Hossein "Hoder" Derakhshan hoder.com is an Iranian-born blogger, journalist, and internet activist. Since mid-90s, he has been advocating the use of internet, particularly as a means for social and political reform in Iran.

His award-winning weblog, Editor: Myself, which was started in Sep 2001, has been among the most influential blogs in Persian language and his step-by-step instruction to create blogs in Persian should take much of the credit for inspiring thousands of Iranians to start their own blogs. He also writes for a Washington Post and Newsweek blog, titled PostGloba, as well as for The Guardian's Commentary website.

Hossein, whom The Guardian called a "key link from Iran's teeming world of Weblogs to the west", has been living in Toronto since Dec 2000, but now spends most of his time traveling. When not worrying about wireless internet access, he updates his blogs in Persian and in English, a blog watching internet censorship in Iran, and a photoblog.

After his unprecedented public trip to Israel in January 2006 and his multimedia coverage of the Iranians living there as a citizen journalist, he has recently launched a project called TehrAviv, with help from an Israeli friend, to promote peace and understanding between the two nations of Iran and Israel and disarm the radical establishment in both countries.

He also last visited Iran last June to cover the presidential elections for his readers. There he was shortly detained and interrogated by the Ministry of Intelligence before being forced to write an apology to be able to leave Iran a week after he had planned to.

He has spoken at various conferences and academic events including Harvard Law School, Columbia University, Tel Aviv University, University of Toronto, and University of Stockholm.

His writing has appeared in The Guardian, The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, Die Zeit, BBC News, Open Democracy, etc.

Hossein can be reached at hoder@hoder.com

Blog Entries by Hossein Derakhshan

Obama Shares Bush's Goals in Foreign Policy

2 Comments | Posted September 25, 2008 | 10:17 AM (EST)


Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential candidate, has adopted the rhetoric of change which has captured the imagination of many Americans and non-Americans around the world.

But when it comes to the foreign policy, there are enough reasons to remain sceptical.  Will he adopt a foreign policy with objectives which differ...

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Iran in Persepolis: Good Versus Evil, Again

Posted May 21, 2008 | 07:03 PM (EST)


Marjane Satrapi's film, Persepolis must have made George Bush and his new ally, Nicolas Sarokzy, quite happy. After all, despite Satrapi's rhetoric against the two leaders, her film's core argument is one that Bush and Sarkozy have long been busy constructing: the evil state versus the wonderful people.

Aesthetically,...

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Haleh is Free, How About Hannah Esfandiari?

Posted September 7, 2007 | 08:24 PM (EST)


On a sunny day in Washington, DC, my imaginary American scholar, Hannah Esfandiari, was sitting in her Kalorama-located house, opening a letter she had just received from Tehran, Iran.

It was a job offer from a prominent think tank at the heart of the Islamic Republic's policy-making...

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Haleh Esfandiari and NED

Posted August 24, 2007 | 05:38 PM (EST)


I know speaking against Haleh Esfandiari is like suicide these days. After all, with the help of her mostly American and Iranian neoliberal allies (especially Washington Post's Robin Wright whose love for Esfandiari, for some reason, surpasses that of Esfandiari's own daughter), has become a...

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TV Confessions Undermine the Reality of American Plans to Destabilize Iran

Posted July 21, 2007 | 02:48 PM (EST)


Esfandiari, Jahanbegloo and Tajbakhsh's tv 'confessions' is only targeted at the ordinary Iranians inside Iran and the fact that they're broadcasting it on the Channel 1 confirms that.

But there is also another delicate detail no one has paid attention to yet that explains what exactly Iranian intelligence system is...

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