1 00:00:00,280 --> 00:00:04,680 Speaker 1: Welcome to Noble Blood, a production of iHeartRadio and Grimm 2 00:00:04,680 --> 00:00:12,840 Speaker 1: and Mild from Aaron Manky listener Discretion advised. January in 3 00:00:12,920 --> 00:00:16,440 Speaker 1: Tehran can get pretty chilly, so it's no surprise that 4 00:00:16,560 --> 00:00:21,560 Speaker 1: people often forsake the city for warmer locales, and on 5 00:00:21,680 --> 00:00:27,240 Speaker 1: January sixteenth, nineteen seventy nine, that's exactly what the sha 6 00:00:27,320 --> 00:00:31,000 Speaker 1: claimed to be doing, leaving the capital of Iran for 7 00:00:31,080 --> 00:00:36,280 Speaker 1: a quote extended vacation. It wasn't publicly known yet, but 8 00:00:36,400 --> 00:00:40,360 Speaker 1: the Shaw had recently been receiving treatment for leukemia, and 9 00:00:40,520 --> 00:00:43,879 Speaker 1: this trip to Egypt and then the United States was 10 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:49,760 Speaker 1: ostensibly to receive further treatment and recuperate. But even people 11 00:00:49,880 --> 00:00:53,400 Speaker 1: in the know understood that there was more to the 12 00:00:53,680 --> 00:00:59,000 Speaker 1: Shah's instinct to leave the country. It wasn't frigid temperatures 13 00:00:59,240 --> 00:01:03,160 Speaker 1: or just the desire for medical treatment that drove the 14 00:01:03,200 --> 00:01:08,000 Speaker 1: Shah of Iran, Muhammad Riza pat Levie to board a 15 00:01:08,000 --> 00:01:12,080 Speaker 1: plane headed for Egypt. The real reason the Shah needed 16 00:01:12,080 --> 00:01:17,360 Speaker 1: to get away was because of the monumental protests calling 17 00:01:17,400 --> 00:01:21,800 Speaker 1: for his downfall that had reached a boiling point in 18 00:01:21,840 --> 00:01:25,160 Speaker 1: his forty years on the throne. The Shah had survived 19 00:01:25,319 --> 00:01:29,800 Speaker 1: turmoil before, and despite appearing to flee in the face 20 00:01:29,880 --> 00:01:33,520 Speaker 1: of this unrest, he assumed that this time would be 21 00:01:33,560 --> 00:01:37,160 Speaker 1: no different. In nineteen fifty three, the Shah had fled 22 00:01:37,200 --> 00:01:40,720 Speaker 1: the country after a botched coup to topple the then 23 00:01:40,840 --> 00:01:44,880 Speaker 1: prime minister, a coup which he, the Shah, had tacitly supported, 24 00:01:45,520 --> 00:01:49,600 Speaker 1: But once the pro shah Us government and the staunchly 25 00:01:49,720 --> 00:01:53,600 Speaker 1: loyal Iranian military stepped in, the Shah was able to 26 00:01:53,720 --> 00:01:57,800 Speaker 1: return to the country, even more determined to maintain his 27 00:01:57,920 --> 00:02:01,040 Speaker 1: hold on power and so oh. As he got on 28 00:02:01,080 --> 00:02:05,440 Speaker 1: the plane in January of nineteen seventy nine, he knew 29 00:02:05,480 --> 00:02:08,040 Speaker 1: it was possible that he might need to be out 30 00:02:08,080 --> 00:02:11,040 Speaker 1: of the country for a year or two, but he 31 00:02:11,120 --> 00:02:15,720 Speaker 1: assumed that eventually he would return, only more popular and 32 00:02:15,840 --> 00:02:21,000 Speaker 1: more supported than ever. After all, the Iranian monarchy was 33 00:02:21,080 --> 00:02:24,919 Speaker 1: over two thousand and five hundred years old. It could 34 00:02:25,000 --> 00:02:30,160 Speaker 1: survive another round of protests, but by the start of 35 00:02:30,280 --> 00:02:35,840 Speaker 1: nineteen seventy nine the protests were particularly fierce. It had 36 00:02:35,880 --> 00:02:39,120 Speaker 1: been a year and two days since the first wave 37 00:02:39,200 --> 00:02:43,240 Speaker 1: of unrest in this bout of turmoil unfolded in that year, 38 00:02:43,320 --> 00:02:48,040 Speaker 1: since the demonstrations which called for a representative government free 39 00:02:48,040 --> 00:02:53,240 Speaker 1: of corruption only grew in size and ferocity. What started 40 00:02:53,280 --> 00:02:58,880 Speaker 1: out as a protest championed by outspoken anti Shah activists 41 00:02:59,400 --> 00:03:04,520 Speaker 1: turned into a bloody nationwide clash between the general public 42 00:03:04,840 --> 00:03:09,040 