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love of leadership, have raised the standard of opposition
and waxed loud in their complaints. Up to now,
they blamed the Sháh for not, on his own initiative,
working for his people's welfare and seeking to bring
about their peace and well-being. Now that he has inaugurated
this great design they have changed their
tune. Some say that these are newfangled methods and
foreign isms, quite unrelated to the present needs and
the time-honored customs of Persia. Others have rallied
the helpless masses, who know nothing of religion or
its laws and basic principles and therefore have no
power of discrimination--and tell them that these
modern methods are the practices of heathen peoples,
and are contrary to the venerated canons of true faith,
and they add the saying, "He who imitates a people
is one of them." One group insists that such reforms
should go forward with great deliberation, step by step,
haste being inadmissible. Another maintains that only
such measures should be adopted as the Persians themselves
devise, that they themselves should reform their
political administration and their educational system
and the state of their culture and that there is no need
to borrow improvements from other nations. Every faction,
in short, follows its own particular illusion.
O people of Persia! How long will you wander?
How long must your confusion last? How long will it
go on, this conflict of opinions, this useless antagonism,
this ignorance, this refusal to think? Others are alert,
and we sleep our dreamless sleep. Other nations are
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