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[While reading this item bear in mind how the Jews are treating the Palestinians, and consider how strong their case of victimhood would be without the 'Holocaust' myth.]
The complex tale of how the Persian Empire founded by Cyrus the Great—the world’s “first” Zionist—metamorphosed into the Israel-Hating nation we know today.
How Jew- Friendly Persia Became Anti-Semitic Iran
Abdol Hossein Sardari didn’t look like a hero. But when Paris fell to Hitler in
June 1940, the 30-year-old Muslim—a dapper man with a receding hairline—took it
upon himself to save Jews trapped inside Nazi-occupied France. Sardari, a junior
official at the Iranian Embassy, had been left behind to look after the building
when the Iranian ambassador and his staff abandoned Paris to establish residence
in Vichy, the new home of France’s pro-Nazi government. Once the Nazis began
rounding up Jews, Sardari, without authorization from his government, made
liberal use of the embassy’s supply of blank Iranian passports to assign new,
non-Jewish identities to those in need, creating his own version of Schindler’s
list.
Ibrahim Morady, who died this past June in Los Angeles at the age of 95, was one
of the hundreds of Jews Sardari helped spare from deportation. “My father moved
to Paris from Persia when he was six,” recounts his son Fred. Once Morady, a
well-to-do rug merchant, had his new identity, he and two colleagues arranged to
purchase false papers for about 100 other Jews of Iranian descent. Sardari
served as their go-between, passing a bribe to a German official. In return,
these Jews were given documents asserting that they were members of “some
strange tribe in Iran—Djouguti, or something like that,” Fred Morady explains.
“I asked my father: ‘What does this name mean?’ And he said: ‘They just made it
up.’”
Sardari was not the only Iranian to protect Jews during World War II. The
Iranian government itself kept its 3,000-year-old Jewish community out of Nazi
reach. But his heroism is representative of Iran’s civilized and empathetic
attitude toward its Jews.
This attitude stands in marked contrast to the vitriolic Islamic Republic of
Iran led by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that we hear and read about today. The world was
stunned when Ahmadinejad, the former mayor of Tehran, felled an Iranian
political giant—Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani—in the 2005 presidential election.
Ahmadinejad, a radically conservative veteran of the Revolutionary Guards, an
arm of the country’s Islamic establishment, quickly became a confrontational
presence. Standing aside a banner that read “The World Without Zionism,” he
whipped up a crowd of 4,000 students at an October 2005 conference in Tehran.
“Our dear Imam ordered that the occupying regime in Al Quds be wiped off the
face of the earth,” Ahmadinejad declared, referring to the late Ayatollah
Khomeini and using the Arabic name for Jerusalem. “Anyone who would recognize
this state has put his signature under the defeat of the Islamic world.”
The president also garnered world headlines when he publicly pronounced the
Holocaust a “myth.” He has since slightly toned down his rhetoric, questioning
why, if the Holocaust happened, the Palestinians should suffer for it. “Under
the pretext of protecting some of the survivors of the war, the land of
Palestine was occupied through war, aggression and the displacement of millions
of its inhabitants,” he told the United Nations General Assembly this September,
ignoring the historic presence of Jews in Palestine.
When it comes to the Jews, Abdol Hossein Sardari and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
represent the two faces of Iran. This Muslim, but not Arab, country that
protected its Jews from the Holocaust now questions whether that genocide ever
occurred. Once one of Israel’s closest Muslim allies, Iran now seeks to wipe the
“Zionist entity” off the map. Tens of thousands of its Jews have left, yet Iran
still retains the largest Jewish population of any Muslim country.
These contradictions have been embedded in the country’s history since ancient
times. “In a sense, the story of the Jews of Iran is literally the Bible
itself,” says Abbas Milani, director of the Iranian Studies Program at Stanford
University and co-director of the Iran Democracy Project at the Hoover
Institution. “The Bible says God asked Cyrus the Great [the founder of the
Persian Empire] to build the Second Temple and Cyrus did. And Esther, a Jew
married to the king of Persia, exposed the anti-Semitic, genocidal plot of Haman
[his chief minister], and it was aborted. These two tendencies—the Hamanic
anti-Semitic tendency and the tendency to welcome and accept the Jews and the
rights that they have—have come all the way to the 21st century.”
The first charter of human rights ever set to paper predates the Magna Carta by
some 1,700 years. It was drafted not within the baronial estates of medieval
England but in a desert palace in the Middle East. “I announce that I will
respect the traditions, customs and religions of the nations of my empire,”
proclaimed Cyrus upon entering the gates of Babylon on the first day of spring
in 539 B.C.E., “and never let any of my governors and subordinates look down on
or insult them.”
