Tehran – The chant of “Death to Israel!” Tens of thousands gathered to lament eight aerospace martyrs of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard (IRGC), and today they echoed through the ancient city of Kashan and were killed in the 12-day war of the Israeli regime with Iran.
About 20 days after their martialism, Mohammad Zolfapur Nuhabadi, Hamid Jalali, Yaser Goramalizadeh, Noslatra Bahaband, Ali Alirezaei, Mohammad Kusabur, Maysam Fat Galib and Mohammad Ansari passed through the cr of cleed ff cleed ff. We finally arrived at the face from 15 Khordad Square to Imam Khomeini Street, a resting spot at Dar Al-Salam Martyrs’ cemetery.
Martialists were awarded as “guardians of Iran’s sovereignty” and “martialists of the road to al-Kud.”
The woman showered rose petals on the flag-raised co, and the man slapped his chest, comparing the hymn to the hymn and the sacrifice of Imam Hussein of Karbala.
“They tried to break our wings, but our aerospace advocates became birds of paradise,” wept Hashem Rezai, 58, a veteran of the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.
This procession embodied Kashan’s legendary resilience. This is a city that withstands Mongol invasions and is now rebellious against modern invaders.
During the ceremony, students read the placard: “The Fear of the Zionist: 12 Days of War, Sons of 26 Cashan Martired.”
Just as mourners dispersed, the prolonged scent of Golab – a thousand-year-old rosewater from Kashan – is now being tested on a heritage that is not intertwined with sacrifice.
The funeral was closed in honor of martial artist Zolfahapur, whose body was brought to Nuhabad, his birthplace, for burial.
At dusk, a candle vigil glowed beneath the ancient cypress in the finger garden. This is the same garden that was martyred by the reformed Prime Minister Amir Kabir in 1852.
Here, history, sorrow and rebellion are intertwined, like the Kanat waterways that feed the soul of Iran.
“I won’t forget Kashan,” whispered the elderly woman at the cemetery gate. “And the Israelites will never sleep soundly again.”
