www.bbc.co.uk Canada has one of the largest and most well developed Iranian immigrant communities in the world, with an estimated 85,000 living in the country, according to the nation's 2003 census.
Preserving the signs and symbols of Iran has long been crucial for Iranian immigrants in Canada, to the point where homesick Iranians create neighbourhoods almost identical to their native land.
Although always willing to mix with their host community, they retain a strong sense of identity through their own cultural traditions.
Iranian marketplaces or bazaars are where one can see these elements of Iranian identity. It is in these bazaars where one can see thriving Iranian shops, restaurants, tea-houses, bookshops and beauty parlours.
There are many traditional Iranian elements in the interior design of places frequented by Iranian expats.
And all this is enhanced by the mesmerising effect of Persian music and painting.
The interior design of a restaurant in Montreal follows the example of traditional Persian tea-houses.
There is a large samovar - an urn used to boil water - with little thin glasses of tea which are served with cube sugar. The chairs have been replaced by coaches covered by Persian rugs.
This traditional style, which dates to the 19th Century, is mixed with ancient looking frescos and other architectural ornaments such as a tabarzin, a tool or form of symbolic axe used by dervishes.
Even the restaurant menus of this restaurant follow the example of the Persian art of book-binding and are handwritten to look like old manuscripts.
Iranian handicrafts in Canada are mainly produced for export. Enamel is the best known example of Iranian handicraft, but there are other works made of glass and wood, along with textiles, rugs and carpets.
Another type of Iranian handicraft available at shops in Toronto and Montreal is cast iron metal work.
The finest examples of Persian handicraft are Iranian musical instruments, which look beautiful as well as sounding good.
And Iranian music on tapes and CDs can be found in dozens of shops.
Some of the shops play Iranian music videos to entice more customers and shops selling Iranian films do a roaring trade, as international attention becomes increasingly focused on the quality of Iranian cinema.
Iranians have taken few steps to make other nations familiar with their food and the Iranian expat community is relatively young and inexperienced when it comes to exposing others to their cuisine.
This may explain why so many Iranian food shops offer little to customers other than traditional breads and kebabs.
However, the new phenomenon of Persian take-away food shows how Iranians are embracing some aspects of modern Canadian life.
And in recent years shops selling traditional Iranian pickles and confectionary, including the country's famous pastries, have been springing up in several Canadian cities. Persian script is the most distinctive cultural aspect of Iranian life.
This characteristic makes any Iranian shop very well known - even outside the Iranian community.
Iranians can now find Persian shops in Canada's cities with ease - when you see the Persian script, you are almost there. And if you see too many signs in Persian, then you must be in a Toronto Iranian neighbourhood!
Language is another strong national element. One could live in Canada without ever needing to speak English or French.
There are Persian-speaking pharmacists and doctors whose patients can watch blaring Persian TV while waiting for a new patient.
The "little Iran" created by Iranian immigrants in Canada will always remain a smaller scale model of the homeland, but those who have left Iran for a new life seem happy to have a model which embodies all the desirable elements of Persian culture in a condensed form.
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