As the Iran war continues, the country’s residents are coming to terms with the new normal of daily conflict. But Iranians overseas also find themselves caught in the middle of a geopolitical storm.
With the death of Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, and the installation of his son Mojtaba as his successor, media outlets have “focused on trying to understand where bombs have fallen and how many have died,” said The Guardian. But what can “easily get lost are the voices of the people directly affected,” including those Iranians living abroad whose beliefs are “far from uniform.”
‘Melting pot with diverse views’ In the U.S., Iranian emigrants are “attacking each other on social media,” said Kowsar Gowhari, an Iranian-born attorney living in Maryland, to The Christian Science Monitor. With a new Iranian supreme leader in power, there are “some who believe this government is finished,” but others “don’t want” President Donald Trump to “destroy the place and to put in place a puppet government.”
Iran has always been a “melting pot with diverse views,” said Mohamad Machine-Chian, an Iran native and researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, to the Monitor. When the first ayatollah, Ruhollah Khomeini, took over in 1979, Iranians “thought that the Islamic revolution was the way to go. Forty years later, they can see the disaster that has been created.”
Many of the “American-born children of Iranians who left after the revolution” only have “memories” of “America’s forever wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” said The Economist. They fear the current situation in Iran could “bring continued conflict rather than liberation.”
Other countries It’s not just the U.S. where Iranians have mixed feelings about the war. Iranians abroad feel like they are “living in a parallel universe,” said Hosnieh Djafari-Marbini, a council member in England who previously lived in Iran, to The Guardian. “Life carries on normally,” while at the “same time you open your phone and see the destruction of places that mean so much to you.” Iranians living overseas have also been threatened with the seizure of their property if they “express support” for the U.S. and Israel, said Reuters. |