The story of Minab is not only about loss; it is also about the fragile humanity that remains after tragedy. The students who died should be remembered for who they were: children with routines, friendships, and the quiet belongings they carried to school each day. Their backpacks belong to that memory, as signs of ordinary life and the future that was cut short. This collection is presented in that spirit of remembrance. It invites reflection rather than purchase alone, asking visitors to remember the children of Minab with compassion and to keep their names present with dignity.
Every child deserves the safety of a school day that begins and ends in peace. The students of Minab were denied that right, and their memory now carries a painful moral weight. Their backpacks, once part of daily life, now feel like small witnesses to innocence interrupted. The children of Minab should be spoken of with tenderness. They were students, sons and daughters, classmates and friends, carrying backpacks as they moved through the ordinary world of school — a world that should have protected them. What remains now is memory, and memory asks for honesty, care, and dignity. For that reason, this collection is framed as a memorial tribute. A backpack chosen from this page is meant to stand as a quiet reminder of the lives behind the story, and of the responsibility to remember them with respect.




