TEHRAN, Iran (AP) 鈥 I've worked for The Associated Press as a photographer since 1999. A lot of what I cover involves either or its , but I also try to shoot on the streets of Tehran as well to show the world what life looks like here in my hometown.
The fire festival offers a great opportunity for that.
Known as 鈥淐haharshanbe Souri鈥 in Farsi, the festival comes in the hours just before the Wednesday before Nowruz, .
To celebrate, people light bonfires, set off fireworks and send wish lanterns floating off into the night sky. Others jump over and around fires, chanting 鈥淢y yellow is yours, your red is mine,鈥 invoking the replacement of ills with warmth and energy.
The fire festival also features an Iranian version of trick-or-treating, with people going door to door and being given a holiday mix of nuts and berries, as well as buckets of water.
It's not necessarily an easy assignment though. Here in Iran, some people remain sensitive about having their photograph taken, particularly , or hijab.
Meanwhile, the joy sometimes overcomes safety concerns as smoke fills the air and fireworks explode at random overhead. and sometimes deaths. I ended up having a piece of a burning firecracker land inside my left shoe. I'm OK 鈥 it just burned a hole through my sock and left a small blister.
I used a flash for some of my photos to capture people jumping through the fire, given their speed and the low light available. One picture my photo editors especially liked shows a man holding a lit firework, his face silhouetted by its bright light. Behind him, you can see the empty branches of trees in the park I shot in.
Nowruz marks the start of spring. Soon, leaves will sprout again.
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Vahid Salemi, The Associated Press