Imagine! the Fall of Ayatollahs
92 pages
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92 pages
English

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Description

Protests to change the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran has been going on since its writing at summer 1979. The protest reached its peak when Ayatollah Khamenei declared Ahmadinejad as President at 2009, known as Green Movement. There are thousands known activists for Change of Constitution in Iran. Here shown pictures of them, who represent millions before them:
But 14 People of Manifestation, at June 2019 set the movement at its 4th phase of the eight phases described in this book. Here shown picture of 14 people.

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Publié par
Date de parution 07 septembre 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781669845430
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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Imagine! The Fall of Ayatollahs







Sohrab ChamanAra



Copyright © 2022 by Sohrab ChamanAra.

ISBN:
Softcover
978-1-6698-4544-7
eBook
978-1-6698-4543-0

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.

Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.





Rev. date: 09/06/2022





Xlibris
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Contents
Preface
Introduction
A New Grand Alliance--Preface
Chapter One
A Peaceful History
Ancient Invasions, Modern Connection
Roman and Persian Empires
The Parthian Empire
The Sassanid Empire
Cyrus and the Persian Jews
Mohammed and the Quran
Shiite vs. Sunni Split
Turkic Mongol Rule (1256-1318)
Next Come the Turks
Safavid and Qajar Dynasties (1502-1925)
Persian-Armenian Relations
Chapter Two
Three Historic Genocides
Armenia
Reforms and Resentment Toward Armenians
The Persian Campaign
Pan-Turkism
World War I Battles
Persecution of Armenians
Iran’s Jewish Injustice
The Great Famine
Book on Iranian Genocide
What If?
The Nazi Genocide or The Jewish Holocaust
Ideology and Scale
Kristallnacht (1938)
Concentration and Labor Camps (1933-1945)
Ghettos (1940-45)
Death Squads (1941-1943)
Gas chambers
Wannsee Conference and the Final Solution
Extermination Camps
New Gas Chambers
Jewish Resistance
Climax
Escapes & Reports of Killings
Death Marches (1944-1945)
Liberation and Final Death Toll
Postscript
Chapter Three
Creation of Israel and Pakistan
Pahlavi Dynasty (1925-1979)
Islamic Republic (1979-Present)
From the 20th to the 21st Century
Shah of Iran
Ayatollah Khomeini
Saddam Hussein
Chapter Four
Thirty-six years after the Islamic Revolution
Iran’s Women’s Movement
Iranian Women Parliamentarians in mid-1970s
Chapter Five
Islamic State (IS)
Wahabi, Sunni, Shia
Time Travel into the Future
The Devil gets out of bottle
How 1906 Constitution Revolution faded away
Chapter Six
A prospective look to the future
The 14 People Manifestation, a boost in the road to “Change Islamic Constitution of Iran”
Finally, after 2021
What Chinese and Putin doing in Iran?
25 years history of Iran
The Road to Future
Conclusion and Final words
Final Word
And Now
Appendix 1
Few Articles from Islamic Republic of Iran Constitution for the US Administration to consider
Appendix 2
About Quran Chronicle








You, you may say I am a dreamer
But I am not the only one
I hope someday you’ll join us
And the world will be as one
John Lennon




Preface
Perhaps if the children are brought up with religious tolerance and taught that the common ground of all religions is to make them better people, the world could be more peaceful. I wrote this some two decades ago when contemplating on my first book “A journey to the Truth” and since then half a dozen books about Iran and related matters I have written, always this thought been in my mind.
I believe the conflicts in the Middle East are not primarily political, military or economical, they are mostly religious.
Although from India to Egypt there have been many religions and profits from beginning of mankind history, but conflicts are mostly initiated from Ibrahimic Religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
In the book that you will read you may ask; In the animosity between Ayatollahs Regime in Iran, Arabs, Turks and Israel, why do I bring a small country like Armenia into this discussion?
The small country of Armenia, once called Eastern Rome at Anatoly, Christianity owes its expansion to all of Europe to an Armenian King Constantin to unite the Eastern and Western Roman Empires.
It is always good to know that religion is not what one decides to choose, but it is something that one inherits from parents and almost all parents have either in a circumstance of force or social or economic or professing to be religious have been pressured to have that religion.
Accepting that religious beliefs is the root of conflicts in the Middle East, it helps to have some knowledge about the history and how these beliefs have spread.
If looking for a solution, with that in mind, we will try to find a way to free the people of Iran from Sharia Laws, which have been imposed on them for the last decades, which has made Iranian Regime the center of all troubles in the Middle East.
Sohrab ChamanAra
Des Plaines, Illinois
September 2022



