Throughline
Throughline

Iran and the Jewish people: An alliance before war

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Israel and Iran have been in almost constant conflict for nearly 50 years. Media tends to frame the violence as endemic, and inevitable — but it’s not. Between the creation of Israel in 1948 and Iran’...

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About 2,500 years ago, in ancient Persia, what's now Iran, a king tossed and turned in his sleep, a nightmare consumed his mind. He saw visions of a baby growing into a warrior, a warrior that would one day forcefully take his throne. The Ucerper in his dreams was no stranger. It was his own infant grandson.

The king awoke terrified of the prophecy and he ordered his servant to kill the baby at once.

But the servant couldn't bring himself to do it. Instead, he secretly smuggled the baby into the care of a shepherd who raised him.

The boy grew up in the countryside, healthy and strong.

He became a decorated warrior, leader and general. He set his sights on his grandfather's throne and launched a rebellion. Soon, the prophecy became reality. The king was overtaken by the grandson he'd feared for so long. Persian lands had a new leader.

His name was Goudosh, for as he's known in the Bible, Cyrus. One by one, cities all over the Near East fell to Cyrus' armies. And soon, he set his sights on the greatest city of the ancient world, Babylon.

Babylon was a bustling metropolis in what's now modern day Iraq.

A center of economic and military power, its streets were lined with precisely constructed buildings. Many of its homes were filled with statues and artwork. It had hanging gardens, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. But this grandeur came at a human cost. After laying siege to Jerusalem, the king of Babylon captured thousands of Jewish people

and held them captive in the city for half a century. In October of 539 BCE, Cyrus' forces surrounded Babylon and its massive walls. Walls so thick that chariots could be driven over them. Eventually, the Persian army found a way in under the city's gates. But what happened next was very unusual for the time.

Instead of sacking the city, Cyrus did something different.

He made a proclamation that many historians believe was the first declaration of human rights.

Among other things, it allowed people to practice their own fate. This new system liberated the Jewish people who had been held captive in Babylon. Cyrus told the Jewish community that they could return if they wanted to, to contribute, to the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the temple and restoring life in their ancient homeland. This is Roya Haka Kiyan, she's an Iranian-American Jewish writer and lecturer.

Some people believe that Cyrus really created the Jewish diaspora model that either you go and live in Israel or if you're not living in Israel, then you make sure to contribute to the ongoing life and the health of that community and society. And that's what happened. Many Jewish people returned to Jerusalem.

Others stayed in Persia and made it their home hundreds of years before the emergence of Christianity or Islam. Cyrus the Great went on to rule over the largest empire the world had ever seen.

He ruled it with a tolerance that was unique for his time.

His story and proclamation of human rights are inscribed on a piece of clay known as the Cyrus

Cylinder, which is usually housed in the British Museum. A ceramic replica is in the United Nations building in New York City. The story of Cyrus the Great is told in the Hebrew Bible. He's called the Messiah and is anointed by God. And he's also celebrated by many non-Jewish Iranians today as a proud part of their history.

This is a very important story, not particularly only exclusively for the Iranian Jewish community,

but were Jews around the world globally historically.

It's considered the origin story of Iranian Jews and of the long relationship between Iran and the Jewish people. A relationship that today has been fractured by decades of violence. Most recently, by a war that erupted after the U.S. and Israel launched wide-ranging attacks across Iran, killing Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Hamanai. For nearly 50 years, Israel and Iran have been in almost constant conflict.

Israel has bombed Iran, assassinated many of its leaders and scientists and civilians.

Iran has fired missiles at Israel and funded an armed groups like Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis,

who've killed citizens inside Israel. Given the past four decades of violence, it's easy to view this conflict as primordial and inevitable. But it's not. After the creation of Israel in 1948 and before Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, the relationship between the countries was characterized by public distance and private cooperation. They shared technological and military knowledge.

They were trade partners. At one point in the 1970s, there were thousands of Israelis living in Tehran, Iran's capital. And the bridge between the two countries was the Iranian Jewish

community. One of the largest and oldest Jewish populations in the Middle East.

A businessman and philanthropist who was like the John D. Rockefeller of Iran, his amazing journey

from a ghetto to wealthy industrialist, and the tragic way it ended, illustrates the long complicated relationship between the countries that has erupted into open warfare. I'm Randad Al-Fattah. And I'm Rahmteen Adabli. On this episode of Throughline from NPR, we trace the rupture between Israel and Iran through the story of Jewish Iranians in the 20th century, and the life of Habib Al-Ghanaiyan.

