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Iranian Empress and Princess Appear at French Senate in Support of Iranian Protesters
The Foreign Desk ^ | 12/02/2022 | ELLIOT NAZAR

Posted on 12/02/2022 8:14:36 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Iranian Empress Farah Pahlavi and her granddaughter Princess Noor Pahlavi, the eldest daughter of Prince Reza Pahlavi, were special guests of the French Senate Tuesday during special conference, “Woman, Life, Freedom! Iran, Revolt or Revolution?” which included French senators declaring their support for the Iranian national uprising against the Islamic Republic.

“Empress Farah Pahlavi, Princess Nour Pahlavi, I would like to say that we are extremely honored to be your host in the Senate this afternoon,” said French Senator Bruno Retailleau in his opening remarks.

“Your presence gives greater weight to the message of support that this conference aims to send to the Iranian people and all those who embody the power and majesty of their civilization, meaning the Iranian women who have raised the storm of freedom in Iran,” Retailleau added.

In addition to the remarks by Senators on the ongoing protests in Iran, the song “Barayeh” by Iranian singer Shervin Hajipour, which has become the recognized anthem of the current movement, was performed by a student choir for the event. Hajipour was arrested by the regime after his song, which poetically lists the grievances of the Iranian people, went viral.

Credit: Public Media

In early November, during an open session of the French Senate, lawmakers chanted the now common Iranian slogan “Woman, Life Freedom” to show support for the Iranian people. 

After the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini at the hands of the Islamic morality police over her hijab wear and the subsequent protests throughout Iran that have endured into their third month now, lawmakers in France and other European countries have praised the revolution and have moved to enact sanctions against the Islamic regime for their brutal crackdowns of peaceful protesters.

A day before Empress Farah and Princess Noor’s visit to the French Senate, the French National Assembly unanimously adopted a resolution to support the Iranian people, condemning in the “strongest terms the brutal and widespread repression” against “non-violent demonstrators.” 

The measure also denounced the Islamic Republic’s use of torture and called for “support for the Iranian people in their aspirations for democracy and respect for their fundamental rights and freedoms.”

Following the measure’s passage in the French Senate and the publication of a video of Senator Retailleau’s speech, Prince Reza Pahlavi, son of the late Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, tweeted appreciation and thanks for the Senator’s statement and support for the Iranian people.

Many Iranians in Iran and abroad, continue to support the Pahlavi family and praise their commitment to supporting the people of Iran and their decades-long aspirations for a democratic Iran. 

Before being exiled in 1979, the Shah of Iran and the Empress were revered by many Iranians as well as by other countries for allowing women in Iran to have many of the freedoms that they are deprived of today.

During her time as Iran’s Queen, the Empress engaged in various campaigns to improve the social and living conditions of women in Iran, including in education, sports, health, jobs, and other areas.

In the streets of Iran, videos have emerged on the ground of Iranian protesters chanting “Reza Shah, bless your soul” and other pro-Shah slogans, praising the late monarch and his grandfather Reza Shah. 

Under the Pahlavi monarchy, Iran became heavily westernized and modernized with economic development with the United States and its neighbors in the Middle East, both Arab and Israeli. 

Following the Shah’s death from cancer, his son, Prince Reza, and his family, now living in the outskirts of Washington D.C., have been calling attention to the actions of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the human rights abuses against ordinary Iranians.

As protests continue in Iran, many young and old Iranians continue to chant slogans and display photographs of the Pahlavi family, with some hoping that the Empress, the Prince, and the Pahlavi family can return to Iran one day.



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: empress; iran; iraq; irgc; lebanon; protests; qudsforce; unitednations; untiednations; yemen

1 posted on 12/02/2022 8:14:36 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The last thing the Iranian people want is the return of the Shah.

They aren’t crazy about the Mullahs…but the Shah’s secret police were just as bad.


2 posted on 12/02/2022 8:16:21 AM PST by Vermont Lt
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To: SeekAndFind

In todays society, anyone can identify as an Iranian princess...


3 posted on 12/02/2022 8:17:51 AM PST by Magnum44 (...against all enemies, foreign and domestic... )
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To: Vermont Lt

Churchill famously said the Muslims are either under your boot or at your throat. I suppose it may just be a choice of whose boot they want. Btw, while it’s possible Pahlavi could return as a constitutional monarch, I’m not aware of any big effort to bring back the autocracy


4 posted on 12/02/2022 8:28:17 AM PST by j.havenfarm (21 years on Free Republic, 12/10/21! More than 5000 replies and still not shutting up!)
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To: Vermont Lt
But were they actually worse than any other regime security force in the Middle East at the time?