Speaker 1: and the military loyal to the Shah. By January nineteen 43 00:03:09,160 --> 00:03:13,680 Speaker 1: seventy nine, over eleven percent of the country was actively 44 00:03:13,720 --> 00:03:19,480 Speaker 1: participating in anti regime protests. Compare that to the estimated 45 00:03:19,639 --> 00:03:23,679 Speaker 1: number of roughly seven percent of citizens who were actively 46 00:03:23,760 --> 00:03:28,880 Speaker 1: participating during the French Revolution. No wonder the Shah was 47 00:03:28,919 --> 00:03:33,760 Speaker 1: feeling the heat. As the Shah and his wife, Queen Farah, 48 00:03:34,200 --> 00:03:37,840 Speaker 1: stepped out of their car and walked toward their private plane, 49 00:03:38,360 --> 00:03:42,240 Speaker 1: the two royal guards standing on the tarmac fell to 50 00:03:42,320 --> 00:03:46,840 Speaker 1: their knees, crying. They attempted to kiss the Shah's feet 51 00:03:46,960 --> 00:03:50,160 Speaker 1: in reverence, only for him to urge them back up 52 00:03:50,200 --> 00:03:54,240 Speaker 1: to their own feet. Once standing, the guards held the 53 00:03:54,320 --> 00:03:58,119 Speaker 1: Koran in the air above the royal couple's heads as 54 00:03:58,160 --> 00:04:03,400 Speaker 1: they walked underneath and up the plane stairs. This traditional 55 00:04:03,520 --> 00:04:07,200 Speaker 1: Muslim ritual is meant to insure one's safety on a 56 00:04:07,200 --> 00:04:12,160 Speaker 1: difficult journey. It's probable that the guards understood that this 57 00:04:12,320 --> 00:04:16,360 Speaker 1: trip was not a regular vacation, and that the Shah 58 00:04:16,480 --> 00:04:19,920 Speaker 1: would need all the support he could get in order 59 00:04:19,960 --> 00:04:25,040 Speaker 1: to remain not just in power, but alive. Once boarded, 60 00:04:25,200 --> 00:04:28,120 Speaker 1: the Shah sat down in the cockpit of his plane 61 00:04:28,440 --> 00:04:32,080 Speaker 1: and turned on its engines. Perhaps in an attempt to 62 00:04:32,240 --> 00:04:36,080 Speaker 1: maintain control in the face of an uncertain future, the 63 00:04:36,120 --> 00:04:39,560 Speaker 1: Shah had decided to pilot his own plane for at 64 00:04:39,640 --> 00:04:42,520 Speaker 1: least take off and the first hour of the journey. 65 00:04:43,120 --> 00:04:45,640 Speaker 1: The Shah turned his plane on and for a moment, 66 00:04:46,080 --> 00:04:49,240 Speaker 1: as the rumble of the engines filled the cockpit, he 67 00:04:49,279 --> 00:04:54,360 Speaker 1: could forget the sound of his people calling for his downfall. 68 00:04:54,960 --> 00:04:58,159 Speaker 1: The Shaw concentrated on the tarmac ahead as he moved 69 00:04:58,200 --> 00:05:02,800 Speaker 1: the plane to the runway, cleted and lifted up. As 70 00:05:02,839 --> 00:05:06,760 Speaker 1: the plane soared into the sky, the Shah looked down 71 00:05:06,920 --> 00:05:11,000 Speaker 1: on Tehran and its surrounding areas. Even though no one 72 00:05:11,080 --> 00:05:15,520 Speaker 1: could see him, he attempted to maintain a steely disposition 73 00:05:16,160 --> 00:05:23,240 Speaker 1: while tears rolled down his cheeks. Despite all of the stress, sadness, anger, frustration, 74 00:05:23,400 --> 00:05:27,120 Speaker 1: and pure exhaustion of the past year, the Shah had 75 00:05:27,160 --> 00:05:31,000 Speaker 1: had no idea that this would be the last time 76 00:05:31,320 --> 00:05:35,200 Speaker 1: he would ever see his country. But as his plane 77 00:05:35,400 --> 00:05:40,320 Speaker 1: flew westward. Not only did the symbolic quote peacock throne 78 00:05:40,600 --> 00:05:43,880 Speaker 1: from which the Shah had reigned crumbled in the face 79 00:05:43,920 --> 00:05:47,919 Speaker 1: of the Iranian Revolution, but so too did the centuries 80 00:05:48,000 --> 00:05:54,680 Speaker 1: old monarchical tradition in Iran. With his departure, Muhammad Reza Pahlavi, 81 00:05:55,200 --> 00:05:59,520 Speaker 1: the quote king of Kings, light of the Aryans, center 82 00:05:59,600 --> 00:06:03,200 Speaker 1: of the universe, shadow of the Almighty could add a 83 00:06:03,360 --> 00:06:07,960 Speaker 1: new name to that impressive list of titles, the last 84 00:06:08,320 --> 00:06:17,920 Speaker 1: Shah of Iran. I'm Danish Schwartz and this is noble blood. Now, 85 00:06:18,000 --> 00:06:20,719 Speaker 1: before we dive into the Shah's life, I think it's 86 00:06:20,760 --> 00:06:24,640 Speaker 1: worth clarifying how I'll be referring to him throughout the episode. 