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Teahouse in Iran's Grand Bazaar According to an article that

appears in CNN

Among the thousands of shops that line the labyrinthine alleyways


of Tehran's Grand Bazaar sits the Haj Ali Darvish teahouse.
It's not the only teahouse in the bazaar, but having first opened in
1918, it's definitely one of the oldest. And according to some, it's
also the smallest -- not just in the bazaar but in the whole world.
For those who find their way to this closet-sized, two-meter-wide
cafe, owner Kazem Mabhutyan is on hand to serve up a wide range
of teas and advice about their healing properties.
"I've traveled abroad and tested different styles such as English,
Turkish and Arabic, but nothing matches Persian-style tea,"
Coffee and hot chocolate are on the menu, too.
Mabhutyan took over the business from his father, Haj Ali
Mabhutyan, who bought the teahouse in 1962 from its original
owner Haj Mohammad Hasan Shamshiri.
Before the 1979 Iranian revolution, the teahouse provided tea for
many of the shops at the bazaar, Mabhutyan says. Since then,
however, people working at the bazaar began to prepare tea
themselves. But that hasn't stopped the shop from thriving.
Mabhutyan serves an increasing number of tourists. The number of
foreign visitors traveling to Iran has boomed in recent years, rising
from 2.2 million in 2009 to 5.2 million in 2016.
"I ask all my customers to leave a message in the visitors' book, and
everybody who drinks tea here for the first time is presented with a
souvenir coin."
Mabhutyan is also a big believer in the marketing power of social
media. He launched the Haj Ali Darvish Instagram account a couple
of years ago.
He loves to post photos of everyone who visits. He says it's helped
make his tiny teahouse into one of the most popular pit stops in the
bazaar.

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