Haider, the son of Mesh Ismail, returns to the village after completing his military service to marry his fiance Golnaz. After the death of the son of one of the residents of the village, he tries to get the favorable opinion of Afrasiab, the lord of Daim
... al-Khamr of the village, to build a school and a clinic. Afrasiab is suspicious of the villagers because they kidnapped his son twenty-five years ago and opposes Haider's decision. Haider organizes a competition to finance the construction of a school and a clinic with its proceeds. Afrasiab's men obstruct Haider's way, and Afrasiab's foreman, Hashem, steals the proceeds of the race and sets fire to the villagers' threshing floor and the lord's house. When he drags Shahla, Afrasiab's daughter, into the forest, Haider and the villagers take action against Hashem. Hashem is killed by Afrasiab's bullet and Mash Ismail explains that Haider is Afrasiab's lost son.
Haider, the son of Mesh Ismail, returns to the village after completing his military service to marry his fiance Golnaz. After the death of the son of one of the residents of the village, he tries to get the favorable opinion of Afrasiab, the lord of Daim al-Khamr of the village, to build a school and a clinic. Afrasiab is suspicious of the villagers because they kidnapped his son twenty-five years ago and opposes Haider's decision. Haider organizes a competition to finance the construction of a school and a clinic with its proceeds. Afrasiab's men obstruct Haider's way, and Afrasiab's foreman, Hashem, steals the proceeds of the race and sets fire to the villagers' threshing floor and the lord's house. When he drags Shahla, Afrasiab's daughter, into the forest, Haider and the villagers take action against Hashem. Hashem is killed by Afrasiab's bullet and Mash Ismail explains that Haider is Afrasiab's lost son.