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Victims of the Minab School Bombing
Breakdown of the 156 confirmed casualties at the Shajareh Tayyebeh school.
Primary Sources
Art Exhibition: Remembering Children Lost In Iran School Bombing ...
An art exhibition in New Delhi is honouring the memory of children killed in a devastating school bombing in Minab, Iran, showcasing their poignant drawings recovered from the rubble.Photograph: ANI PhotoKey PointsAn art exhibition in New Delhi displayed drawings by children killed in a school bombing in Minab, Iran.The exhibition, titled 'Minab Children Still Draw the Sun,' featured artworks recovered from the rubble of the bombed school.The drawings and photographs poignantly highlighted the loss of innocent lives due to the Iran-US-Israel war.Visitors expressed grief, solidarity with Iran, and calls for peace in response to the tragic event.The exhibition served as a powerful reminder of the devastating impact of conflict on children. Everything is as it should be in the drawings a globe in green and blue, a yellow school bus in motion, multi-hued birds perched on a branch beneath blue clouds and a shining sun. What is missing? The children who brought that fragile order into being and gave visual form to a world they saw as full of colour. Remembering the Victims of the Minab School Bombing Framed in innocence and hope, the drawings on display at the Iranian Embassy belonged to children killed when a school in Minab, Iran, was bombed into rubble on February 28 -- the day the Iran-US-Israel war broke out. Around 160 children, aged five to seven, were killed. The exhibition, titled "Minab Children Still Draw the Sun", ended earlier this week. It was an art show unlike any other, less a celebration of the creations and more a mourning of their creators. The artworks were found in school bags buried under the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls' elementary school by Red Crescent teams, then scanned and sent to the Iranian Embassy in New Delhi as well as many others across the world. The recurring Persian line at the bottom of most of these drawings read: "May our children find happiness." The Emotional Impact of the Artworks A preliminary glance at the artworks induced deep sadness with even some of the most stoic finding it hard to hold back their tears. The hall, filled with visitors of all ages, also echoed with sounds of loud sobs. "A school that was destroyed following a millitary attack by the USA and the zionist regime. Pages that were recovered through the efforts of Red Crescent rescue teams, and have been restored only to the extent that they can be seen. "The world depicted in them is still simple, bright and trustworthy. But the world outside did not rema...
Families in Iran struggle with school closures even as the airstrikes ...
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Mahnaz Ataei, a finance manager in Tehran, brings her 7-year-old to the office and oversees his online classes while trying to do her job.Schools have been closed across Iran since the United States and Israel launched the war on Feb. 28, with no word on when in-person instruction will resume. The fear of airstrikes has lifted since a fragile ceasefire went into effect, but life has not returned to normal.As with the COVID closures six years ago, it's especially difficult for working parents with small children.“My productivity drops when I have to pay attention to both my child and my work at the same time,” Ataei said. “The hardest part is trying to create balance between work and online classes, and always stressing over whether he is really learning his lessons properly.”The war killed at last 3,000 people in Iran, including more than 165 people killed in a strike on an elementary school. The ceasefire is set to expire early next week, with the U.S. and Iran still divided on key issues like Iran's enriched uranium. A U.S. naval blockade could further damage Iran's already cratered economy.Safer but not easierMany parents fled Tehran with their children after the airstrikes began. But the relative safety came at the cost of disrupted routines, crowded living arrangements and financial stress. Now they are struggling to resume normal life with no idea what comes next.“I feel like I’m suspended — neither in the air nor on the ground,” said Roya Amiri, a housewife who recently returned to Tehran after fleeing with her two sons, ages 10 and 18, days after the start of the war.The family joined hundreds of thousands of Iranians who fled the capital and other cities for safety in rural areas or the relatively unscathed north. They stayed with relatives, with 15 people living under one roof.Tensions flared among the children as they packed into close quarters and their routines — and sleep — were disrupted. Her 10-year-old son has a respiratory illness, and they struggled to find his medication.Schools shut down after the initial strikes, briefly resuming with online classes for a week in March before the Nowruz holiday. Online classes resumed April 4.Even with the risk of renewed conflict hanging over the capital, Amiri said she felt returning to Tehran was the right decision. If war breaks out again, she plans to stay in her own home.“I was tired of living collectively. I wanted to return to my own home and routine,” Amiri said. “I missed...
Makan Nasiri is the only student from Minab School who is still missing ...
Iran Military Media ☫ (@IRMilitaryMedia). 103 likes. Makan Nasiri is the only student from Minab School who is still missing after 50 days, and no trace of his body has been found! The only thing left of him is one shoe, found in the rubble...
Among the children massacred by a US missile attack on Shajareh ...
Tehran Times (@TehranTimes79). 31 likes 7 replies. Among the children massacred by a US missile attack on Shajareh Tayyebeh elementary school in Minab, southern Iran, was a 7-year-old boy named Makan Nasiri.