Cyrus’s reign is warmly remembered as the Persian equivalent of Camelot, the
mythical English court ruled by King Arthur. “Iranians take a lot of pride in
the old civilization started by Cyrus,” says Sam Kermanian, secretary general of
the Iranian-American Jewish Federation in Los Angeles. “He was extremely
tolerant of other beliefs and ideologies; that, too, is an added measure of
pride.”
Cyrus is also sometimes referred to as the world’s first Zionist. He righted the
wrong done by King Nebuchadnezzar II 58 years earlier when he captured Jerusalem
and Judah, and exiled thousands of Jews. “All the kingdoms of the earth the
Lord, the God of heaven, has given to me and he has also charged me to build him
a house in Jerusalem, which is in Judah,” Cyrus declared. He offered the Jews
the opportunity to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the Temple at Persian
taxpayer expense. Many accepted, while others remained in Persia.
Typically depicted as a bearded warrior-king with broad shoulders in a military
tunic and helmet, Cyrus was killed in 529 B.C.E. in a battle in northern Persia.
The Jews fared less well under his son, Cambyses II, who suspended construction
of the Temple. But a few years later, work was resumed under King Darius.
According to the Bible, Esther was the beloved wife of Darius’s son. Xerxes,
also known as Ahasuerus.
Overall, life was good for the Jewish community under the early Persian kings.
“From what we know, the Jews were well trusted and tolerated,” says Houman
Sarshar, a scholar with the Center for Iranian Jewish Oral History who edited an
anthology called Esther’s Children: A Portrait of Iranian Jews. He points to the
prominence of Jewish prophets in the Persian Empire and notes that Ezra held the
respected job of scribe in the royal court. “The Jews weren’t seen as a threat
to anyone else’s way of life,” Sarshar says. But with the advent of Islam their
world would change.
A battle in 642 C.E., which Arabs hail as the “victory of victories,” brought an
end to the golden age of Persian Jews. Some 30,000 battle-hardened Arab Muslims
assembled at Nehavend, along the western Persian border, and defeated the
150,000-man Persian army, ending 2,000 years of Persian independence. The
caliphate was then controlled from Damascus and Baghdad.
Although Muslims revered Jews as “the people of the Book,” the imposition of
Islam led to second-class citizenship for Persia’s minorities—Jews,
Zoroastrians, and Armenian and Assyrian Christians. “After the rapid expansion
of the Muslim dominion, Muslim leaders were required to find a way of handling
non-Muslims, who remained in the majority in many areas,” says Nahid Pirnazar,
who teaches Iranian studies at the University of Southern California at Los
Angeles and is founder and director of the House of Judeo-Persian Manuscripts
Foundation. As a way of both protecting and discriminating against minorities,
Islamic leaders came up with the notion of dhimma, or protected minorities. “The
dhimmi were required to pay an extra tax but usually were unmolested,” says
Pirnazar. “This compares well to the treatment meted out to non-Christians in
Christian Europe.”
Over time, the list of hardships and humiliations grew. The Pact of Umar, named
after the reigning leader from 634 to 644 C.E., established harsher laws for
non-Muslims. Jews were barred from government office and the military, and
forbidden to ride on white donkeys, which were seen as symbols of cleanliness.
They were forced to wear yellow armbands, while Christians had to don blue ones.
After the Mongols invaded Persia in the second half of the 13th century, the
standing of the country’s Jews improved dramatically. “This period was the
highlight of the life of Jews in Islamic Iran,” says Pirnazar. “The Mongol
rulers at the time were secular, not yet converted to Islam, so Jews had a
chance to penetrate into socio-political and cultural levels.”
This didn’t last. Treatment of minorities deteriorated after the Safavids took
power in the 1500s, imposing their hard-line brand of Shia Islam and ushering in
“the worst era of Persian-Jewish relations,” says political scientist Eliz
Sanasarian of the University of Southern California, author of Religious
Minorities in Iran.
The Safavids forcibly converted Iran’s Sunni Muslims to Shia Islam and
introduced the concept of “ritual pollution,” which further segregated
minorities from their neighbors. Because nonbelievers were deemed spiritually
and physically contagious, Jews were barred from leaving their houses when it
rained, for fear the water would transmit their impurities. A Jew who entered a
Muslim home had to sit on a special rug and could not be offered tea, food or a
water pipe, since any object touched by a Jew could no longer be used by a
Muslim.