Hi, this is Kristina from Los Angeles, California, and you're listening to Throughline on NPR. Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, investing in creative thinkers and problem-solvers who help people, communities, and the planet flourish. More information is available at Hewlett.org. Part one, loved by God.

On April 5, 1912, a boy was born in Iran's capital, Tehran, in a place the people called Mahalai. It was also called Satterchal, which meant the edge of the pit, and the edge of the pit is where the garbage was burned. His name was Habib Al-Ghanaiyan, and Satterchal, where he was born, was a Jewish ghetto. During the 16th century, the ruling clerics

had instituted many restrictions on Jews. Jewish Iranians were legally forbidden from doing things like using Muslim-public baths, drinking from public fountains, leaving their houses when it rained

Or snowed, touching anything when entering Muslim shops, opening shops in the...

homes taller than a Muslim's, giving children Muslim names. The Islamic clerical class in Iran

or Ulamah used the Islamic dimmy system, which made all non-Muslims into second class citizens.

Those who didn't accept Muhammad as the prophet and the Quran as God's final revolution were deemed impure filthy or nudges. As a result of these restrictions, Jewish people had to live in segregated communities within Iranian society to survive. But that would all change when Iran adopted a modern constitution that ended this legal system of religious discrimination. The 1905 revolution gave Iranians all Iranians equal rights. This fundamentally changed life from minorities in Iran.

So when Habib Iranian was born, Satterchal was no longer a place Jewish people had to live. And you can see even in his name that things had changed. Habibullah means loved by God and he was the first of the sons who had an Arabic name. This is Shahzad Al-Ranayam. I'm the author of Titan of Tehran, which is a book about my grandfather Habib Al-Ghanian's life. Shahzad Habib Al-Ranayam's granddaughter is a journalist. She's worked at the Associated Press

and NBC News. She was born in Iran but moved to the US as a young child. Growing up, she knew

something terrible happened to her grandfather, but it was never really a topic of conversation in

her family. Well, we rarely talked about it. Why do you think that is just too painful?

Yeah, I think you just dash away things that happened and you need to move on because it's

painful. But my father had collected some newspaper clippings and I always had those so I knew. Starting with those newspaper clippings, Shahzad dedicated years of her life, piecing together her grandfather's story. A story that begins in hope and ends in tragedy. Despite starting in Tehran's Jewish ghetto, the Al-Ranayam family moved out and became a part of Iran's burgeoning class of international merchants. They were seven brothers.

Two of his brothers moved to the United States and they were importing lots of consumer goods from the US. Habib joined his brothers and entered the family business. He started a company based in Tehran's grandbazaar or central market, importing watches and women's clothing. He was very successful and by the end of World War II. He was part of the group of Iranian industrialists who

made their name and their first million. The 1930s were a period of rapid modernization in Iran

under its new king or Shah, Reza Pahlevi. As a part of that modernization process, he undermined Iran's clerics by pushing the country towards secularization and part of that was reaching out to the country's minorities, including Jews. He became the first king to actually visit Synagogue in Iran. This is Roya Hakkaki on again. She's an Iranian-American Jewish writer, journalist, and political commentator. By putting himself in a synagogue, among this minority,

he was delivering a very clear message that everyone was well-come to create the essence of Iranian

identity, and I think that made a difference, not just for Jewish community, but for all Iranians.

Under Reza Pahlevi's rule, Iran was developing a modern sense of national identity that could hold

all of its diverse ethnic and religious groups. Jews, we always wanted to belong.

This is mere Javid and far. He's in his really Iranian political scientist. I teach various courses on Iranian politics and contemporary Iranian history at Reichmann University. Meers says many Jewish Iranians like Habib Oranayan embrace this nationalist project. This is the first time somebody has recognized us, wants us to involve, wants us to involve us in the development of Iran, doesn't see us as Jews sees us as Iranians,

the Jews were following over themselves to help. During World War II, Iran was actually occupied by allied forces because of a strategic

Position and its oil reserves, but there was very little fighting in the coun...

So while European Jews were experiencing the Holocaust, Jews in Iran were in the middle of their golden age.

