THE TRUTH BEHIND ‘300’
By
Cyrus Kar,
Director
For many Iranians the cinematic movie ‘300’ may come as a shocking revelation.
But to those of us who came up through America’s school system, the ‘Battle of
Thermopylae,’ which is what the movie ‘300’ is based on, is as familiar as
George Washington’s fabled “cherry tree” episode.
- Hide quoted text -
The Battle of Thermopylae
was of course written by the classical Greek author, Herodotus, who lived in the
Persian city of
Halicarnassus. His book, ‘The
Histories’ became part of Western folklore only recently. It wasn’t until about
1850 that America embraced Herodotus as the leading authority on Persian
history.
Before 1850, however, the West had a
very favorable impression of the
Persian Empire.
That’s because the West’s main source for Persian history was the Bible and the
‘Cyropaedia,’ written by another Greek author named Xenophon.
But the Cyropaedia glorified the
monarchy of Cyrus The Great, and in the wake of two bloody revolutions fought by
America and France to liberate
themselves from their own monarchies, a major campaign began, around the mid
19th century, to promote democracy throughout the rest of Europe, and Herodotus
was the perfect propaganda tool.
Herodotus was a democratic groupie
and was quickly ushered in as the “Father Of History.” Around 1850, his ‘Battle
Of Thermopylae’ came to symbolize the West’s struggle for democracy against the
powerful forces of Persia’s
monarchy.
The story is easy to buy into: 300
brave Spartans saved Western democracy from 2.7 million evil Persians. But aside
from the fanciful numbers which need decimal-point adjustments, this whimsical
tale has far graver consequences than a mere biased account of history.
The ‘Battle Of Thermopylae’ has been
the single most powerful wedge, which has divided East and West for over 2
millennia. In a time when East and West should be reconciling their differences,
along comes the movie ‘300’ to drive that wedge even deeper.
What is most disturbing about this
movie is not that it lacks historical accuracy. It is not that Xerxes, the
Grandson of Cyrus The Great and loving husband of Esther, is shown as an
oversized drag queen. It is not even the outdated racist cliché of casting the
Persians as Africans and the Spartans as white, blue-eyed ‘Chippendale dancers,’
when in reality the roles may well have been reversed.
What is so distressing about this
movie is the realization of the tremendous power
Hollywood wields in
determining a people’s identity. It is the same nightmare Native Americans
endured during the whole ‘cowboy-movie’ genre.
But for those who are quick to
dismiss ‘300’ as a fleeting fantasy flick aimed at the insignificant, 17 to 24
year-old male video-gamer, think again. First there was Alexander, now ‘300,’
next could well be the ‘Battle Of Marathon,’ another one of Herodotus’s glowing
accounts of ancient Persia.
Herodotus is accepted blindly by
virtually all Western demographics. Even the New York Times is not immune. Here
is how it described the Persians in its April 20, 2004 issue about the Battle Of
Marathon:
“the defeat of a ruthless state
(Persia) that had enslaved much of the known world from the Balkans to the
Himalayas.”
“the ancient Greeks defeated the
Asian invaders (Persia) and saved Europe in what scholars call one of the first
great victories of freedom over tyranny”
- William J. Broad,
(NY Times)
What stretches the limits of
hypocrisy is that there isn’t a single shred of archeological evidence that the
Persians ever owned slaves. Yet we know that slavery was an integral cornerstone
of Greek society. Aristotle’s manifesto even sanctions it.
Persia, which was
once a haven for runaway slaves from Egypt, Greece, and later Rome, is today
branded as a slave-hungry empire by cultures which were built on slavery!
What makes Herodotus’s propaganda so
difficult to refute is that it is peppered with facts. But in reality, it is a
desperate diatribe. Perhaps his biggest ploy is his attempt to equate democracy
with freedom. These two words are used virtually interchangeably throughout his
book. And the West has swallowed it hook-line-and-sinker.
But
America’s founding
fathers knew better. They were not swayed by Herodotus. They implemented many
safeguards to protect freedom from the pitfalls that mired Athenian democracy.
Even Winston Churchill said, “Democracy is the worst form of government
except for all the others which have been tried.”
Democracy may well be the best
form of government. But what makes
America great is not so much
democracy as it is its Bill Of Rights.
And this is exactly what made Persia Great. Democracy can often lead to tyranny
by the majority as was the case in democratic Athens, where women, slaves and
foreigners did not have the right to vote.