Safavid rule came to an end in 1736, but the Muslim perception of Jews as impure
remained. Occasional violent outbreaks, reminiscent of the blood libels and
pogroms carried out in Europe, punctuated the next two centuries of Qajar
Dynasty rule. In one incident in the northeastern town of Mashhad in 1839, an
ailing Jewish woman was told to use dogs’ blood to cure a certain malady. A
rumor quickly spread that she had tried the cure on a Shia holiday, deliberately
insulting the sect. Jews were attacked and some three dozen killed, while the
rest of the Jewish community was given the choice of conversion to Islam or
death. Such bloody outbreaks persisted until the 20th century, when a new breed
of shah came to power.
Born in the isolated northern Persian village of Alasht in 1878, Reza Pahlavi
was the son of a military officer. Pahlavi was a man of powerful military
bearing, most often portrayed with a thick handlebar mustache and a curved knife
hanging from his scabbard. In 1925, he deposed the last shah of the Qajar
Dynasty, giving himself the title Reza Shah.
For the first time in 1,400 years, an Iranian ruler reached out to his country’s
Jews, bowing to the Torah to show his respect during a visit to the Jewish
community of Isfahan, banning mass conversions and discouraging the idea that
non-Muslims were unclean.
While respectful of Iran’s Jews, Reza Shah was fascinated by Nazi Germany. With
German encouragement—and to emphasize that Persians are Aryan, not Arab—he
changed the country’s name to Iran—from the old Persian “Arynam” or “of the
Aryans.”
Iran, sitting of vast pools of oil, became of great strategic importance during
World War II. Hitler coveted the oil, sparking fears of an Iranian-German
alliance. As a result, Britain and the Soviet Union invaded and occupied Iran in
1941, forcing the Shah to abdicate in favor of his son, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
Though the younger Pahlavi was seen as a playboy more interested in fast cars
than in governing, he had a bold vision for his nation.
A man of grandiose self-image, the new Shah viewed himself as heir to Cyrus the
Great and as such was a friend of the Jews. Under his rule, the community
“enjoyed almost total cultural and religious autonomy, experienced unprecedented
economic progress and had more or less the same political rights as their Muslim
compatriots,” says David Menashri, a Tel Aviv University expert on Iran.
To protect them from the Nazis, Iran assured the Germans that its Jews were
fully assimilated Iranians called kalimis—a term derived from the accolade for
Moses in Koran. The Nazis, still more interested in Iran’s oil, acquiesced, and
also turned a blind eye to the fact that the Shah was providing an escape route
for thousands of European Jewish refugees.
Rachel Meer, a Jewish Iranian expatriate who lives on the upper west side of
Manhattan, remembers her father telling her the story of how, during World War
II, he helped Jews pass through Iran. “He purchased a huge army tent to protect
these refugees,” she says. “When he married my mother, the Jews traveling
through were invited to the wedding.” Later, when great numbers of Iraqi Jews
left their homes for the newly born state of Israel, they too were granted
passage, says Shaul Bakhash, a veteran Mideast analyst at George Mason
University in Virginia. “Iran was one of the few countries that did not charge
the Zionist organization for this permission.”
At first Iran had opposed the partition of Palestine, says Trita Parsi, author
of the forthcoming book Treacherous Triangle—The Secret Dealings of Iran, Israel
and the United States. “But once it was done, Iran and Israel realized they had
common interests and common enemies.” In the 1960s, Iran developed a military
relationship with Israel and Israeli technicians assisted Iran with agricultural
projects. Both nations, wary of Arab domination of the Middle East, saw value in
creating a non-Arab “outer ring,” consisting of Iran, Israel, Turkey and
Ethiopia.
With the exception of Turkey, Iran stood virtually alone in the Middle East in
its acceptance of the state of Israel. But in doing so, the Shah walked a fine
line. As Iran’s covert ties with Israel became public, Egypt’s Gamal Abdel
Nasser launched a campaign against the Shah. At home, his efforts to westernize
Iran faced opposition from mullahs—Iran’s Islamic clerics—on the right and
intellectuals on the left, all of whom condemned his government as repressive.
After Israel seized and occupied the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Golan Heights and
East Jerusalem during the 1967 Six-Day War, the Iranian clergy’s antipathy
toward Israel increased sharply. “1967 changed many minds,” says Menashri. He
recounts the story of the 200-rial banknote to illustrate the Shah’s precarious
position.
It was 1974, a time of great tension: Arab oil-producing nations had imposed an
oil embargo on the West, but the Shah, wishing to maintain his strategic
alliance with Washington and Jerusalem, refused to stop supplying them with oil.