World War II didn't affect them the way it affected Jews in Europe.

While there was a Zionist movement in Iran, it didn't have the same urgency or energy it did in places like Eastern Europe. In fact, many Iranians used didn't know that much about the horrors of the Nazi regime, but that would change in 1942. Wanderers upon the face of the earth. Patriots from Poland,

nearing the end of one of the most amazing marches in history.

Three thousand weary miles they've walked to find a haven of refuge. Our people ground to helplessness beneath the heel of Nazi oppression. During World War II, there were some Polish children, they were Jews. From one little town in Poland, a thousand men, women and children fled from the Nazis into Russia. When the Nazis followed, they pushed on through mountain and desert,

3,000 miles to Persia to a haven in Iran on the Kaspian Sea. So they came to Iran and Iranian Jews really got to see the effects of World War II.

And that's what really summents their feelings about Israel.

And this has been Habib al-Hanayon visited Palestine for the first time.

Actually, he went to visit Palestine in 1943. He saw Mount Carmel and he named my dad Carmel. The first of his children, he gave a Jewish name. Before that, his son Ferrejoan has a very Persian name. And Flushing, Long Island, the General Assembly of the United Nations, has made its decision on Palestine. Two years after the end of World War II, the UN General Assembly met to vote on a plan to partition Palestine.

Earlier that year, the UN created a special committee to come up with a plan for Palestine's future. Iran was one of the 11 countries chosen to be on that committee.

After months of deliberation and investigations, the committee came up with two central options for a plan.

The first plan was to create two separate states, one controlled by Jews and one controlled by

Palestinian Arabs. The other plan, which Iran helped to craft, was to create one state consisting of both Jews and Arabs with power sharing. Ultimately, the majority of the committee voted to create two separate states. But Iran was part of a small dissenting group that argued if Jews and Arabs didn't live under one flag with a shared sense of purpose, then conflict would only accelerate. On May 14, 1948, months after the UN voted for a two-state partition plan, Israel unilaterally

declared its independence and statehood. Neighboring Arab countries formed a coalition and responded by invading. A bloody conflict followed and Israel came out victorious, taking control of territory the UN had declared belong to the Arabs. In the process, thousands of Jews and Arabs were killed and hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were expelled from their ancestral lands. Although Iran had voted against partition at the UN, Iran's new Shah Muhammad Reza Pahlevi,

the son of Reza Pahlevi did not join the war. This was not a popular position in Iran, where there were protests in support of the Arab nations. And Iran's very influential clerical class spoke out loudly against Israel. This forced the young Shah to walk a very difficult tight road, publicly holding Israel at a distance, but privately trying to cooperate with them. It wasn't for romantic reasons. The only reason the Shah wanted relations with Israel is

bit to serve Iranian interests. As a king of Iran, who desperately wanted to develop his country, he saw Israel as one country that could contribute to development of Iran. The Shah was closely allied with the United States, as Israel in the United States grew closer, so did Iran with Israel. In 1950, just a few years after Iran voted against the UN partition plan,

The Shah opened up diplomatic relations with Israel, a defactual recognition ...

It was the second Muslim country to make this move after Turkey.

The Shah said, "Okay, I want to cooperate with these rallies,

then then it expanded to agriculture, then it expanded to wet joint weapons, development, and of course diplomatic cooperation." Coming up, Iran and Israel become shadow partners, and Happy Ebel Honeyon brings a new industry to Iran. This is coronavirus calling from San Antonio, Texas. I listen to NTR through life. In fact,

it is the only podcast that I have to pay subscription to because it's that valuable. I love the research behind it, and it opens my mind to a whole new world about the

underpinnings of what could be a normal story that we know nothing about. Bravo to all the producers

and editors, and commentators. Thank you. Hey, it's around team. If you like what you're hearing so far, we would love it if you would make sure to follow through line on Spotify or Apple Podcast, and leave us a review while you're there. It does really help people find out about our show. And the more people that find out about our show, the better it is for us, and the better it is for you as the listeners. We really appreciate your

support. It means so much to us. And this is just something else you can do to help out. Okay, I'll stop now. Thank you. Love you. Bye. Part two. Alliance of the periphery.

