This year, against the backdrop of Ramadan and rising discontent, the celebrations took on an unmistakably political tone.
Families celebrate Nowruz by gathering around a Haftseen table to mark the start of spring and the Persian New Year.
Ahead of Nowruz I was struck with a desire to cook with my mom — something we hadn't done before. Here's what I learned ...
Rebecca Sassouni shares her family’s recipe for halva, a beloved dessert that honors both cultural roots and cherished ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Hamid Rahmanian has made it his life’s work to share the richness of Iranian culture. “Song of the North,” at the New Victory Theater ...
San José Spotlight on MSN13d
Urbanowski: United through arts and culture
Arts are embedded and integral in every culture, in our spiritual practices and in our community traditions. When we talk ...
The Grand Iwan Nowruz Festival takes center stage at Concordia University’s Loyola Campus for a two-day celebration leading up to the Persian New Year on March 20.
Festival organizers called Nowruz a “universal moment of rebirth and renewal,” a cultural welcoming of spring.