The Arabs were incensed. What seemed like routine government business—the
replenishment of currency by issuing 10 million new 200-rial notes—quickly grew
into a crisis. On the day the new currency was to be distributed to banks,
attention fell on a six-pointed star on the back of the bill. Though the star
was of a traditional Iranian design, rumors spread that the currency had been
printed in Israel. Fearing rebellion, the government withdrew the notes that
same day.
Protests against the Shah continued to escalate and the storm clouds of
revolution gathered. “The revolution did not have Islamic overtones at first—it
was a revolution of the intelligentsia and it was pro-democracy,” recalls
Esther’s Children author Sarshar. “But, very quickly, in about two or three
months, all the craziness started.” While many Jews were sympathetic to the
protestors, the community was seen as an ally to the Shah and part of the ruling
establishment—thus an enemy of the revolution.
The most influential of the revolutionaries was a religious leader with a
flowing beard who sat brooding in exile in a Parisian suburb: Ayatollah Rohollah
Mousavi Khomeini. Born in 1902 near the holy city of Qom, Khomeini had been
exiled from Iran in 1964 for condemning the Shah’s modernization policies. After
13 years in Iraq, he moved to France, where he continued to challenge the
regime. Via smuggled audiotapes of his sermons, he fanned the swelling protests
against the Shah’s regime from afar and inspired Iran’s Islamic Revolution.
By 1978, widespread strikes had led to the collapse of the economy and, on
December 12, two million protestors gathered on Tehran’s Azadi Square. On
January 16, 1979, the Shah fled Iran into exile. Two weeks later, enormous
crowds greeted Khomeini’s triumphant return to Tehran on a chartered Air France
airliner. That November 4, a mob of angry students, spurred on by his
denouncement of the United States as an enemy of Islam stormed the American
Embassy, taking 66 Americans hostage. The demonstrators included a young
rabble-rouser named Ahmadinejad who also advocated seizing the Soviet Embassy. A
new age of Islamic fundamentalism for Iran had begun, spelling great uncertainty
for its 80,000 Jews.
As a skinny, brainy Tehran teenager in the 1970s, Roya Hakakian was one of many
young Jews who supported the Islamic Revolution despite the nervous admonitions
of their parents. For them, participation was not only an adventure but
affirmation they were fully assimilated Iranians. Hakakian, now a 39-year-old
mother in Connecticut, has written a memoir, Journey From the Land of No, that
provides a glimpse into the turmoil that followed the Revolution.
Initially, the Islamists were too busy imposing their rules on society at large
to worry about the Jews. “People weren’t permitted to laugh on the streets on
certain national mourning days; it was a crime to be with a boy you weren’t
related to; we had to cover our heads and we couldn’t hold hands,” Hakakian
recalls. Women couldn’t appear in public without a veil and garments like the
chador that revealed not a clue of femininity. Women also lost the right to
divorce, and most engineering and law schools began refusing them admission.
People could be arrested—and sometimes executed—for possession of books such as
The Communist Manifesto, or music cassettes. “Those were the Khmer Rouge days,”
Hakakian says.
Hakakian’s first brush with the new order came when she and a few friends went
for a hike in a public park in the Alborz, part of a mountain range outside
Tehran. Encountering a sign that said the mountain was “closed,” they giggled
and ignored it. As they ascended, some of the girls loosened their mandatory
head scarves. Soon, they were stopped by a teenager in army fatigues toting a
Kalashnikov, who demanded to know what they were doing. Three other uniformed
men joined him and took the group to a detention center. There, a policeman
found a Jewish prayerbook in Hakakian’s pocketbook; ironically, that broke the
tension. “Jews are cowards,” one of the uniformed men said. “They never get
mixed up in politics. And we thought we’d got ourselves a pack of leftists or
royalists.” The girls were sent home.
“For once in Jewish history,” says Hakakian wryly, “Jewish stereotypes came to
our aid.”
In the evenings, she and her friends would watch the show trials on television.
Former leaders of the Shah’s government, stripped of their dignity and wearing
cardboard signs with their names around their necks, were charged with offenses
like “corruption on earth,” and taken to be shot. In March 1979, the spectacle
hit close to home. Habib Elghanian, an industrialist who led the Jewish
community council, was accused of corruption, contacts with Israel and Zionism,
“friendship with the enemies of God,” “warring with God and his emissaries” and
“economic imperialism.” He was tried by an Islamic revolutionary tribunal whose
members kept their backs to him, refusing to look a traitor in the face.
