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Friday, 29 June 2012

The Murder Of Habib Elghanian

How Iran killed its future

The execution of Habib Elghanian, its most prominent Jewish industrialist and philanthropist, was a turning point for the country.

Imagine where the U.S. economy would be today if John Jacob Astor, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Andrew Carnegie or any of the magnates who helped turn America into an industrialized society had been gunned down by a revolutionary firing squad. In 1979, that is what happened in Iran to my grandfather, Habib Elghanian, Iran's most prominent Jewish industrialist and philanthropist. My grandfather's execution was not only a personal loss but a turning point for Iran.

His execution and the subsequent fleeing of businessmen from Iran contributed to derailing the country's chances of building a modern, diversified, export-based economy, and foreshadowed Iran's neglect of its most valuable resource: its people. Since the revolution in 1979, a new generation of Iranians has been left to foot the hefty losses caused by the Islamic Republic's hostility to independent businessmen, its fixation on oil, uranium and nuclear power and its cantankerous rhetoric against Israel.

In the months after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's return to Iran on Feb. 1, 1979, about 200 former high-ranking members of the shah's security forces, military and government were killed, many charged with "association with the shah's regime." That May, my grandfather was the first businessman to be executed. During a show trial that lasted no longer than 20 minutes, he was falsely charged with being a "Zionist spy" and a "corrupter on Earth." Newspaper stories and editorials around the world, including in the Los Angeles Times, carried the news of the execution of "Iran's plastics king."

My grandfather's crime, according to the prosecutor, was making financial contributions to Israel and meeting with Israeli politicians when they came to Iran or when he traveled to Israel — as was customary for leaders of the Jewish diaspora. He was the leader of Iran's 80,000 to 100,000 Jews in the 1960s and 1970s when Iran and Israel enjoyed peaceful, if not always cordial, relations under the shah. Not mentioned was how hard he had worked to form partnerships with Muslim and Armenian businessmen, how he had rehabilitated hospitals — including one in which injured revolutionaries were treated — and had funded charities to help poor schoolchildren and the elderly.

It didn't matter that even as members of the elite were fleeing the country with their money, my grandfather had returned to Iran from a brief visit to the U.S. and Israel in November 1978. "I have done nothing wrong; I'm going home," he said. The prosecutor instead focused on his contributions to Israel and concluded that made him "a friend of God's foes and a foe of God's friends."

My grandfather grew up poor. He began working in an uncle's hotel at 15, went on to become a merchant in a bazaar and later, along with his brothers, spent decades building factories, creating thousands of jobs, producing modestly priced goods for a growing middle class and laying the foundations for an Iranian export industry.

For 30 years, the family played a pioneering role in Iran's modernization and industrialization, building the first high-rise and shopping arcades in Iran. An aluminum factory manufactured household goods including refrigerators, and a plastics factory mass-produced simple consumer products never before made in Iran.

In the early 1970s, my grandfather and other industrialists who belonged to the Iranian Chamber of Commerce were invited to China to lay the groundwork for trade between the two nations. China became Iran's biggest trade partner, but an average 80% of what Iran exports to China is oil, not manufactured goods. Today, it is the "Made in China" label that has become ubiquitous globally. When I think of how Iran's economy was more modern than China's and India's before the Iranian revolution, it saddens and frustrates me that Iranian oil has helped fuel both those nations' prosperity while Iran's modernization came to a halt. Even worse is seeing how it is the U.S.-born children of Indian and Chinese immigrants who are now starting their own companies in their families' former homelands.

If Iran after the 1979 revolution had nurtured, rather than ended, entrepreneurs' visions for the country, wouldn't businessmen such as YouTube Chief Executive Salar Kamangar, Expedia President Dara Khosrowshahi, MGA Entertainment Chief Executive Isaac Larian and EBay founder Pierre Omidyar have helped transform Iran into a 21st century economic powerhouse? The first three were born in Iran; Omidyar's father is Iranian.

Whether Iran's nuclear program is to build a bomb, create nuclear energy or extend its influence in the Middle East, the country has sabotaged its own interests by focusing heavily on that sector and leaving little opportunity for economic diversification. A new generation of Iranians, eager for opportunities to create and mold its future, clamors for political, civil and economic liberties. More than 20% of Iranians younger than 24 are unemployed. Without prospects for new private sector jobs, innovations that attract investments and open new trade opportunities, the educated youth leave, if they can afford it.