87 00:06:24,920 --> 00:06:28,720 Speaker 1: Mohammad Resah Shah had many names throughout his life. When 88 00:06:28,760 --> 00:06:32,320 Speaker 1: he was born in nineteen nineteen, he was named Mohammad 89 00:06:32,440 --> 00:06:36,679 Speaker 1: Resa with no surname. When his father usurped the throne 90 00:06:36,760 --> 00:06:41,040 Speaker 1: in nineteen twenty one, his father adopted the surname pot 91 00:06:41,160 --> 00:06:43,800 Speaker 1: la Vie, which is also the name of the pre 92 00:06:44,040 --> 00:06:48,960 Speaker 1: Islamic language in Iran. Once king himself, the Shah became 93 00:06:49,040 --> 00:06:53,520 Speaker 1: known as Mohammad Reza Shah. And so for this story's sake, 94 00:06:53,600 --> 00:06:56,520 Speaker 1: I'll be referring to him either as the Shah or 95 00:06:56,680 --> 00:07:01,520 Speaker 1: Muhammad Resa Shah. Mohammad Reza Shah was born a commoner, 96 00:07:02,000 --> 00:07:05,320 Speaker 1: but by his twenty second birthday he was the Shah 97 00:07:05,360 --> 00:07:09,280 Speaker 1: of Iran and second Shah of the Paula Vis dynasty. 98 00:07:10,200 --> 00:07:14,880 Speaker 1: He ultimately ruled Iran for almost forty years, a period 99 00:07:15,120 --> 00:07:19,840 Speaker 1: during which the nation underwent dramatic cultural changes and grew 100 00:07:19,920 --> 00:07:23,920 Speaker 1: in power, going from essentially a colony of England and 101 00:07:24,040 --> 00:07:27,400 Speaker 1: Russia to one of the most powerful nations in the 102 00:07:27,400 --> 00:07:32,200 Speaker 1: Middle East. Mohammad Reza Shah would contend that he was 103 00:07:32,280 --> 00:07:36,480 Speaker 1: to thank for this growth. In striving to build uote 104 00:07:36,720 --> 00:07:41,360 Speaker 1: the Great Civilization, the Shah undertook a series of modernizing 105 00:07:41,440 --> 00:07:46,800 Speaker 1: reforms that he labeled the White Revolution. These wide ranging 106 00:07:46,880 --> 00:07:52,320 Speaker 1: reforms included land reform programs that dismantled the country's semi 107 00:07:52,360 --> 00:07:57,560 Speaker 1: feudal system of land management, equal rights for women, nationalization 108 00:07:57,760 --> 00:08:02,560 Speaker 1: of forests, and water and literacy corps. Many of these 109 00:08:02,600 --> 00:08:07,840 Speaker 1: programs were not successful due to either administrative ineptitude or 110 00:08:07,960 --> 00:08:12,200 Speaker 1: poor public perception, but the country did still modernize in 111 00:08:12,320 --> 00:08:16,360 Speaker 1: many ways. If you're wondering where Iran would have gotten 112 00:08:16,440 --> 00:08:20,080 Speaker 1: the money to make these menu reforms. The answer is, 113 00:08:20,600 --> 00:08:26,640 Speaker 1: perhaps unsurprisingly oil. In the nineteen fifties, Iran nationalized oil 114 00:08:27,000 --> 00:08:31,200 Speaker 1: and brought millions of dollars into the treasury. Iran appeared 115 00:08:31,240 --> 00:08:34,240 Speaker 1: to be on the up and up, which the Sha 116 00:08:34,280 --> 00:08:39,480 Speaker 1: attributed to his brilliant leadership and stewardship of his country. 117 00:08:39,840 --> 00:08:43,720 Speaker 1: When the two thousand, five hundredth anniversary of the Persian 118 00:08:43,800 --> 00:08:48,760 Speaker 1: monarchy ruled around, the Shah used that opportunity to celebrate 119 00:08:48,920 --> 00:08:52,440 Speaker 1: Iran himself and all that he felt he had done 120 00:08:52,600 --> 00:08:57,000 Speaker 1: for the country with an extravagant week long affair in 121 00:08:57,080 --> 00:09:01,280 Speaker 1: nineteen seventy one. The party took place at the ancient 122 00:09:01,440 --> 00:09:06,240 Speaker 1: ruins of Persepolis, located in the arid landscape of southern Iran. 123 00:09:06,760 --> 00:09:10,400 Speaker 1: Persepolis had been the capital of Cyrus the Great's empire. 