We admit that many technical fees, we are behind. This is the voice of Muhammad Reza Pathavi,

Iran's King, or Shah, talking about the need to develop Iran in the 1950s and 60s. We can accept the know-how and help other advanced countries, and we're also encouraged their investment. The Shah Avidan used things like government subsidies and land reform to boost the economy. He was particularly interested in industrializing the country, which was still mostly agrarian. And Habib Al-Ranian, along with his brothers, were among the Iranian merchants who rode

this wave of industrialization. They had a brother who was in the United States studying, and he went to a factory where they were making plastics goods. This is Shah Zad Al-Ranian again. She wrote a biography of her grandfather Habib Al-Ranian called Titan of Dehran. He fell in love with these machines, and he told his brothers, "We should import one of these machines and make homes." Plastic combs. At this time, most combs in Iran were made of wood and were easily broken. So plastic

would be a game changer. Habib Al-Ranian and his brothers put their money together and took

a big risk to open Iran's first plastics factory. So it started out with combs and then they had buttons and the factory grew. It was very exciting. They were making all sorts of things like toys and plastic bags, plastic shoes, small consumer goods. They also had aluminum factories, building door frames and window frames, and they also had another factory where they had refrigerators and stoves, so bigger durable goods. Any Iranian was living at the time had Plasco product.

Habib became very popular in the business community. He was elected to be the first Jewish

Iranian to join the prestigious Chamber of Commerce. And in 1962, he built Iran's first high-rise building. He named it after his company, Plasco. It was 17 stories. It had office buildings and the first floors had a mall. And it was Iran's first mall, so everybody hung out there and there was a restaurant on the top floor. Romtines dad actually took his mom and nine of his soon to be in laws there

To go shopping for their engagement party.

mandrelay price. I mean, yes, everything was there. So we went to the shopping and after

after shopping we went to restaurant in 17th floor. So you take the because not only he was going to

press them, but then it was also affordable for you. affordable, yes, sir, affordable. It was 10 people.

To this day, any person I speak with, first says, "Oh, Elhania, are you related to Habib?"

And I say, "Sure, I'm his granddaughter." And everyone has a story about Plasco, about spending time in their building. It was almost in downtown middle of the terror. It was like showing like mother and Iran is coming, you know. Did I make you guys proud? So proud. Yes, it was proud because that building not only clothing hop for whole country, it was also entertaining for people. They go over the event couple of times to leave a pool. I'm American pool because you couldn't find many places there.

He also introduced a great deal of philanthropy. This is Roya Hacachian,

she's the author of Journey from the Land of No, a girlhood caught and revolutionary it on. He was

what I want this new generation that believed that you have to leave the world a little bit better

than the one that you came into and therefore you need to contribute to the society in which you live and from which you profit. Habib Al-Ghanian became well known for supporting both Jewish and non-Jewish causes in Iran. He gave money to build hospitals. He helped start a huge scholarship fund for poor students. He even donated thousands of dollars to help build the grand Husainay Ershad mosque into Iran. Many of his employees and business partners refer to him

as Hadji Habib, an honorific title, usually given to Muslims who've made a religious pilgrimage to Mecca. Habib Al-Ghanian was the realization of our dreams to be recognised as Iranians as a ethnic minority who wants to develop Iran. It was absolutely like the thing that he was he had the most pride in. As did a lot of other Jews who were doing this because they had been repressed for such a long time and now here they are in their golden era and it's the pride of

having helped build Iran. Habib was also a vocal supporter of Israel. He visited the country many times and even helped build a high-rise building in Tel Aviv. He became the secular leader of Iran's Jews. The secular leader is the head of a group called the Andromen and the Kalimyan and what they do is they're in charge of the internal affairs of Jews and also their relationship with Israel. He loved Israel as a country. He traveled there. He visited just like many Jews around the world do this.

Wahhabib Al-Ghanian and many other Iranian Jews were experiencing a golden age in the 1950s and 60s. This was not the case in other Middle Eastern countries. After the U.N. voted to partition Palestine, the governments of nearly all the Arab countries made life difficult for their sizeable Jewish populations. They passed discriminatory laws, confiscated land, and often sponsored

anti-Jewish violence. Under the palm of the dynasty, Iran never instituted these kinds of policies

and actually accepted Iranian Jews holding citizenship in both countries. This was in part because Iran had become a member of a loose partnership with Israel and Turkey called the Alliance of the periphery, referring to the fact that these countries were non-Arab and living on the edges of the Arab world. The Shah's good relations with Israel actually encouraged him to see Iran and Jews as a bridge between Iran and Israel whom you can use to develop Iran.

