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Ladan and Laleh Bijani, twins who died earlier this week in separation surgery, were prayed over by a cleric, then buried in separate graves Saturday as thousands of mourners wept.
The deaths of the 29-year-old sisters, who had been joined at the top of their heads, caused sadness around the world but particularly in their homeland. Some 20,000 people attended the burial ceremony in the twins' home village.
A note, in Farsi and English, attached to flowers on the coffins read: "Separated. Rest in Peace." One family member fainted during the emotional funeral.
Most mourners wore black, though some women were dressed in the long, colorful tribal dresses of the region. They tearfully cried out, "Today is the day of mourning." Others said, "Oh! Laleh and Ladan, where are you? The country is in grief."
People came from towns and villages across the region, and a nearly two-mile convoy of vehicles packed the road from nearby Firouzabad to Lohrasb, 680 miles southwest of Tehran, as the coffins were taken to the burial site.
The twins died Tuesday in Singapore, where they underwent a 54-hour operation. They died within 90 minutes of each other after surgeons separated their heads but failed to control bleeding.
The sisters had captivated the nation with their bravery and charm, and the admiration grew when it was revealed that they left wills donating all their property to blind children and orphans.
A government official proposed a "National Day of Love" to mark the twins' Dec. 31 birthday. Rahim Ebadi, head of the National Youth Organization, made the proposal in a letter to President Mohammad Khatami, the English-language Iran Daily reported.
Across Iran, people also grieved openly on city streets, halting work and parking their cars to cry when radio and TV interrupted normal programming to announce the news. Khatami also paid tribute to the twins' resolve and patience.
On Thursday, hundreds of mourners paid their respects at Tehran's Grand Mosque in a reception normally reserved for slain soldiers and prominent figures.
In their home village, which the sisters left at a young age to move to the capital, people placed photos of the women and placards expressing condolences on lamp posts and buildings.
The sisters left Iran seven months ago to prepare for the operation, insistent on the surgery despite the risks after a lifetime of compromising on everything from when to wake up to what career to pursue. Before the operation, they joked and said they wanted to look each other in the face without a mirror.
It was the first attempt to separate adult craniopagus twins -- siblings born joined at the head, although the surgery has been performed successfully since 1952 on infants, whose brains can more easily recover.
A neurosurgeon who assisted in the attempt to separate them said Friday the operation should have been done in stages over several weeks.
Performing the surgery as a marathon procedure felt like "heading into a dark jungle to hunt a hungry tiger with no gun," said Dr. Benjamin Carson, director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Children's Center in Baltimore.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2003/07/12/international1515EDT0561.DTL
Ladan and Laleh Bijani, twins who died earlier this week in separation surgery, were prayed over by a cleric, then buried in separate graves Saturday as thousands of mourners wept.
The deaths of the 29-year-old sisters, who had been joined at the top of their heads, caused sadness around the world but particularly in their homeland. Some 20,000 people attended the burial ceremony in the twins' home village.
A note, in Farsi and English, attached to flowers on the coffins read: "Separated. Rest in Peace." One family member fainted during the emotional funeral.
Most mourners wore black, though some women were dressed in the long, colorful tribal dresses of the region. They tearfully cried out, "Today is the day of mourning." Others said, "Oh! Laleh and Ladan, where are you? The country is in grief."
People came from towns and villages across the region, and a nearly two-mile convoy of vehicles packed the road from nearby Firouzabad to Lohrasb, 680 miles southwest of Tehran, as the coffins were taken to the burial site.
The twins died Tuesday in Singapore, where they underwent a 54-hour operation. They died within 90 minutes of each other after surgeons separated their heads but failed to control bleeding.
The sisters had captivated the nation with their bravery and charm, and the admiration grew when it was revealed that they left wills donating all their property to blind children and orphans.
A government official proposed a "National Day of Love" to mark the twins' Dec. 31 birthday. Rahim Ebadi, head of the National Youth Organization, made the proposal in a letter to President Mohammad Khatami, the English-language Iran Daily reported.
Across Iran, people also grieved openly on city streets, halting work and parking their cars to cry when radio and TV interrupted normal programming to announce the news. Khatami also paid tribute to the twins' resolve and patience.
On Thursday, hundreds of mourners paid their respects at Tehran's Grand Mosque in a reception normally reserved for slain soldiers and prominent figures.
In their home village, which the sisters left at a young age to move to the capital, people placed photos of the women and placards expressing condolences on lamp posts and buildings.
The sisters left Iran seven months ago to prepare for the operation, insistent on the surgery despite the risks after a lifetime of compromising on everything from when to wake up to what career to pursue. Before the operation, they joked and said they wanted to look each other in the face without a mirror.
It was the first attempt to separate adult craniopagus twins -- siblings born joined at the head, although the surgery has been performed successfully since 1952 on infants, whose brains can more easily recover.
A neurosurgeon who assisted in the attempt to separate them said Friday the operation should have been done in stages over several weeks.
Performing the surgery as a marathon procedure felt like "heading into a dark jungle to hunt a hungry tiger with no gun," said Dr. Benjamin Carson, director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Children's Center in Baltimore.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2003/07/12/international1515EDT0561.DTL