124 00:09:11,040 --> 00:09:15,360 Speaker 1: If the Shah was looking to celebrate Iran's millennium spanning history, 125 00:09:15,760 --> 00:09:19,040 Speaker 1: there was no better place to emphasize just how old 126 00:09:19,120 --> 00:09:24,439 Speaker 1: Iran and its monarchy were. The guests for this festive 127 00:09:24,440 --> 00:09:28,480 Speaker 1: occasion were notable in and of themselves. The Shah invited 128 00:09:28,559 --> 00:09:32,640 Speaker 1: heads of government and state from across the globe, including 129 00:09:33,040 --> 00:09:38,559 Speaker 1: then US President Richard Nixon, Queen Elizabeth of England, Princess 130 00:09:38,600 --> 00:09:42,440 Speaker 1: Grace and Prince Rainier of Monaco, as well as Soviet 131 00:09:42,520 --> 00:09:47,920 Speaker 1: President Nikolai Podgourney. Not all of those people attended, specifically 132 00:09:48,040 --> 00:09:52,840 Speaker 1: Richard Nixon and Queen Elizabeth, who passed but sent lesser 133 00:09:52,960 --> 00:09:57,120 Speaker 1: figures in their stead, Spiro Agnew, the Vice President of 134 00:09:57,160 --> 00:10:02,640 Speaker 1: the United States, and Prince Philip sspectively. In all, sixty 135 00:10:02,880 --> 00:10:11,560 Speaker 1: nine countries sent representatives to the festivities for the Shaw. 136 00:10:11,720 --> 00:10:14,720 Speaker 1: There was a lot riding on this event. With all 137 00:10:14,800 --> 00:10:18,000 Speaker 1: the world's eyes on Persepolis, the Shaw was eager to 138 00:10:18,080 --> 00:10:22,600 Speaker 1: demonstrate just how strong and prosperous Iran had become, and 139 00:10:22,720 --> 00:10:27,200 Speaker 1: he certainly delivered, sparing no expense and racking up a 140 00:10:27,200 --> 00:10:31,480 Speaker 1: bill so big that even today people still debate just 141 00:10:31,559 --> 00:10:35,440 Speaker 1: how expensive the whole thing was. Robert Steele, in his 142 00:10:35,520 --> 00:10:39,800 Speaker 1: book on this bimillennial celebration, states that while landing on 143 00:10:40,000 --> 00:10:44,800 Speaker 1: an exact number is difficult, we can tentatively estimate that 144 00:10:44,840 --> 00:10:49,600 Speaker 1: the Shaw spent around sixteen point eight million dollars on 145 00:10:49,679 --> 00:10:53,240 Speaker 1: the event, which would be equivalent to just over one 146 00:10:53,320 --> 00:10:58,400 Speaker 1: hundred and twenty eight million dollars in today's money. Among 147 00:10:58,480 --> 00:11:01,520 Speaker 1: the week's activities were a par raid, a fireworks show, 148 00:11:01,679 --> 00:11:05,080 Speaker 1: and the most well known part of the celebration, a 149 00:11:05,160 --> 00:11:08,320 Speaker 1: dinner party for all of the guests that was so 150 00:11:08,360 --> 00:11:13,360 Speaker 1: elaborate it became infamous. The dinner, which was five hours 151 00:11:13,400 --> 00:11:17,600 Speaker 1: and featured six courses, took place under a massive tent. 152 00:11:18,160 --> 00:11:22,320 Speaker 1: Each dish was an elaborate, decadent creation, with a menu 153 00:11:22,440 --> 00:11:27,560 Speaker 1: featuring roasted peacock, quail, eggs, saddles of lamb, golden caviar, 154 00:11:27,679 --> 00:11:32,920 Speaker 1: and dom perignon. Of the six courses, only one ingredient 155 00:11:33,200 --> 00:11:38,439 Speaker 1: was actually from Iran caviar during the first course. Everything 156 00:11:38,440 --> 00:11:42,360 Speaker 1: else was flown in from Maxims in Paris, and it 157 00:11:42,400 --> 00:11:46,520 Speaker 1: wasn't just the food that was imported. Basically everything the 158 00:11:46,559 --> 00:11:50,280 Speaker 1: Shah needed for the entire week's festivities was brought in 159 00:11:50,320 --> 00:11:54,960 Speaker 1: from Europe, including the weight staff. Even at the time, 160 00:11:55,320 --> 00:12:00,440 Speaker 1: the dinner party wasn't particularly well received. The lavish of 161 00:12:00,480 --> 00:12:03,360 Speaker 1: the event appeared too many to be in poor taste, 162 00:12:03,760 --> 00:12:07,760 Speaker 1: given that so many Iranians were still in poverty. Sure, 163 00:12:07,880 --> 00:12:11,480 Speaker 1: the Shah might have previously put time, money, and energy 164 00:12:11,600 --> 00:12:16,840 Speaker 1: into developing Iran, but those investments