"I was taught in my history classes that the Shah was a tin-pot dictator installed by the CIA to subdue Iran’s leftists and secure American access to the country’s oil. That he was extravagant and capricious. That his secret police, the Savak, tortured and spied with impunity. Much of this is probably true. Mohammad Reza was definitely the intended beneficiary of an at-least-attempted CIA coup in 1953. And he was definitely a dictator (though whether he was benevolent or tyrannical is debatable). But I must admit to ambivalent feelings towards the Shah and his government. Under the Shah my grandmother gained the right to vote and to divorce her emotionally abusive, opium-addicted husband. My relatives benefitted from his land redistribution and industrial profit-sharing programmes. My father learned to read from the Shah’s literacy corps and received government-subsidised meals and textbooks. So who am I to tell them that he was a lousy guy, that he was a despot, that his policies were too pro-western? They don’t care about that. They were starving and he gave them food, that’s all they need to know. In my household I was always taught that Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and his father were the greatest leaders Iran ever had. My family loves the man like a grandfather, or even a god. Growing up, we always had a Shir o Khorshid in our house. “Every aspect of life was better then,” my father loves to say, “everyone was happier.” When he comes to visit Iran he blames every imperfection personally on Khomeini. The teller at the bank is rude? Khomeini. The metro is late? Khomeini. The internet is slow? Khomeini. When he was growing up, people were nicer, food tasted better, the Azadi Tower looked bigger."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Anonymous, "Why Iranians are lapping up Shah memorabilia", The Guardian (17 June, 2015)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Mohammad_Reza_Pahlavi
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
Mohammad Rezā Shāh Pahlavi (Persian: محمدرضا شاه پهلوی, pronounced [mohæmmæd-rezɒː-ʃɒːh-e pæhlæviː]) (26 October 1919 – 27 July 1980) was the Shah of the Imperial State of Iran from 1941 until he was deposed in 1979 by the Islamic Revolution. He died in exile in Egypt. His eldest son is Reza Pahlavi.
116 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Mohammad Reza Pahlavi →
Related Quotes
"Mossadeq, the orator, is difficult to judge as a politician because of the perpetual contradictions between his words…"
"No doubt history will say that Eisenhower was a soldier. For my part, I will remember, above all, his goodness. He wa…"
"One of my chief "crimes" then, was to have wanted Iran to move from the oil age into the atomic age before it was too…"
"I did not share the enthusiasm of certain politicians for the National Front leader, it was because I had noticed, in…"
"Nikita Khruschev was a difficult man to deal with, often very hard, always determined. But his peasant side which mad…"
"All ideological differences set apart, I cannot help having a sincere admiration for Mr Brezhnev. He is to all appear…"
"My father loved us dearly and deeply. There were eleven of us and our love for him was full of admiration. We held hi…"
"The world petroleum story is one of the most inhuman known to man: in it, elementary moral and social principles are …"
"... the Jewish press in the USA is solely responsible for our poor publicity."
"Henry Kissinger is possessed of a truly superior intelligence, in addition to which he has two qualities which, unfor…"