In monarchic
Persia, however,
women enjoyed a level of gender equality unmatched even to this day, and slavery
was not practiced. The fact is, Persia’s monarchy was more free than
Athens’
democracy, all because of
Persia’s
Bill Of Rights.
No one exemplifies
Persia’s
freedom better than Herodotus himself. He describes Athens as the bastion of
freedom, yet he chose to live in Persia. Xenophon, on the other hand, who
actually lived in Athens, reminisces enviably about the monarchy of Cyrus The
Great?
Herodotus claims
Persia had enslaved most of the known
world, yet we know Herodotus was not a slave. He traveled freely throughout the
empire, openly criticizing it.
Why did Herodotus not live in
Greece?
Because Persia - the empire he is so quick to demonize - afforded him the very
freedom to publish his scathing report of it. People want to live where their
god-given rights are protected, regardless of whether its democratic or
monarchic.
These god-given rights were first
drafted into law by the founder of the
Persian empire,
Cyrus The Great. In fact, ancient Persia may well have served as the blue print
for America’s Bill Of Rights. Both Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, the
architects of America’s Constitution, were great admirers and owned several
copies of Xenophon’s Cyropaedia.
Today, no other country resembles
ancient
Persia as closely as does the United
States. If any country should sympathize with, rather than celebrate, Persia’s
quagmire in Greece it is the United States. Few events in history mirror
America’s war on terror as closely as Persia’s war on Greece.
The Greeks had been carrying out
terrorist attacks on Persian holdings for years. They had attacked Persian
cities, set fire to Persian temples, disrupted key trade routes, and pirated
merchant ships crossing the Bosphorus. They incited rebellions inside Persian
provinces, but perhaps most abhorrent to the Persians was the ease by which the
Greeks broke their treaties and betrayed
Persia’s trust.
Rather than resort to violence,
however,
Persia tried to keep the Greeks in
check by financially supporting Greek politicians who were “pro-Persian,” much
the same way America fights its proxy wars. But what finally triggered Persia’s
wrath was an act rarely mentioned in the West, though well documented, even by
Herodotus (7:11).
Persia’s 9/11:
In 498 BCE, Athens carried out a
terrorist attack on Sardis, a major Persian city, which made 9/11 seem like
child’s play. Aristagoras, an Athenian, set fire to the “outlying parts” of
Sardis trapping most of its
population “in a ring of fire.” (Herodotus 5:101)
More innocent civilians died at the
hands of Aristagoras than Osama bin Laden could ever hope to kill. And just as
most of the world supported
America’s retaliation against Al
Qaeda, so did it rally in support of Persia’s attack on Athens.
The Spartans were not even targets
of Persia’s attack, until they violated a universal protocol by killing a
Persian messenger who Herodotus claims was asking for Sparta’s submission but in
reality was probably sent by Persia’s king, Xerxes to convey the same message
America sent to the entire world after 9/11: “you’re either with us, or against
us.”
The Spartans were Greek Jihadists
who lived only to die. They were by all accounts ruthless savages who murdered
Greek slaves known as “Helots” just for sport, cultivated a culture of thievery
and rape, and practiced infanticide, as the movie ‘300’ rightly points out in
its opening scenes.
Sparta was not even democratic. It
was an oligarchy at best. Despite knowing all this, the West continues to hail
the Spartans as the saviors of Western democracy.
Yes, the Spartans died fighting a
foreign invader. But so do countless terrorists, yet few would consider them
“good guys.” Those who do are then not much different from Westerners who cheer
for the Spartans.
Persia was drawn into a protracted
war against terror, much the same way the
U.S. was.
Cheering for the Spartans merely because they were underdogs, is like cheering
for Osama bin Laden today.
The Power Of Film:
History is no longer written by the
victors, it is written by filmmakers. When will the children of
Persia rise
up and fight back using the same weapon Hollywood has used for decades to
denigrate the legacy of their ancestors? When will we abandon our defensive
posture and begin to write our own history again?
Perhaps the movie ‘300’ was a
necessary wake up call. But
Persia bashing will never disappear
on its own. It is the main villain in the Western saga. The only way it will
change is through the power of film.
Alex Jovy’s epic movie about Cyrus The Great could have done
wonders for the Iranian image. Most minority groups in
America understand the power of film
and are quick to finance films that communicate their stories to the rest of the
world. But Alex Jovy’s movie today sits idle due lack of money. My documentary
film about Cyrus The Great has languished for the same reasons.
Cyrus Kar