Introduction
This book chronicles a 2500-year history of the Middle East. It all began in the B.C. era with a period of glorious empire, followed by Arab invasions, Genghis Khan of Mongol and Ottoman domination and ending with three genocides of the past century and the totally repressive Iranian Revolution of 1979. That last event ushered in the regime of the corrupt and tyrannical Ayatollahs, led by Ayatollah Khomeini and his successor, Ayatollah Khamenei.
The intent in providing this lengthy, inclusive history, beginning with benevolent rulers like Cyrus, literary masterworks such as the “ShahNameh” and peaceful relations among neighbors, has been to demonstrate the dominant civilizing influence of Persia (now Iran) in the region.
If we can see the history of that nation, before the invasions by Arab invaders and the self-interested rule of colonial powers in the 1800s, we can have our minds open to the possibility that an era of conciliation is possible. The only thing preventing such a return to those better, once-before, times are the shackles imposed by our limited historical consciousness.
That worldview, prior to 1979, saw Iran as a Muslim nation, rich in oil and exploited by American and other international petroleum companies and Industrial Military Complex for their domestic use. Since 1979, we have seen a nation that has retreated to the Middle Ages with rule by religious clerics also intent on exploiting and abusing the Iranian people for their personal enrichment and misguided religious beliefs.
Hopefully, to offer an alternative vision of the land of our ancestors. The year 2020 and beyond is not seen as a strict calendar dates. It is, instead, a metaphor for a time in the not-too-distant future in which the people of three, once-unified, nations--Iran, Armenia and Israel, three Nations of Ibrahimic Religions Judaism, Christianity and Islam--can unite once again in an alliance of similar political and cultural values along with economic interests, a territory that was once the same size as the Persian Empire.
The three nations will keep their current boundaries but acknowledge that they each emerged from the same source and have the same peaceful aspirations for their people and for advancing their common development.
We are living in dangerous, even revolutionary, times. A new century is awakening and wishes to throw off the shackles of the past--old rulers, old ways and outmoded national structures.
The last century brought at least three genuine revolutions: in Russia (1917), China (1949) and Cuba (1959) but countless coups and fascist uprisings in Germany (1933) and Italy (1922). Iran witnessed a coup that overthrew the regime of Prime Minister Mossadegh and replaced it with the Pahlavi dynasty that had ruled since 1926 with the Shah (1953).
The Islamic world today is enduring historic upheavals. The Arab Spring of 2011 in Egypt set off a chain reaction of mass popular protests in other Middle East nations. While none succeeded in bringing in the granting of more political and social freedoms, we have not seen the end of such popularly-generated revolts. The Old Guard is nervous that its decades-long rule and continued legitimacy is under attack.
Besides serving as a metaphor, 2020’s is an expression used to signify that one has perfect vision. While the exact course of events that will trigger popular revolts for change in the three nations of the Middle East Alliance is unknown, I would like to offer an alternative 2020 vision, one that replaces the current oppression, hatred and violence that now rules in the region.
The hinge on which my vision rests is with change in Iran. Change the future in Iran and peace will come to Israel, Armenia and rest of the Middle East!
After the 1979 revolution in Iran, “the Devil came out of the bottle” in Afghanistan, Egypt, Iraq and unleashed what has grown into a worldwide plague of terrorism.
A book, “Iran in the Triangle Chain of Misery”, written in Persian, highlights the country’s past hundred-year history and the people’s struggle for freedom and the rule of law.
The colors of the Iranian flag--green, white and red—are, here not in color shown, in the picture below, inside the country’s boundaries.

The green part shows peaceful demonstrations and slogans, over the last hundred years, where the people demand, in the white part, “Where is my vote?”. That question has always been answered, in the red part, with bloodshed by successive Iranian governments through assas

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