hadn't necessarily resulted in 165 00:12:17,000 --> 00:12:22,040 Speaker 1: material improvements in the lives of ordinary Iranian people. And 166 00:12:22,240 --> 00:12:24,520 Speaker 1: so it wasn't a great look for him to be 167 00:12:24,559 --> 00:12:29,640 Speaker 1: spending money on French champagne and a thirty three kilogram 168 00:12:29,760 --> 00:12:34,080 Speaker 1: birthday cake for his wife, Not to mention, because they 169 00:12:34,120 --> 00:12:37,920 Speaker 1: had imported almost everything for the event, they were sending 170 00:12:37,960 --> 00:12:41,320 Speaker 1: all of that money abroad instead of investing it domestically. 171 00:12:42,080 --> 00:12:46,160 Speaker 1: Iranians who were struggling saw the message plainly, the Shah 172 00:12:46,200 --> 00:12:49,800 Speaker 1: would spend lavishly on himself and on dignitaries that he 173 00:12:49,840 --> 00:12:55,120 Speaker 1: wanted to impress, but not on them. Given that criticism, 174 00:12:55,240 --> 00:12:59,640 Speaker 1: it's not surprising that nowadays a common narrative about the 175 00:12:59,679 --> 00:13:03,720 Speaker 1: cell and the dinner specifically is that it was the 176 00:13:03,800 --> 00:13:07,800 Speaker 1: catalyst for the Iranian Revolution or the protest movement which 177 00:13:07,800 --> 00:13:12,200 Speaker 1: would ultimately oust the Shah. A twenty sixteen article in 178 00:13:12,240 --> 00:13:15,719 Speaker 1: the British tabloid The Daily Mail went so far as 179 00:13:15,760 --> 00:13:18,360 Speaker 1: to say, quote the great iron knee is that the 180 00:13:18,400 --> 00:13:23,199 Speaker 1: Shaw's feast was supposed to reinforce the throne it ultimately toppled. 181 00:13:24,360 --> 00:13:28,560 Speaker 1: That narrative is an oversimplification of the forces behind the 182 00:13:28,600 --> 00:13:33,840 Speaker 1: Iranian revolution, and bad as the optics were. To put it. Frankly, 183 00:13:34,120 --> 00:13:37,480 Speaker 1: one dinner party did not cause the Shah to fall 184 00:13:38,040 --> 00:13:42,200 Speaker 1: Even though Iranian did not perceive the event positively, it 185 00:13:42,280 --> 00:13:46,000 Speaker 1: wasn't the sole foundation on which the later revolution developed. 186 00:13:46,600 --> 00:13:51,000 Speaker 1: That being said, the event is an incredibly useful tool 187 00:13:51,160 --> 00:13:55,319 Speaker 1: in understanding many of the factors which did lead to 188 00:13:55,360 --> 00:13:59,840 Speaker 1: the Iranian Revolution and the Shaw's ultimate dethroning, namely his 189 00:13:59,840 --> 00:14:05,440 Speaker 1: opulent spending practices, his desire to court the West, and 190 00:14:05,800 --> 00:14:14,440 Speaker 1: his growing detachment from reality. You might recall that I 191 00:14:14,559 --> 00:14:18,679 Speaker 1: mentioned in passing in the introduction that Muhammad Razash Shah 192 00:14:18,760 --> 00:14:23,120 Speaker 1: ruled from a peacock throne. The peacock throne wasn't a 193 00:14:23,280 --> 00:14:27,120 Speaker 1: literal object, but a common metaphor to describe just how 194 00:14:27,160 --> 00:14:31,520 Speaker 1: ostentatious the Shah was. He and his three wives had 195 00:14:31,560 --> 00:14:36,240 Speaker 1: a habit of buying expensive cars, boats, planes, art, jewelry, 196 00:14:36,320 --> 00:14:40,800 Speaker 1: and artifacts. The extremely lavish nature of the two thousand, 197 00:14:40,920 --> 00:14:45,880 Speaker 1: five hundredth anniversary celebration was completely on brand for the 198 00:14:46,040 --> 00:14:50,200 Speaker 1: lifestyle that the Shah and his household led. But an 199 00:14:50,240 --> 00:14:52,680 Speaker 1: important thing to bear in mind is that the money 200 00:14:52,720 --> 00:14:55,600 Speaker 1: that the Shah was spending on luxury goods and palace 201 00:14:55,640 --> 00:15:01,120 Speaker 1: renovations wasn't entirely his own. The line between the Shah's 202 00:15:01,200 --> 00:15:05,920 Speaker 1: money and the country's treasury gradually blurred to the point 203 00:15:05,960 --> 00:15:08,760 Speaker 1: where it was hard to deny that the Shaw was 204 00:15:08,880 --> 00:15:12,840 Speaker 1: using the country's oil money to fund his lavish lifestyle. 