The Shah invited Israeli business people to work in Iran and the Shah brought members of Israel's

main intelligence organization, the Masad, to help train his secret police, the Savak,

an organization that suppressed dissent in Iran, jailing, torturing, and sometimes killing

Dissidents.

and not us, not true. The Shah Iran did many good things for Iran, but at the end of the day he

was a dictator. And when you're a dictator and you force people to do things, they turn against you.

So whoever the Shah was friends with, the people of Iran viewed as an enemy.

The Iranian left, the seculars who had always been anti-imperialist and were seeing Israel as an

imperialistic project as an American project began to really embrace it to the Khomeini. "Mobor Israel Maholef Hassan, we are against Israel, and we will never help Israel. We will cut off all diplomatic relations." Ayatullah Rahulah Khomeini, who's voice you just heard, was a Shia Iranian cleric. Beginning in the 1960s, he became an outspoken opponent of the Shah of Iran. He opposed Iran's

modernization and viewed the Shah as a puppet of Western imperialist countries.

"He used to call the United States the Great Satan, and Israel was the Great Satan's

bastard child." "If the Shah were overthrown, and the kind of government you want came to power in Iran, how would Iran's relations with Israel change? We will cut relations with Israel." "We will have no relationship with them." "They are an occupying government." "And they are our enemy." "He is so Iran as a member of the Islamic Ummah, the Islamic world community, and he saw it as Iran's duty to

side with the Palestinians against the Israelis." "We are on the side of the

innocent." "We are on the side of the innocent." "The Palestinians are innocent. The Israelis

have done an injustice. "From this perspective, we are on the side of the Palestinians." "He recognized that speaking against the United States and Israel did in fact in dear him to certain classes who wanted to bring down the monarchy, however they couldn't see themselves banding with the likes of Ayatollah Romani. To them, you know, a cleric signaled backward movement toward a pass that they were trying to

leave behind. You can see that Ayatollah Romani begins to adapt his rhetoric in order to appeal to the secular Iranians, to the leftists, to the ultra-radical communists, and that's through his anti-American and anti-Israeli speeches. "Homani was exiled for me on in 1964 by the Shah. In exile, his popularity grew even more. His speeches were smuggled until Iran via cassette tape, and in one of those speeches made before his exile. He made a

direct reference to Habib Iranian's family. The entire country's economy now lies in Israel's hands that is to say it has been seized by Israeli agents. This is Shah-Hazad Al-Ranian reading a translated portion of that speech. Hence, most of the major factories and enterprises are run by them, and one of the people mentioned is one of the these so-called agents are the Elganyan families, who says were among the mediators of world Zionism who resided in Iran.

Khomeini also said, "The Shah takes so many of his cues from Israel that we wonder if he is not himself a Jew." By the late 1970s, there was a growing protest movement against the Shah's autocratic rule over Iran. People chanted things like death to the Shah, and while this was happening, Iran was experiencing significant inflation as a result of mismanaged economic growth. Many Iranians blamed the Shah for this, so he was under a lot of pressure, and he needed to show the public

he was doing something about it. Instead of having an economic solution to it, he basically decided

to blame businessmen for it. The Shah publicly accused Iran's biggest businessmen, including

Habib-Balhanian, of price gouging.

while he was sleeping and they took him away, and the next day there were headlines in the paper

about how Habib-Balhanian was arrested on charges of profiteering. Habib-Balhanian at this point was in his sixties. He was internally exiled to another city, and then spent time in prison.

It was six months before he was released. I think the Shah was, he just believed that everybody

was out to get him, and that he had no responsibility for what was going on in Iran, which is pure fantasy. He was looking for an escape goat. The fact that they made such an example of him, to me definitely says that the Shah was not his friend.

All these things later came back to become even more problematic when homemade he came.

Coming up, revolution comes to Iran, an Iranian enters its crosshairs. This is Jacob in Irvine, California, and you're listening to throughline, MNPR. Really love the show, y'all, so thanks for all your hard work, and really appreciate the way you tell stories. Bye. Part three, a bitter divorce.