Shot by firing squad on May 8, Elghanian was the first private citizen in Iran
to be executed by the tribunal. His real crime was that he had failed to follow
established custom for Jews and maintain a low profile. He had become a
prominent figure under the Shah: While most well-off Iranian Jews were merchants
with small businesses, Elghanian, owner of a huge conglomerate with interests in
plastics, tile and aluminum, was a mogul. He even built a huge skyscraper in
Tehran’s business district.
Within days of his execution, leaders of the Iranian Jewish community selected a
delegation to meet with Khomeini. They chose two rabbis and four intellectuals,
some of whom had joined the early street demonstrations against the Shah. Early
one morning, the six men climbed into a station wagon and drove to Qom, one of
them later told Hakakian’s father.
When they arrived, they were surprised to find that Khomeini, still not
accustomed to the trappings of power, had cleared his calendar for their visit.
As they seated themselves on folded blankets in a reception room, the Ayatollah
entered. “Bism Allah al-Rahman al-Rahim,” one of the rabbis addressed him,
invoking the name of God in Arabic in deference.
Khomeini began a long, roundabout discourse on subjects ranging from monotheism
to how a man should choose a wife, to how to properly copulate, puzzling his
Jewish audience. But when the Ayatollah completed his talk, his meaning became
clear. “Moses would have nothing to do with these Pharaoh-like Zionists who run
Israel,” he said. “And our Jews, the descendants of Moses, have nothing to do
with them, either. We recognize our Jews as separate from those godless
Zionists.”
When the Jewish delegation returned to Tehran, they spread the word: The
Ayatollah had made Iran’s Jews kosher in the eyes of the Revolution. Soon all
synagogues were painted with Khomeini’s decree and the Jews of Iran renounced
Zionism.
True to its rhetoric, the Islamic Republic severed all official ties with
Israel, but a clandestine relationship continued. Though Yasser Arafat was
invited to Tehran and spoke of the plight of the mostly Sunni Palestinians, the
Shia-Sunni divide and the fact that the Palestine Liberation Organization was
largely secular meant that Iran’s support for the Palestinians was always
lukewarm. Privately, Iran and Israel shared a common fear of the Arab states,
especially Iraq. Israel sold Iran arms throughout the eight-year Iraq-Iran war.
In 1985, in the middle of that war, then-Prime Minister Shimon Peres helped
broker a deal between the Reagan Administration and Iran. The agreement allowed
the sale of American arms, including anti-tank missiles, to the Islamic
Republic. In exchange, the United States sought Iranian influence to free
Western hostages held by Hezbollah, the militant Lebanese group supported by
Iran. (It also used the Iranian money to fund the anti-Communist Contra rebels
in Nicaragua.) When news of the deal surfaced, the Reagan Administration was
embarrassed and politically damaged—both the United States and Israel had
previously denied selling arms to the Islamic Republic.
At the end of the Cold War, Israel had a change of heart and concluded that Iran
had become a major threat to its security. With Iraq severely weakened by its
defeat in the Gulf War, Israeli strategists focused on Iran’s quest for
long-range missiles and nuclear weapons as well as Iranian funding of Hezbollah.
At press conferences in Jerusalem and during many visits to Washington in the
late 1980s and early 1990s, Yitzhak Rabin began emphasizing his desire to make
peace with the Palestinians and with Syria because an even greater danger
loomed: a nuclear Iran.
In 1977, Abbas Milani, then a political scientist at Tehran University, was
arrested by the Shah’s police and thrown in jail. Considered a dangerous leftist
academic, Milani shared a cell with some of the men who would become the leaders
of the Islamic Revolution, including one of Ahmadinejad’s predecessors,
Rafsanjani. Recalling his incarceration with the Islamists, he says bluntly, “I
couldn’t stand them and they couldn’t stand me.”
Milani, who is not Jewish, left Iran for the United States in 1986, after the
first waves of Iranian Jews fled the Revolution. He remembers that he first came
to understand the special penalties that Iranian Jews faced under the mullahs
when an Iranian friend, a prominent astrophysicist at Cambridge University, was
invited to attend a conference in Tehran in 1982. The Iranian authorities had
assured the young man he would have no problem returning to Britain, but because
he was Jewish, they seized his passport upon his arrival and refused to return
it.
“The poor guy had a wife and baby in England and they wouldn’t let him leave,”
recalls Milani, who later discovered that the Islamic Republic had an unofficial
policy of denying passports to young Iranian Jews to coerce their families into
returning home after traveling abroad. They were in effect held hostage. “You
can’t be a human being without feeling offended that this is happening in your
name in your country,” says Milani.
