. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1889347"^^ . "1355"^^ . "Firdous e Bareen (Persian: \u0641\u0631\u062F\u0648\u0633 \u0628\u0631\u06CC\u0646) was the name of the ancient Persian garden, supposedly located in the fortress of Alamut, in the Elburz mountains of Northern Iran, in which Hassan-i-Sabah and his band of Nizari Ismaili Shiite Hashshashin took refuge. The novel , written by Indian Muslim novelist Abdul Halim Sharar, gives a biographical account of Hussain, a youth lured and captured by Sabah's men and then forced into his assassination machinery. Firdous e Bareen is also a song on the album In the Absence of Truth by the American post-metal band Isis. \n* v \n* t \n* e \n* v \n* t \n* e"@en . "Firdous e Bareen (Persian: \u0641\u0631\u062F\u0648\u0633 \u0628\u0631\u06CC\u0646) was the name of the ancient Persian garden, supposedly located in the fortress of Alamut, in the Elburz mountains of Northern Iran, in which Hassan-i-Sabah and his band of Nizari Ismaili Shiite Hashshashin took refuge. According to some accounts, this Paradise garden, imitating paradise or heaven, was furnished with all luxuries of life, even a rivulet of wine and was used to recruit Sabah's assassins. The recruit was drugged to simulate \"dying,\" only to later awaken in a garden and be served a sumptuous feast by virgins. The supplicant was then convinced he was in Heaven and that Sabah was a minion of the divinity and that all of his orders should be followed, even to death. The novel , written by Indian Muslim novelist Abdul Halim Sharar, gives a biographical account of Hussain, a youth lured and captured by Sabah's men and then forced into his assassination machinery. Firdous e Bareen is also a song on the album In the Absence of Truth by the American post-metal band Isis. \n* v \n* t \n* e \n* v \n* t \n* e"@en . . . . . . . "1107850343"^^ . . . . . "Firdaws-i Bareen"@en . . . . .