 percent of the votes cast by the 57-member Muslim body to win the title.
The OIC first recognized Jerusalem al-Quds as the tourism capital of the Muslim world in 2015. The Turkish city of Konya and the Holy city of Medina were recognized as the next tourism capitals in 2016 and 2017, respectively.
Once a center of culture and Islamic civilization and the seat of many diplomatic, political and international missions, Tabriz seeks to restore its historic glory as the new tourism capital.
Numerous cultural and artistic events as well as street festivals are underway across Tabriz in celebration of the occasion. The city has also offered special discounts on hotels, museums, historic sites and handicrafts for visitors.
Tabriz is fabled to have been the historical site of the Garden of Eden. It is one of the most ancient and largest cities in Iran, with a history of some 4,000 years.
According to the 13th century travelogue of Venetian merchant and adventurer Marco Polo, Tabriz attracted merchandise from India and Iraq, the Persian Gulf and many other places. At the time, it was the capital of the Persian Empire which stretched from Egypt to Central Asia and from the Indian Ocean to Armenia.
When Persia opened up to the West at the end of the 19th century, Tabriz became a European foothold as industry grew, making it Iran’s economic capital. The carpet, textile, footwear, cement and food processing industries that are still the key components of the city’s economy have roots in this period.
The city was also one of the first to embrace modernization and many of the new developments in Iran’s history used to happen in Tabriz, such as the print shop, public cinema, theater, municipality, kindergarten, school for the deaf and the dumb, modern school, newspaper and firefighting service.
Modern Tabriz has lost its position as Iran’s second city and economic hub, but it is still the largest metropolitan area in the northwest. The city is also a major heavy industry center for automobiles, machine tools, refineries, petrochemicals, pharmaceutical products, leather goods and carpets.
This pivot to industry has had its downsides, where tourism has been neglected overall.
Tabriz gets very little of the limelight in Iran’s promotion of its splendid ancient heritage in places such as Isfahan, Shiraz, Yazd and Mashhad.
The development tempo in Tabriz is underlined by the new high-rises which dot its skyline to the accompaniment of new highways, parks and bridges being built and old buildings given a face-lift.
Since then, the city has paved many of its old alleys and streets anew and repaired its historical sites to be named Iran’s cleanest city for several years in a row.
Tabriz also carries a number of unofficial attributes such as the city of firsts because of its perceived pioneering role in Iran’s modernization, the city without beggars and homeless and the chocolate capital of Iran.
Local confectionery, dried nuts and traditional Tabrizi cuisine are recognized throughout Iran as some of the best.
Shirin Asal, Aysuda, Aydin, Shoniz, Anata, Baraka and Chichak are some of the household names in Iran and the country’s best gourmet chocolate brands. Their specialties include qurabiya, Tabrizi lovuez, riss, nougat, tasbihi, latifeh, Ahari, lovadieh, and lokum.
The city is further famous for its handicrafts, including hand-woven rugs and jewelry.
Tabriz rugs are distinguished by their excellent weave and adherence to the classical traditions of antique Persian rug design.
Historical landmarks
While many of the city’s ancient monuments have been lost through repeated earthquakes, the remaining historical buildings are impressive in their kind.
Foremost is the world’s largest covered bazaar in the world, a fifteenth-century complex of interconnected brick structures and enclosed spaces for different functions, which is one of Iran's UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
Others include a huge fourteenth-century brick edifice that is the only remnant of a once mighty citadel, as well as the famous Blue Mosque, named for the vivid blue tiles that decorate its walls.
Tabriz has also a number of hillside gardens and parks popular for weekend getaways.
Its museums exhibit finds dating as far back as 4,000 years ago. There is also a graveyard belonging to some 400 classical and contemporary poets, mystics and other notable people.
Churches in the city attest to its place as a boiling cauldron of races, religions and nationalities. The city currently has a visible Armenian minority who follow Christianity. It also had a small Jewish community, but most of them have moved to Tehran.
Near Tabriz, the village of Kandovan attracts many visitors who travel to see manmade cliff dwellings excavated inside volcanic rocks, which are still inhabited.
The Arasbaran or Qaradaq gorge of majestic forests is a UNESCO Biosphere reserve which Iran has applied for promotion to the National Park status. It is home to about 350 species of birds, mammals, reptiles and fish as well as many exotic plants and wild trees.
Source: Presstv