The Oral History Weekly; A New Window
Mohammad Mehdi Abdolah Zadeh
Translated by Mandana Karimi
2025-8-28
The ups and downs of everyday life sometimes cause me to forget certain duties and missions, including oral history—especially its form related to the Holy Defense! But when Wednesday comes and I receive an issue of the Oral History weekly journal, a new window opens before me. Each title, article, viewpoint, and memory becomes a chapter for reflection in that realm.
Although the scientific aspect of the journal is useful to me, its psychological value improves my mood even more. For years, the friends who run the journal have remembered me and continuously send it to me without any expectation, which strengthens my bond with the large family of oral history. This very fact has made me consider myself a member of this journal and share my opinions about its content on occasion.
Once, I wrote to the journal’s officials asking why the weight of theoretical content in the journal is weak. By reading more content titled oral history, I realized we are still at a crossroads and perhaps this is exactly the path this weekly journal is taking. Because with the occurrence of the Islamic Revolution and the Holy Defense, the need to document events from these two occasions led many people—who had only heard the name oral history but had neither read an article or book about it nor attended a class—to enter the circle of oral history.
I am confident that with the continuous development of theoretical and practical knowledge among scholars and practitioners of oral history projects in our country, the effects will become visible in the quality and quantity of the content in this weekly journal.
Number of Visits: 1045
The latest
- Expert Panel Session on Oral History of the Country – (Part 2)
- Third Regiment: Memoirs of an Iraqi Prisoner of War Doctor – 33
- Memoirs of Majid Yousefzadeh
- Oral History News/April–May 2026
- Expert Panel Session on Oral History of the Country – (Part 1)
- 100 Questions/ 32
- Third Regiment: Memoirs of an Iraqi Prisoner of War Doctor – 32
- Ta An Setareh (Up to that Star) (Part One)
Most visited
- Ta An Setareh (Up to that Star) (Part One)
- Theory Two: The Borderline Legitimacy Crisis of Oral History in the Academic System
- Memoirs of Mohammad Kazem Taqavi
- Third Regiment: Memoirs of an Iraqi Prisoner of War Doctor – 32
- 100 Questions/ 32
- Expert Panel Session on Oral History of the Country – (Part 1)
- Oral History News/April–May 2026
- Memoirs of Majid Yousefzadeh
From Revolutionary Circles to the Military Arm of the Islamic Government
In those days, it became clear that certain institutions had to be established very quickly—institutions suited to the temperament, expectations, and lingering aspirations of the younger generation; young people who had been politically active before the Revolution and, in some cases, had been directly entangled in arrests, imprisonment, ...Authenticating Oral History: From Possibility to Necessity
The use of oral history as one of the historical sources has long been one of the principal challenges facing oral historians and those who employ it in contemporary historiography. The development of international standards for oral history, as well as IRIB standards, was intended to address the criticisms raised in this regard. The relationship between Diplomatics in written records and oral history is reciprocal.100 Questions/27
What is the place of research ethics in compiling oral history?We asked several researchers and activists in the field of oral history to express their views on oral history questions. The names of each participant are listed at the beginning of their answers, and the text of all answers will be published on this portal by the end of the week.
Photo Album from The Doctor of fly
The Doctor of fly, authored by Fatemeh Dehghan Niri, presents the memoirs of Dr. Mohammad-Taqi Khorsandi Ashtiani, Professor Emeritus and a subspecialist in Otolaryngology at Tehran University of Medical Sciences. Compiled within the framework of oral history, the work recounts different stages of his life—from childhood and years of ...