205 00:15:13,520 --> 00:15:16,600 Speaker 1: And even when he did spend the country's money on 206 00:15:16,680 --> 00:15:20,440 Speaker 1: things for Iran, he did so according to his whims. 207 00:15:21,200 --> 00:15:24,000 Speaker 1: For example, he was obsessed with the military, and so 208 00:15:24,280 --> 00:15:27,560 Speaker 1: he ended up spending a higher percentage of the country's 209 00:15:27,600 --> 00:15:30,920 Speaker 1: GDP on the military than any other country in the 210 00:15:30,960 --> 00:15:35,040 Speaker 1: world aside from the US. None of that was looked 211 00:15:35,080 --> 00:15:39,040 Speaker 1: upon kindly by the Iranian public, many of whom were 212 00:15:39,080 --> 00:15:43,680 Speaker 1: still living in poverty. The Shah also idolized the West, 213 00:15:44,080 --> 00:15:47,920 Speaker 1: almost to a fault. Recall that just about everything at 214 00:15:47,920 --> 00:15:52,720 Speaker 1: the two thousand, five hundredth anniversary celebration dinner was imported 215 00:15:52,880 --> 00:15:57,240 Speaker 1: from France. That exemplifies just how much value the shop 216 00:15:57,280 --> 00:16:03,080 Speaker 1: placed on Western, specifically European tastes. He essentially used the 217 00:16:03,080 --> 00:16:07,200 Speaker 1: West as the benchmark against which he measured himself and 218 00:16:07,320 --> 00:16:11,400 Speaker 1: the country. He strove to make Iran equivalent in quality 219 00:16:11,400 --> 00:16:16,160 Speaker 1: of life to European countries, and quite literally fashioned himself 220 00:16:16,680 --> 00:16:21,520 Speaker 1: like a European monarch, wearing Western military regalia in all 221 00:16:21,600 --> 00:16:25,200 Speaker 1: of his formal portraits in a country with a long 222 00:16:25,360 --> 00:16:29,800 Speaker 1: Muslim tradition and a history of being abused and overlooked 223 00:16:29,880 --> 00:16:32,720 Speaker 1: by the West, and a country with a deep sense 224 00:16:32,720 --> 00:16:38,040 Speaker 1: of national pride. His outlook was not widely appreciated, But 225 00:16:38,240 --> 00:16:42,080 Speaker 1: perhaps the quality that most Iranians took issue with was 226 00:16:42,120 --> 00:16:45,880 Speaker 1: that despite the progressive measures that the Sha championed during 227 00:16:45,920 --> 00:16:51,600 Speaker 1: the White Revolution, the Shah was an authoritarian ruler. During 228 00:16:51,640 --> 00:16:55,160 Speaker 1: his reign, he consistently stripped the Iranian people of the 229 00:16:55,240 --> 00:17:00,160 Speaker 1: right to exercise their political freedoms. For example, people can 230 00:17:00,240 --> 00:17:04,359 Speaker 1: not express anything but positive feelings about the Shah. In 231 00:17:04,440 --> 00:17:07,479 Speaker 1: nineteen fifty seven, in order to enforce that rule and 232 00:17:07,600 --> 00:17:12,080 Speaker 1: generally maintain control over the population, the Shah created a 233 00:17:12,200 --> 00:17:17,320 Speaker 1: secret police force called Savakh. For two decades, Savak agents 234 00:17:17,359 --> 00:17:21,560 Speaker 1: instilled fear in society, as they had the authority to arrest, 235 00:17:21,640 --> 00:17:26,439 Speaker 1: in prison, and torture anyone who supposedly posed a threat 236 00:17:26,520 --> 00:17:31,080 Speaker 1: to the monarchy or the Shah's agenda. Eventually, the Sha 237 00:17:31,119 --> 00:17:35,159 Speaker 1: went so far as to abolish political parties in favor 238 00:17:35,200 --> 00:17:39,080 Speaker 1: of his new party, the National Resurgence Party, and he 239 00:17:39,200 --> 00:17:43,399 Speaker 1: directed that all Iranians, lest they wanted to be labeled traders, 240 00:17:43,960 --> 00:17:48,119 Speaker 1: must join There's no doubt about it. The Shah was 241 00:17:48,200 --> 00:17:54,919 Speaker 1: an autocrat. In nineteen seventy four, the Shah was diagnosed 242 00:17:54,960 --> 00:17:59,439 Speaker 1: with leukemia. Like many authoritarians, the Shah saw his power 243 00:18:00,200 --> 00:18:04,359 Speaker 1: dependent on not looking weak or replaceable, and so the 244 00:18:04,400 --> 00:18:09,399 Speaker 1: Shah kept his diagnosis highly classified. Very few high ranking 245 00:18:09,400 --> 00:18:13,040 Speaker 1: officials in the government, let alone the general public, knew 246 00:18:13,080 --> 00:18:17,880 Speaker 1: of the Shah's diagnosis. By nineteen seventy eight, the Shah 247 00:18:17,960 --> 00:18:21,320 Speaker 1: started to become affected by the brutal nature of his 248 00:18:21,440 --> 00:18:25,120 Speaker 1: cancer and his treatments. While he had always been an 249 00:18:25,200 --> 00:18:30,000 Speaker 1: indecisive man, because of the illness and treatments, his mood 250 00:18:30,080 --> 00:18:33,760 Speaker 1: and opinions would violently swing from one extreme to the 251 00:18:33,800 --> 00:18:38,240 Speaker 1: other within a day. This wouldn't necessarily be a problem, 252 00:18:38,600 --> 00:18:42,240 Speaker 1: but because of the Shah's need to maintain complete control, 253 00:18:42,600 --> 00:18:46,520 Speaker 1: the Iranian government hinged on his word and his word alone. 254 00:18:47,240 --> 00:18:49,639 Speaker 1: So not only was the government at the mercy of 255 00:18:49,680 --> 00:18:52,920 Speaker 1: the Shah's ever changing mood, but the country was now 256 00:18:52,960 --> 00:18:57,280 Speaker 1: being entirely led by a violent, weakened king who was 257 00:18:57,560 --> 00:19:02,280 Speaker 1: increasingly detached from reality. While there were many periods of 258 00:19:02,400 --> 00:19:06,040 Speaker 1: unrest during the Shah's rule, the beginning of what became 259 00:19:06,080 --> 00:19:10,680 Speaker 1: the Iranian revolution came in early nineteen seventy eight when 260 00:19:10,720 --> 00:19:14,000 Speaker 1: the people of Iran took to the straits to protest 261 00:19:14,080 --> 00:19:19,600 Speaker 1: a newspaper article published in the unofficial state newspaper. The 262 00:19:19,720 --> 00:19:24,240 Speaker 1: article hurled a slew of insults at a dissident Ayatola 263 00:19:24,640 --> 00:19:29,600 Speaker 1: named Rujala Romeni, which was a thinly veiled attempt by 264 00:19:29,640 --> 00:19:35,520 Speaker 1: the Shah to undermine Chromeni's popularity. Protesters were accustomed to 265 00:19:35,640 --> 00:19:39,480 Speaker 1: the Shah's controlling regime, but they could not stand idly 266 00:19:39,520 --> 00:19:43,840 Speaker 1: by as he attacked one of their most outspoken advocates 267 00:19:43,840 --> 00:19:48,919 Speaker 1: for their freedom. During the protests over this news article, 268 00:19:49,320 --> 00:19:54,439 Speaker 1: the SHA's security forces fired on protesters. In Shia Islam, 269 00:19:54,560 --> 00:19:59,080 Speaker 1: the majority religion in Iran, memorial services are held forty 270 00:19:59,160 --> 00:20:02,960 Speaker 1: days after someone dies, and so forty days after this 271 00:20:03,119 --> 00:20:07,280 Speaker 1: first protest, Iranian took to the streets again to mourn 272 00:20:07,400 --> 00:20:11,480 Speaker 1: their lost loved ones and further the protest against the regime. 273 00:20:12,119 --> 00:20:15,520 Speaker 1: Again directed to do so by the Shah, his security 274 00:20:15,600 --> 00:20:19,880 Speaker 1: forces fired on and killed protesters, which led to another 275 00:20:20,040 --> 00:20:24,600 Speaker 1: round of protests forty days later. This forty day cycle 276 00:20:24,760 --> 00:20:28,439 Speaker 1: kept the protest movement alive and in fact grew it 277 00:20:29,119 --> 00:20:32,920 Speaker 1: while only making the Shah and his brutality more apparent. 278 00:20:34,119 --> 00:20:37,800 Speaker 1: The Shah could not comprehend how his people could be 279 00:20:37,920 --> 00:20:40,920 Speaker 1: so ungrateful for all of the good he had accomplished, 280 00:20:41,200 --> 00:20:46,520 Speaker 1: how prosperous their country was becoming. In reality, despite any 281 00:20:46,640 --> 00:20:49,520 Speaker 1: of the public works the Shah had achieved, he had 282 00:20:49,560 --> 00:20:53,439 Speaker 1: also purged his government and court of anyone who might 283 00:20:53,480 --> 00:20:56,479 Speaker 1: have been able to offer a true representation of the 284 00:20:56,520 --> 00:20:59,720 Speaker 1: will of the general public. There was no one who 285 00:20:59,720 --> 00:21:02,280 Speaker 1: would tell the Shah that, in fact, much