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A shocking response to "Ahmad Alam-ul-Huda" who attributed Iranian achievements to Afghanistan

Ahmad Alam-ul-Huda's statement that Iranian heroes are all from Afghanistan drew a devastating response.

Alam al-Huda's widely republished remarks about Iranian achievements, most of which he attributed to Afghanistan, not only had a meaning beyond his personal opinion on the matter, but his remarks also became controversial in cyberspace.

During the 13th government, special facilities were provided for the presence of Afghans in Iran, from issuing national cards to issuing identity cards similar to those of Iranian citizens, as well as giving them the right to vote, all of which provoked widespread reactions.

The reactions to Alam-ul-Huda's claim that all Iranian honors are for Afghanistan made headlines. Many have said: "It is strange that in an era when countries are trying to increase their honors, someone in Iran is found behind the podium and is presenting Iranian honors to others! Why? Because he probably wants to theorize the strange and mysterious policy of the widespread presence of Afghans in Iran. A policy that even reached the election debates, and the speaker of the parliament, who was a presidential candidate, promised to build a border wall between Iran and Afghanistan to control the presence of Afghan citizens in Iran."

In addition, many social media users stated that as if Great Iran, the proud people whose birthplace is present-day Afghanistan, had no other prominent figures and that everything we had, as Alamul-Huda said, belonged to Afghanistan! In addition to having incorrect information, such as the birthplace of Ibn Sina, he also reversed the issue because some of the current countries that have become independent were once part of Iranian territory, so it is natural that the aforementioned proud people were also Iranian, and the territorial divisions that emerged do not negate the Iranianness of these proud people.

It should be noted that a large part of the Caucasus region, Afghanistan, Central Asia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Transoxiana and Khorezm, the Caspian Sea, Pakistan and Kashmir, the Hindu Kush Mountains, parts of China, Kurdistan, the entire Persian Gulf region, Mesopotamia, Armenia, and parts of present-day Turkey are among the areas that were once part of Iranian territory, but after the division of the lands, Iran has now become a small cat on the vast map of the world.

Karbi also challenged Alamul-Huda's literacy and said: "I wish Alamul-Huda loved Iran and I wish he would not speak in a field in which he has no expertise or literacy. I wish he would appreciate the contemporary Iranians' achievements, just as he speaks passionately about the Iranians born in Afghanistan and present-day Uzbekistan, one of whom was "Maryam Mirzakhani," whose death anniversary was celebrated abroad just a few days ago."

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