Ayatollah
Mesbah Yazdi's nickname comes from a cartoon portraying "Professor Crocodile", a "reptilian academic who was shown strangling a journalist with his tail". The cartoon was drawn by Nikahang Kowsar and satirized freedom of expression in Iran, and a speech given by Mesbah Yazdi in the previous day. Mesbah Yazdi was known as Professor Mesbah (Persian: استاد مصباح) among his supporters. "
Mesbah" rhymes with the Persian word for crocodile, "
Temsah" (Persian: تمساح), and the cartoon labeled the crocodile as "Professor
Temsah", who repeats the words used by Mesbah Yazdi in the previous day. Nikahang Kowsar was arrested and spent six days in prison for the depiction. In 2001, he sent an apology letter to Mesbah, and the cleric had said that he had accepted it, but later in 2003 Kowsar received a death threat, from and Islamist assassin group. Kowsar is a Canadian Citizen. In 2005, CBC's
Farid Haerinejad made a documentary about Nikahang Kowsar entitled "The Bloggers' War". The film was the winner of Bronze Plaque from Christopher Columbus International Film and Video Festival Ohio. Kowsar has been sentenced to prison for his cartoons in absentia. After moving to Canada, he worked in a Dry-Cleaner's for a while before joining
MarketWire in 2005 and
IFEX in 2008. He also has been free-lancing and his cartoons have been recently published by
The New York Times,
The Washington Post,
The Globe and Mail, ''
Maclean's, and The Guardian''. Kowsar is a member of the
New York Times Syndicate. He has appeared on CNN, BBC, CBC, CTV, VOA and many political TV shows as a guest analyst and observer. Kowsar now works in
Washington DC and is the editor-in-chief of Khodnevis.org, the first Persian citizen journalism platform. Kowsar is a member of the board of directors of
Cartoonists Rights Network International. Kowsar is also a member of the Association of Canadian Editorial Cartoonists (ACEC) and Journalists in Exile (JEX).
CBC made a documentary based on his life and his involvement in the Blogger movement. == Awards ==