It was puzzling in March to hear Iran's leaders suggest that the nation "lift our domestic production" to stave off inflation and unemployment and strengthen the economy. That very principle — favoring products made in Iran by Iranians — was what my grandfather and other Iranian industrialists had long championed.

If their efforts had not been quashed, the headlines about Tehran might have been about Iran's latest crop of titans building a modern, prosperous and stable economy, serving as an example for the rest of the region. Instead, they will continue to be about the tribulations of a nation investing its energy in the wrong resources.

Shahrzad Elghanayan, a news photo editor, is working on a book about her grandfather.

Posted on 06/29/2012 12:29 PM by Hugh Fitzgerald
Comments
29 Jun 2012
Send an emailcassandra

Thank you so much for this article! I look forward to the book coming out. This is so important.

I am so sorry for your loss, may God avenge his blood!



29 Jun 2012
Christina McIntosh

 Islam - Muslims, their brains addled by Islam, filled with hate and envy and fear and the lust for power, by Islam - killed Habib Elghanian, and with him, all that he had done and could have done for Iran.

Islam, manifest in the Ummah or Mohammedan Mob, wherever it goes, creates - as John Quincy Adams inimitably summed it up - 'desolation and delusion'.  It may fatten and flourish for a brief period on plunder seized from others; but it does not foster human creativity or productivity, within its own domains but rather, obsessively, persistently, suppresses and destroys them.  

For 1400 years it has survived primarily on booty, on the slave trade, and on the proceeds of extortion - whether jizya 'protection' money extorted from terrorised dhimmi populations, such as the dhimmi Jewish and Christian communities of Iran, or 'tribute', extorted from neighbouring non-Muslim countries who are persistently attacked and threatened (and trapped or sweet-talked into 'agreements' that always redound to their harm).  

Considered as a whole, the ummah today survives because of the geological accident of oil (originally found and extracted by kafir technology that no Muslim entity could have invented), and by the de facto jizya of 'aid' and (for Muslim colonies within non-Muslim lands) 'social security' payments...all of this supplemented, in many, many places, by the proceeds of fraud of every description and outright organised crime including the drug trade, and people trafficking, including sex slavery.  Some Somalis are currently making money from a very traditional Mohammedan source: piracy and the extortion of ransom for captured boats and seamen.

Islam: not only the Religion of Slavery, or the Religion of Murder, or the Religion of Blood and War, but ..the Religion of Ruin.  



29 Jun 2012
PDK

Incredibly fascinating story, well articulated, thanks for sharing it.

Condolences to the family of grandfather Habib.

The whole world can thank both France and Jimmy Carter for the current state of Iran. Liberal France was the nest that harbored the egg of one Ruhollah Khomeini, giving him both aid and abetment, and a perch to promulgate to his minion Islamics for some 15 years. Liberal Jimmy "the coward" Carter showed his true colors when, Irans, Americas and the worlds best Iranian friend, the Shah Pavlavi, was in need of help and friendship, and Jimmy turned his back.

Jimmy BTW, is still alive and still besmirching Jews and Isreal. He should do all humanity a favor and off himself. France on the other hand, may get their own payback, as immigrating Islam is killing the Repubic through death by anaconda. What soothsayer could have fortold such poetic justice?

During the American hostage crises of 79-80, when 52 American hostages were seized and held under duress for 444 days, I one day passed a billboard which read, "The Ayatollah is an Assaholla", so acurate and apropos.

Shahrzad, the story you relate about Irans economy since the 79 Iranian coup is typical of liberal, socialist and Islamic thinking, The reality must be made to fit the illusion, the ideology. This is why socialism and Islamic economies struggle and worse fail, because reality just does not conform to "other worldly" ideology, but rather, ideology must conform to reality.

Further, for liberals and their socialism, and Islamics and their Sharia, the game afoot is the same, they both prefer to cheat reality, blame others for their own failings and shortcomings, and force all, through tyranny and indoctrination, to conform to the big lie. Unbelievably, they prefer to hold others down, rather than to lift themselves up.

Life is always a struggle. The struggle between two mutually exclusive groups and or ideologies, and the competition for limited, availing resources. This is the great  slough our humanity slogs through, and nowhere is this task more prominent than between the matured and the immature. Those who mature and play the game fair, versus the immature who simply cheat, trying desperately to avoid their personal responsibility to mature by finding that short cut to Nirvana, and that short cut, in their high minded opinion, is always at someone elses expense.

Liberalism is the iceburg targeting the Titanic.

Woe will be humanity, when all are enslaved to Islamic insanity. Thank you.






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