Since the Islamic Revolution, approximately 75 percent of Iran’s Jews have fled
the country. Estimates of the number that remain vary from 13,000 (the U.S.
State Department’s 2005 International Religious Freedom Report, based on the
most recent Iranian census) to the 25,000 to 30,000 claimed by the Iran Human
Rights Documentation Center, a non-profit group based in New Haven, Connecticut.
The difference, the Center says, stems from the fact that many Jews in Iran do
not wish to call attention to their heritage.
Whatever their number, Jews make up a tiny and vulnerable fraction of Iran’s
population of nearly 70 million. “Personally, I am very much concerned about
attacks on Iranian Jews,” says George Haroonian, former president of the Council
of Iranian American Jewish Organizations (CIAJO), a group of outspoken Iranian
expatriates that advocates for the rights of Iran’s remaining Jews. “It’s my
viewpoint that Iranian Jews are in a very precarious situation.”
CIAJO reports that since 1979, 10 Jews in addition to Elghanian have been
executed, six have been assassinated by the regime, two have died as a result of
being held in custody, eight have died under suspicious circumstances and 12
have disappeared.
The situation has become increasingly worse, says Haroonian. He points to the
trial in 2000 of 13 Jews from Shiraz and Isfahan accused of illegal contact with
Israel, conspiracy to form an illegal organization and recruiting agents, which
provoked vandalism and boycotts of Jewish businesses. “This was the largest
wholesale attack against the Jewish community,” Haroonian says. Ten of those
charged were found guilty, although espionage charges were dropped and an
appeals court overturned all the convictions but those for illegal contacts with
Israel. By 2003 all had been released from prison; 10 remain on probation.
Iran has seen a recent wave of anti-Semitic propaganda masquerading as
anti-Zionism in print, on television and within the educational system, heavily
influencing what Iranians—a quarter of them under 15—learn about their Jewish
neighbors. Last February, Iran’s largest newspaper Hamshahri sponsored an
international Holocaust cartoon contest that solicited sinister anti-Semitic
entries that were widely displayed. In 2000, the Al-Manar television station
aired a claymation special in which Jews were turned into apes and pigs. In
2004, the station Sahar 1 aired a weekly series Zahra’s Blue Eyes, also called
For You, Palestine, in which the Israeli government is depicted as removing the
blue eyes of Palestinian children for implantation into Jewish children. The
claymation program “doesn’t say ‘all Jews are cursed,’” notes Yehudit Barsky,
director of the Middle East and International Terrorism section of the American
Jewish Committee. “It doesn’t say the Jewish person next door is evil. But
still, the selection of this story is saying there were Jews who were evil and
were punished. It’s a message of an insidious nature, not a direct nature.”
As the line between anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism becomes increasingly blurred,
the Jews who remain in Iran continue to stick to the Khomeini formula. “The
Iranian Jewish community has gone out of its way to condemn the state of Israel,
including the recent war with Hezbollah,” says Nahid Pirnazar. Catholic
University law professor Marshall Breger, who visited Tehran and Shiraz in 2003,
says that the Iranian Jews he met expressed regard and affection for the people
of Israel, but were not political Zionists. “They were creating what I would
call Judaism without Israel,” he explains. “It’s not unknown. People would say,
‘it’s no problem to be a Jew’ but the more observant wouldn’t wear a kippah
outside because people in Iran know kippahs as a symbol of the Israel Defense
Forces.”
While Iranian Jews are loath to speak out in defense of Israel, they do
occasionally draw attention to other matters, such as anti-Jewish stereotypes in
the media and the government’s campaign denying the Holocaust. Earlier this
year, Haroun Yashayaei, chair of the Tehran Jewish community, sent an extremely
rare letter of protest to Ahmadinejad, expressing concern about the president’s
statements about the Holocaust. His objections were seconded by Maurice Motamed,
who holds the one seat allotted to Jews in the country’s 290-member parliament.
“When our president spoke about the Holocaust, I considered it my duty as a Jew
to speak about this issue,” Motamed told the British newspaper The Guardian in a
June 2006 interview. “The biggest disaster in human history is based on tens of
thousands of films and documents. I said these remarks are a big insult to the
whole Jewish society in Iran and the whole world.”
Motamed, an engineer, made clear to The Guardian that although he took issue
with Ahmadinejad over the Holocaust, he supports the president on other issues,
including the standoff with the United States, Europe and Israel over Iran’s
nuclear program. “I am an Iranian first and a Jew second,” he stressed. Although
he acknowledged that Jews in Iran face problems, he assured readers that “there
is no pressure on synagogues, no problems of desecration. I think the problem in
Europe is worse than here. There is a lot of anti-Semitism in other countries.”
