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IRANIAN TRADITIONS & CELEBRATIONS JASHN-E TIRGÂN(The Rain Festival)
By: Joseph H. Peterson
The festival of Tiragân is observed on July 1st, and it is primarily a rain festival and it is one of the three most widely celebrated feasts (along with Mehregan and Norooz) amongst Iranian peoples. Tir in modern Persian,; Tishtar in Middle Persian or Pahlavi; and Avestan Tishtrya, is the Yazad presiding over the Star Sirius, brightest star in the sky, and of rain, and thus Tir Yazad especially invoked to enhance harvest and counter drought (Av. Apousha). Besides an Afrainagân or Jashn dedicated to Tir, there appear to have been many customs associated with Tiragân. Mary Boyce (Persian Stronghold of Zoroatrianism) mentions a game of Moradula ('bead-pot') or chokâdula ('fate-pot'). She also related the custom of tying rainbow-colored bands on their wrists which were worn for ten days and then thrown into a stream. She observed during her time in Sharif-Âbâd that many of the charming old Tiragan customs had died away by the 1960's leaving "merry-making by young people and children, who with a happy license... splash and duck one another in the village streams."
Tiragan is also associated with the legend of the arrow ('tir'), which is briefly alluded to in the Tishtar Yasht (Yt8.6):
An expanded account is found in Mirkond, History of the Early Kings of Persia, Erekhsha Khshviwi-ishush (Pahlavi Arash-i Shiwâtir, i.e. 'Arash of the swift arrow, and in modern Persian, known as Arash-e Kamângir) was the best archer in the Iranian army. When Manouchehr and Afrasiyab determined to make peace and to fix the boundary between Iran and Turan, 'it was stipulated that Arash should ascend Mount Damâvand, and from thence discharge an arrow towards the east; and that the place in which the arrow fell should form the boundary between the two kingdoms. Arash thereupon ascended the mountain, and discharged towards the east an arrow, the flight of which continued from the dawn of day until noon, when it fell on the banks of the Jeyhun (the Oxus).'
The following Tirgan story from the Persian Rivâyâts tie together many of these elements:
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