In early 1979, after months of mass-estrate protests and violence,

the Shah of Iran left it on for a vacation. Everyone knew he would not return from. As he walked the tarmac to board the jet that would take him away from his homeland, he carried a box of Iranian soil. It was over. But it was not clear who would fill the power vacuum he left behind. There were a lot of different groups who were vying for power. This is Shazad Al-Raniyan,

author of the book, Tyin of Dehran. Khomeini was one of them. Habib Al-Raniyan was visiting family in the United States

when all of this was happening. He planned on returning to Iran.

Anytime anyone sets a him, oh, this could be dangerous for you, he was so convinced that because of what had happened to him during the Shah's power when he was taken away, that he couldn't be taken again. They couldn't say, oh, he's so, you know, the Shah, he's friends with the Shah, or he's a Shah. He was convinced. So what he thought was, okay, a new government comes in and I'm going to continue what I'm doing.

He very proudly said, I have been a great citizen. I've contributed a great tale to the society. This is Roya Haqqiyan again. She's an Iranian-American Jewish writer and analyst. I see no reason why I should leave. He's like, this is my country. What am I going to do? I'm going to just leave everything and go. There are all these people working in my factories, and there are the Jewish communities here. I have to protect them too.

Habib Al-Ghanayan did return to Iran, and so did Ayyatullah Khomeini. Within weeks of his return, there's really diplomatic offices in Tehran were closed, and the keys handed over to the Palestine Liberation Organization. And Khomeini's forces started to round up former members

of the Shah's government and brought them in front of the newly created Revolutionary Tribunals.

Khomeini arrives on February 1st, and on March 15th, they come after my grandfather. Armed men arrived at Habib Al-Ghanayan's office. They walked him out to a car and drove them to the notorious guest prison in Tehran. All that time, anyone who's executed is a member of the Shah's government military police. So while he's in jail, there's some hope that, you know, he can get out because no civilians have been executed.

For several months, Habib Al-Ghanayan was kept in prison and tortured. Different business leaders

Tried to intervene on his behalf to get him released, but it didn't work.

On May 8th, he was taken to the Revolutionary Tribunals. His trial was broadcast on television.

It was in this tiny room, and this is how it was described by an American woman living in Iran at

the time. Facial bruises and swelling showed through heavy makeup. Bearded Mullah's dressed in dark cloaks back questions at him. Before he could answer, Mullah answered the question for him and twisted it into an accusation. El-Ghanayan had no defense counsel and seemed disoriented and unsteady in his chair. At this point, does he even know why he's there? What would they even

charging him with? He's not aware of his charges at all. He's read it. They're being read to him

in the court. And what were those the charges? I'll read you open quote. In the name of Allah, Habib El-Ghanayan Holder of ID card number 6108, resident of Tehran,

literate, spy, Zionist capitalist, is accused of the following. One, friendship with the enemies of God,

and an enemy of the friends of God. Two, spying for the Zionist state of Israel. Three, gathering contributions for Israel for the sake of bombarding Palestine and Muslim Arab people. Four, investing money made from exploiting and destroying resources of Iran to help Israel, who, incessantly, combats, steals and affronts Islam and God. Five, corruption on earth by means of destroying resources and helping in the destruction of an entire generation of Iranians.

Six, war on God and the prophet of God. Seven, obstructing God's way and obstructing the well-being of weak nations against the value of humanity and Islam. Eight, corruptor on earth, nine, helping the daily and cruel massacre of our Palestinian brothers. Those were the nine charges against him. No credible evidence was produced to support these charges. He starts to try to defend himself without a lawyer. The trial lasted just 20 minutes. The verdict is that he's guilty.

And what does that mean for him? What's going to happen? That means that he has to go and write his will and then he's going to face a firing squad. The next day, he was taken outside to a courtyard in prison, blindfolded and forced to stand with his back against the wall. Execution was a dawn in the early morning on May 9th, 1979. Habib Al-Khanian was executed. The first civilian

to receive the punishment by the revolutionary tribunals. And then there's a question of my grandfather's

body is in a morgue somewhere and how do we bury him? Who where is he? There is a man who was the caretaker of the cemetery, a lollumon, who was a great friend of my grandfather's who goes to the morgue. Finds the body. There's a sign on it that says Habib Al-Khanian's sign is spy. They wouldn't immediately give up his body and this is something that still happens. Then they make you pay for the bullets. The bullets used by the firing squad. And they tell you, you shouldn't have a funeral.