Similar sentiments can be found on the Jewish Central Committee of Iran’s
website, iranjewish.com. “Iran’s Jewish community congratulates the achievement
of nuclear fuel to the supreme leader, the Islamic Republic officials and all
Iranians,” a May 2006 entry reads. “We celebrate the coincident of this victory
with the New Year and the unforgettable days of Passover.”
Generally, Jews who have chosen to stay in Iran say that they are content and
have no wish to leave their homeland. Tehran has more than a dozen active
synagogues, and large groups of Jews also live in Shiraz and Isfahan. “Jews stay
in Iran because they have their jobs, their lives and they love it,” says Shirin
Taleh, a family therapist who left Iran in 2001 with her children to join the
rest of her family in California and has visited twice since then, including a
stay earlier this year.
Taleh believes her children will have more opportunities in the United States
but dearly misses the country of her birth. She balks at the notion that Iran
discriminates against Jews. “I would say ‘limitation’ rather than
‘discrimination.’ Two words, two meanings. Limitations for everyone, not just
the Jewish community. We have some freedoms that the Muslims don’t have. Men and
women mix. We are allowed to use alcohol for religious purposes. I don’t claim
everything is OK. Everybody in the world abuses the name of the Jews. It’s an
old problem between Muslims and Jews.” But, she makes clear, “I don’t know
anything about political issues. I don’t want to go there.”
The decision to remain in Iran may not be measurable in rational ways. In 1998,
when Manochehr Eliasi, Motamed’s predecessor as the Jewish member of parliament,
was asked by a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter why Jews don’t leave, he
burst into tears. “This is my birthplace,” Eliasi said. “I love its smell.”
In many ways, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the sixth president of the Islamic Republic
of Iran and the first non-cleric president in 24 years, is an exemplary product
of modern Iran. Born to a modest family in a small village, he capitalized on
high test scores to enter the civil engineering program at the Iran University
of Science and Technology during the reign of the Shah. Later, he received his
doctorate in a program funded by the Revolutionary Guards. With 12 percent of
voters participating, he won the mayor’s office in 2003.
This 50-year-old newcomer to the world stage shocked analysts during his recent
visit to the United Nations, not only by his hardline address to the General
Assembly but by his seeming enjoyment of the limelight. He parried questions at
a press conference, deftly handled CNN’s Anderson Cooper during a televised
interview and spent 90 minutes jousting with two dozen members of the Council on
Foreign Relations. He stayed on message: The New York Times reported that
Ahmadinejad spent 40 minutes of the session challenging evidence that the
Holocaust took place. “I think we should allow more impartial studies to be done
on this,” he said after hearing the account of a Jewish member of the Council
who saw the Dachau concentration camp at the end of World War II. After the
meeting, former national security adviser Brent Scowcroft described Ahmadinejad
to The New York Times as “a master of counterpunch, deception,
circumlocution.”
Milani, who has followed Ahmadinejad’s rise to power, believes the Iranian
president is truly anti-Semitic and is playing the Israel card to gain
international attention and enhance his stature. “Had he not said those comments
about the Holocaust and Israel, he would have come to the UN as a two-bit
president of a despotic regime. Instead, they gave him a rock star treatment
here, and it all translated into more power for him back home.”
“Not even a second-tier player” in Iran before the furor arose over his remarks,
now he is world-renowned, says Milani. “The last month and a half, every time I
have traveled and taken a cab, if the cab driver is Muslim and they get a whiff
that I’m Iranian, they begin talking about Ahmadinejad as the man who is
standing up to the Jews, to Israel and to America. It is working for him.”
Still, for all its bombastic rhetoric, Milani says he doesn’t believe the regime
poses a direct threat to Iran’s Jews. “Is there a specific danger that Jews
face? I don’t think so,” he says. “That kind of eliminationist anti-Semitism has
never been part of Iranian history. Iranian anti-Semitism has been more or less
limited to verbal pressure, verbal anti-Semitism, forcing Jews to live in
ghettos, occasionally forcing them to wear the Star of David. Killings,
pogroms—that’s European, not Iranian.”
Ahmadinejad’s statements about Israel and the Holocaust may have more to do with
political pragmatism than anything else. A man of a secular background, he must
show the mullahs that he is as staunch an Islamist as they are; to mix religious
metaphors, he has to be more Catholic than the Pope.
His outspokenness has advantages for the mullahs and the Supreme Leader they
elect, who holds most of the real power. Seizing the limelight allows non-Arab
Iran to pursue its goal of becoming the leader of the mostly Arab Middle East.
