President Donald Trump has the power to end a civilization. But it’s not Iran’s. It’s America’s.
As an Iranian American born and raised in the United States, I love
both my homelands equally and unreservedly. But I’ve never worried more
about America or less about Persian civilization.
Because even if Trump demolished every building in all of Iran and
killed every living Iranian, he couldn’t come close to destroying
Persian civilization. Not just because it’s thousands of years older
than these disturbingly divided United States I call home, but because
Iranians don’t take pride in buildings or big, beautiful bills. We take
pride in the whole of Persian architecture and the Cyrus Cylinder. We
are not impressed by Dr. Phil or Kid Rock or Trump for that matter. We
are the descendants of the poets Rumi, Hafez, Saadi and Ferdowsi. We
have no interest in being timely; we’re perfectly happy being timeless.
So we don’t think in years or decades or even centuries. We think in
millennia. And that’s why I’m not even remotely worried about the
survival of Persian civilization.
American civilization, however, is another story. For I worry
about it every day. Because I see our greatest asset as a nation of
immigrants slipping away.
Like countless American immigrants, my parents came to the United
States for a better life, and they succeeded spectacularly. Living
embodiments of the American dream and Iran’s post-revolutionary brain
drain, they both practiced medicine in Ohio for decades while raising
two daughters to believe that anything was possible in America. And we
did.
My sister, the smartest, became a doctor and a mother. I, the
loudest, became a lawyer and a writer. By all accounts, our family is
proof that America is an extraordinary country, full of freedoms and
opportunities that evade so many around the world. But Trump’s America
has not been kind to immigrant families like ours, who have worked hard
to better this country only to feel increasingly isolated within it.
For families like ours, Trump’s bombast is ominously reminiscent of
the autocracies we fled. Every time he demeans or deports our fellow
Americans in service of his white, pseudo-Christian, nationalist agenda,
our country and our people suffer. As eerily familiar as it feels to
see the U.S. flirt so shamelessly with theocracy and dictatorship, I
know this is different.
For unlike Iran, America doesn’t have thousands of years of history
to reassure us that our civilization will survive. Because we are
building it as we go. As a country born of genocide and built by
slavery, the true patriots among us know that our greatest strength and
salvation lie in our diversity. Trump’s refusal to acknowledge our
history or celebrate our diversity represents nothing short of the
greatest threat to American civilization since the Civil War. And his
insistence on cutting funding for pretty much everything that creates
and sustains a civilization — including the arts and sciences, the
humanities and health care, the environment and education — doesn’t bode
well for our nascent nation.
Ultimately, for American civilization to last even a tenth as long as
Persian civilization, Americans must elect leaders who truly put
America first. Not as some collection of embezzled real estate holdings
meant to boost the egos and pockets of tyrants, but as one of the most
diverse and vibrant civilizations this side of the 21st century.
For we are the descendants of Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow and Audre Lorde, Paul Laurence Dunbar and Edgar
Allan Poe, Henry David Thoreau and Maya Angelou. These poets alone have
given us more than enough upon which to sustain a civilization. But only
if we can pull away from our screens long enough to quit thinking in
seconds and 24-hour news cycles. Because to survive, Americans must stop
surrendering to political hubris and cultural amnesia. To survive, we
must start thinking in millennia.
Melody Moezzi, a Chicago native, is an author, attorney and activist. Her latest book is “The Rumi Prescription,”
and her forthcoming book is “Maybe Let’s Not: Adventures in Deleting
Delusions, Refreshing Reality, and Living Life in Real Life.”