He takes the body in his car and actually does something very sweet. He drives him around the building where my grandfather's office was, the lollumon and building and then takes him to the cemetery. But of course his body is resolved with bullets and they have a funeral for him at night in the dark because they're scared that they're going to be caught. Iranian newspapers and newspapers around the world announced Habib Al-Khanian's execution.

It's scared Iranian Jews. They're thinking if this can happen to him,

right, it could happen to any of us. I remember, you know, my father was holding up the daily paper

and on the cover it was get body did body did body. And the fact that someone like him with his track record of business, influence, power and charity could get arrested,

Summarily tried and subsequently executed really through shock waves within t...

community, which is why tens of thousands of Iranian Jews fled Iran within the first couple of years

of the revolution that the execution of Habib Al-Khanian was really the culprit behind that mass exodus initially. Within days of his execution, soldiers had evicted his family, showed up at Habib Al-Khanian's home in Tehran and confiscated all of his assets. You know, so everything that he had built his entire lifetime building was gone. The day after Habib's execution, a small group of Iranian Jews visited Ayatullah Khomeini

in his home in the city of Khome. And they asked them, you know, are we safe?

You know, can't we say? And he gave this big, big long winding sermon that had initially nothing to do

with what they had asked, which really puzzled them at first. But at the end, he gave them a

single statement that became sort of the unofficial policy of the Iranian regime towards the Jewish community to this day. And the sentence was, we separate the affairs of our own indigenous Jewish community from those blood-sucking Zionists in Israel. And this line was painted on the walls of every synagogue and every Jewish school in Iran. It was sort of the blessing that he had given over to the Iranian Jewish community to say, you are not them, you are Jews, they are Zionists,

we are against them and not you, and you can say, and they can't, we will fight them to the death.

And that's why this single line was painted on all the walls because it was

what everybody wanted with the Jewish community to remind the outsiders of what the big leader had said and that we were welcome and that we were not the enemy. Still, the threat of being called a Zionist hung over the heads of Iranian Jews and slowly over the course of the 1980s and 90s, their population in Iran decreased significantly, breaking a connection that had been there from millennia. And as Ayatollah Homeini, strengthened his grip over the country, the United

States and Israel became official enemies of Iran. Children across the country, regardless of their religious background, were forced to stand up in the morning at school in chant, death to America, in death to Israel. Most Iranians who live through 1979 and saw the rise of Ayatollah Homeini to power and were not for him and there were many who were not for him could not believe that a regime like that could go on, which is the reason why my families stayed in Iran for

you know, until the middle 80s because we thought it can't be. With the loss of this ancient connection and the rise of a radical Islamic government, Iran and Israel have been locked into a bitter conflict that has caused the deaths of thousands of Iranians as railies, Palestinians and others. The Islamic Republic of Iran claims to support the Palestinians in their quest for a state, but its actions have mostly focused on providing military and financial support to Palestinian

Islamic radical organizations like Hamas and Islamic Jahad. And today, the nearly 50-year war between Iran and Israel has reached what might be seen if. A joint Israeli U.S. operation has killed many

of the Islamic Republic's most important leaders, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Homeini.

Iran has retaliated by firing a barrage of missiles into Israel and other countries in the region. No one knows what will come of this war, but it is clear that it's another violent turning point in the relationship between Iran and Israel.

That's it for this week's show.

I'm Ron Teen Adablui, and you've been listening to "Throughline" from NPR.

This episode was produced by me.

And me? And? Julie Kayne. Ania Steinberg. Casey Meiner. Cristina Kim.

Devin Kadyama.

Irene Naguchi. Kiana Mohatem.

Thomas Coltrane.

Fact-checking for this episode was done by Kevin Vocal.

Also, thank you to my dad Nadir Adablui. ITN Arizu Resvani. Carmel Melamed. Rebecca Ferrer. Dilling Kurtz, Johannes Dergi, Beth Donovan, and Tommy Evans. This episode was mixed by

Robert Rodriguez. Music for this episode was composed by Ron Teen and his band "Drop Electric,"

which includes "Navid Marvi", "Show Fujiwara", "Ania", "Mizani".

And finally, if you have an idea or like something you heard on the show,

please write us at "[email protected]" Thanks for listening. Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people, communities,

and the planet flourish. More information is available at Hewlett.org.

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