“The
halt was brutal. Since mid-September, and for six months, tourism
dropped by 80 percent in our town,” said the head of Isfahan’s
tourism organization, Hamid Emami, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported.
Nasrine
Hamidi, a psychologist in Isfahan, insists that people’s reluctance
to visit Iran after the September 11 attacks is “totally
irrational.”
“Iran
is neither Afghanistan nor Iraq. There is no objective reason not to
come. Nevertheless, almost all tourists refused to come last
winter.”
Isfahan
was united Persia’s capital at the time of the Safavids in the 17th
century. Its massive central Imam square, built by Shah Abbas I,
celebrates its 400-year anniversary this year.
Its
three million inhabitants are accustomed to receiving an average of
400,000 visitors a year, mostly Europeans.
“Americans,
who love Isfahan, hardly come anymore,” Emami said. However, since
March “there have been almost 160,000 visitors, mostly Germans,
French, Italians and British,” he added.
Hotel
Abassi, located on the grounds of an ancient rest house for caravans,
is one of the city’s grandest hotels, with 230 rooms and 25 suites.
Business here has picked up after the few months of quiet.
“Fortunately,
the Germans and French are returning,” said Majid Ghassemi, the
assistant manager of the hotel, which has hosted in the past few
months UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez and Spanish Prime Minister Jose-Maria Aznar, among other
dignitaries.
However,
visitors from Arab countries continued to come in earnest, especially
Saudis, delighting in the parks and fountains of the city.
There
has also been a rise in the number of young visitors to the country -
including many backpackers - passing through Isfahan, and other
Iranian cities, looking for adventure.
“It
was my childhood dream to visit magical Persia. I am so happy in
Isfahan,” said Guennadi Podborodnikov, 30, from Moscow.
Guennadi
and his Italian friend Jacomo Mezzera, 33, are both traveling around
the country on a modest budget. They also went to watch the sunset
from the ancient Zoroastrian temple, Atash-Kadeh, eight kilometers
(five miles) north of the city.
Jacomo
is delighted: “Everything is beautiful, the people, the Imam mosque,
Ali Qapou Palace, the bazaar. But here, it is not like in Europe, we
have to follow the local forms of conduct and politeness,” he said.
A
group of five Chinese were also visiting Isfahan’s attractions. They
went to the bird park, famous across Iran for its thousands of bird
species.
“I
have not traveled much, but here I find an intense historical presence
and the burdens of modernity, as in my hometown Xian. I am at ease in
Isfahan,” said Xu Wen, a 36-year old electric engineer.
Elsewhere
in Iran, French Ambassador to Tehran Francois Nicoullaud said Sunday,
June 30, that France plans to open cultural centers in Tehran and
Tabriz, Iranian news agency IRNA reported.
In
a meeting with provincial Governor General Sobhanollahi, he said
Tabriz is one of the most important cities in Iran, adding “its
location in the close proximity to Europe is considered one of the
most important economic, cultural and political centers by the
Europeans.”
The
French Ambassador announced France’s readiness to undertake more
economic projects in Iran.
The
project has gone on stream at a cost of 100 million euro, 49 percent
of which will be provided by the French side.