Try being a dissident in the Syria of Hafez al-Assad, or the Iran if Saddam Hussein, Nasser's Egypt or even King Hussein's Jordan and King Faisal's Saudi Arabia! In short, any Middle Eastern country!

The Shah was conciliatory\weak when he should have been strong, strong when he should have been conciliatory, so he ended up being contemptible. He wasn't his grandfather, who was a tough old cavalry man! the Shah and his family were always a step out of touch with the population. His family's first language was French not Farsi; stories about them remind me of stories of the last Romanov.

That's not to say they should have been allowed to fall! It's all on Carter. It set the stage for the rise of Islamic fundamentalism!

5 posted on 12/02/2022 8:41:16 AM PST by Reily
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To: Reily

Typo

“.. the Iran if Saddam Hussein...”

Should read

“.. the Iraq of Saddam Hussein ..”


6 posted on 12/02/2022 8:42:27 AM PST by Reily
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To: SeekAndFind
No headscarves.


7 posted on 12/02/2022 10:05:12 AM PST by BeauBo
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To: Reily

I guess I am more sensitive to that because they killed the fathers of some classmates during the revolution. The Mullahs killed some too.

To an 18 year old kid who “believed” that governments we were in bed with would not kill their military leaders…it left a mark. Other classmates killed in the Iran/Iraq war made “more sense.”

I heard some pretty scary stories of people being disappeared and tortured that were pretty close to first hand.

That whole part of the world is messed up.


8 posted on 12/02/2022 11:06:25 AM PST by Vermont Lt
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To: Vermont Lt

Even before Carter the US was partially to blame with insensitivity as to where they were. The US footprint in Iran was HUGE! I read (and I admit I don’t believe it!) it numbered up to 30K (military & oil worker civilians). That part of the world is NOT Europe! We treated it like it was! And yes, the Shah encouraged that US attitude. Resentment against the US was huge in Iran and fueled the revolution.


9 posted on 12/02/2022 12:02:17 PM PST by Reily
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To: Vermont Lt
I don't believe you are right.

When I was at Lackland AFB in 1975, I had a base pass and watched a baseball game in one of the baseball fields next to the BMTS barracks row.   There were at least fifty Iranian cadets male and female there watching the game and they were very outgoing and friendly with me.   I could clearly see that they treated each other as equals with no Islamic clothing at all.

The Shah’s secret police were clearly oppressive to communist subversives, but the rule of the repressive Mullas has been oppressive to all.   More so to those who had a taste of freedom before the senseless downfall of The Peacock Throne.

Iran and Turkey are not Arab nations.   The Persians and the Turks were Westernized especially since WWII, but this new-age Islamic proselytization is a dangerous retrograde force against freedom.

10 posted on 12/02/2022 12:11:08 PM PST by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken!)
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To: higgmeister

I am well aware of their culture.

We had Naval cadets at our school. Some of the cadets were the children of high level military and state department officials. Those were the people who were swept up by the secret police and murdered. They were then dropped off at the families homes.

The culture itself was quite western. When they got kicked out of the US in March 1980, many of them skipped out on their naval commitments to stay in the US. Those that went back, only to escape later had nightmarish stories about the Revolutionary folks.

I think you mistake my point. The Shah’s regime was a dictatorship—benevolent most of the time—but one off hand comment to the wrong person could get you killed. Not exactly a government you want back.

We should provide arms to the people of Iran. Let them decide whom they want in charge. And we should keep our nose out of it. We don’t need the buffer against Russia anymore.


11 posted on 12/02/2022 5:35:29 PM PST by Vermont Lt
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To: Reily

Carter messed that up. Big time.


12 posted on 12/02/2022 5:36:08 PM PST by Vermont Lt
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To: Vermont Lt
Bearing in mind that Turkey wasn't a buffer against Russia but one big surveillance station against Russia and the Warsaw Pact.   We had a few hundred ditty boppers in front of typewriters there back in the day.   The ditty bopper classes were on the floor below us in our USAF tech school.

I had not realized that in addition to Communist subversives, children of high level military and state department officials were the most likely way to keep those officials in line.   Especially if they had been exposed to viewpoints out of country.

13 posted on 12/02/2022 8:46:22 PM PST by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken!)
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To: higgmeister

The main problem for the Shah was that after the elected prime minister was deposed in 1953, he was easy to paint as a foreign puppet. While he changed many things the West found praiseworthy, he was imposing a liberalism on the people at the time who often didn’t want it. With Western affluence came Western decadence, and that is easier to impose on poor communists than poor Muslims.


14 posted on 12/03/2022 4:31:58 AM PST by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: Magnum44

It is bizarre that any modern governments even recognize these former monarchs/their families; their very existence (hereditary monarchies) should be anathema to countries with the history of France or the US.


15 posted on 12/03/2022 4:34:14 AM PST by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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