And Ahmadinejad’s vitriol makes the mullahs seem almost moderate by comparison.
His combativeness has another upside: it serves to shift attention from economic
problems at home. Despite a huge rise in oil revenues, there is grumbling in
Tehran’s streets about economic conditions, reflecting the gross inefficiency of
its bloated bureaucracy and centralized economy. Despite Iran’s oil wealth and
bravado, the government fears Western economic sanctions that would force it to
spend more to subsidize food and fuel.
Growing speculation about a nuclear showdown in the Middle East is premature,
according to Milani. “I don’t see them picking on Israel militarily because they
know that they will pay a very heavy price,” he says. “Even in arming Hezbollah,
they’ve been very careful. They have allowed Hezbollah to become more of a
nuisance, they have given them more staying power, but not any weapon that could
seriously change the balance with Israel or make Hezbollah a more lethal threat.
I think the war in one sense was a big loss for the Iranians. They won a
publicity war but not much else.”
Scholar Trita Parsi agrees. “Israel is a means for Iran, just as Iran is a means
for Israel.” And Parsi doesn’t believe that the Iranian people would
support a war against Israel. “I think the larger feeling among the population
is that it’s really not Iran’s main problem. People don’t like what Israel is
doing [in the occupied territories] but they don’t like Arabs, either. A poll
says that 67 percent of Iranians say that Israel does not have right to exist.
But does that mean that they think Iran has to do anything about this? I don’t
think so.”
Nonetheless, many Iranian expatriates long for regime change. Houman Sarshar
doubts the voices calling for change inside Iran will remain silent. “A
population of 75 million—with approximately 50 million born after 1978—is being
run by a population of mullahs 60 and 70-plus [years old]. If only 60 percent
[of the population] wants a completely secular government, then it’s over,” he
says.
Milani believes that without $70-per-barrel oil, the regime would not survive
long. “The age of pseudo-totalitarian corrupt dictatorships has come to an end,”
he says. “The majority of Iranian society doesn’t want it. But tactically this
is a very nimble regime, very brutal, and it has a lot of money.”
However, Jerusalem-based Middle East analyst Meir Javedanfar, co-author of the
forthcoming book The Nuclear Sphinx of Tehran: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the State
of Iran, believes the chance of regime change is small. “Iranians are suffering
from conflict fatigue after the Islamic Revolution, followed by one of the
longest wars in modern history. They are tired. And there’s no alternative. Who
are they going to revolt for? People don’t want chaos—who is going to give them
hope? Who are they going to die for? Don’t expect Tiananmen.”
Iranians are upset that the government has shut down blogs as well as Shargh,
the reformist newspaper. “It makes people angry. But go to the streets to
revolt?” says Javedanfar. “Only two things would make a revolution overnight.
One: Shoot the entire Iranian football team. Two: Ban the sale and eating of
Persian rice. Then you will have a revolution on your hands. Until then, as they
say in New Jersey, fuggedaboutit.”
As Mahmoud Ahmadinejad commands the world’s attention, Abdol Hossein Sardari,
who died in 1981, has been all but forgotten. When the courageous diplomat
returned to Iran after the war, he was imprisoned for the unauthorized
distribution of passports, says George Hooranian. “After 30 days he was released
by the Shah. The Shah said he did a good deed. He saved people’s lives.”
There is no memorial to Sardari in Iran, or until recently, anywhere else, says
Haroonian. In 2004, Iranians living in the United States organized two Yom
Hashoah events to honor the diplomat. One was at the Museum of Tolerance in Los
Angeles, the other at the Nessah Educational and Cultural Center in Beverly
Hills. A cut glass tablet reads: “In memory of and admiration of his
humanitarian and courageous efforts that led to the saving of many innocent
lives while serving as the Iranian Consul in France during World War II.”
Inspired by Sardari’s deeds, and angry that he has received so little
recognition, Hooranian collected hundreds of pages of documents and personally
delivered them to Yad Vashem in Israel. He would like for Sardari to be become
the first Iranian bestowed with the designation of Righteous Among the Nations,
a title awarded to non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the
Holocaust.
The public committee that decides who should be given this honor has discussed
Sardari’s case twice, and reports that it is “very interesting.” A decision has
not yet been made, pending further documentation. But the necessary information
is not forthcoming; the Iranian government has refused to cooperate.
“How sad,” says Haroonian, “that Sardari—and what he represents—cannot be
honored in Iran.”
Rachel Safier contributed to the reporting of this story.
http://www.momentmag.com:80/features/dec06/2006-12_Iran.html
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