of the 286 00:21:02,320 --> 00:21:06,960 Speaker 1: Iranian population was deeply upset with his lavish spending, with 287 00:21:07,119 --> 00:21:11,880 Speaker 1: his government's corruption, with the government's ineptitude, and the lack 288 00:21:12,000 --> 00:21:15,560 Speaker 1: of political freedoms they had. The Shah just thought these 289 00:21:15,600 --> 00:21:20,840 Speaker 1: protesters were Islamic Marxists supported by foreign agents looking to 290 00:21:21,040 --> 00:21:24,120 Speaker 1: rile up the country, and so he urged his forces 291 00:21:24,160 --> 00:21:28,560 Speaker 1: to crack down, continuing the cycle of deadly protests of 292 00:21:28,600 --> 00:21:34,199 Speaker 1: brutality toward the people the Shah claimed to love. After 293 00:21:34,280 --> 00:21:38,320 Speaker 1: a helicopter ride over one of the massive protests in Tehran, 294 00:21:38,520 --> 00:21:41,359 Speaker 1: when the Shah was able to see the hordes of 295 00:21:41,400 --> 00:21:44,480 Speaker 1: people who had come out against him, the shaw seemed 296 00:21:44,520 --> 00:21:48,240 Speaker 1: to come to his senses. He started to offer concessions 297 00:21:48,320 --> 00:21:51,720 Speaker 1: like releasing political prisoners who had been arrested by Savak, 298 00:21:52,359 --> 00:21:56,200 Speaker 1: but it was too late. His brutality had offered kindling 299 00:21:56,280 --> 00:22:00,840 Speaker 1: to the most extreme factions of his dissidents. Revolution was 300 00:22:00,920 --> 00:22:04,679 Speaker 1: snowballing and had picked up too much energy and manpower 301 00:22:04,800 --> 00:22:09,800 Speaker 1: to stop. Protests continued with a renewed fervor to topple 302 00:22:09,920 --> 00:22:14,480 Speaker 1: the Shah. The Shah's foreign allies, particularly those in the US, 303 00:22:15,040 --> 00:22:17,720 Speaker 1: saw the writing on the wall, and began to urge 304 00:22:17,760 --> 00:22:22,600 Speaker 1: him to leave the country. As nineteen seventy eight turned 305 00:22:22,640 --> 00:22:26,560 Speaker 1: to nineteen seventy nine, the Shah saw fewer and fewer 306 00:22:26,800 --> 00:22:31,560 Speaker 1: viable paths ahead. Despite this, and even as he ordered 307 00:22:31,560 --> 00:22:35,200 Speaker 1: his staff to begin packing up his belongings, the Shah 308 00:22:35,320 --> 00:22:38,879 Speaker 1: could not have fathomed that this unrest would be capable 309 00:22:38,920 --> 00:22:50,080 Speaker 1: of dismantling two thousand, five hundred years of monarchy. Muhammad 310 00:22:50,240 --> 00:22:55,399 Speaker 1: Rezashah left Iran on January sixteenth, nineteen seventy nine, and 311 00:22:55,640 --> 00:22:59,640 Speaker 1: never returned. As news of his departure broke, the streets 312 00:22:59,680 --> 00:23:03,880 Speaker 1: of Iran became the scene of a massive party. Hordes 313 00:23:03,920 --> 00:23:06,760 Speaker 1: of people flooded to the streets to celebrate, cheering the 314 00:23:06,800 --> 00:23:11,240 Speaker 1: Shah is gone. Forever. People drove around aimlessly blasting music, 315 00:23:11,320 --> 00:23:15,400 Speaker 1: honking their horns. Others handed out candy to passers by. 316 00:23:16,240 --> 00:23:20,879 Speaker 1: A few days later, Ayatola Ruhala Homeni returned to Iran 317 00:23:21,040 --> 00:23:25,679 Speaker 1: after fourteen years in exile, and he began consolidating power 318 00:23:26,040 --> 00:23:29,600 Speaker 1: in the vacuum that the Shah had left. His return 319 00:23:29,840 --> 00:23:33,080 Speaker 1: marks the beginning of the government that he created, the 320 00:23:33,160 --> 00:23:37,560 Speaker 1: Islamic Republic of Iran, which still controls Iran today with 321 00:23:37,680 --> 00:23:42,840 Speaker 1: its own deep, deep problems with corruption and violent oppression. 322 00:23:43,600 --> 00:23:47,440 Speaker 1: But this is not the story of Ayatola Komani. This 323 00:23:47,600 --> 00:23:52,320 Speaker 1: is the story of the Shah. After leaving Iran, the 324 00:23:52,359 --> 00:23:56,359 Speaker 1: Shah was shunted from country to country as fewer and 325 00:23:56,600 --> 00:24:01,360 Speaker 1: fewer people were willing to be responsible for an unpopular, 326 00:24:01,520 --> 00:24:06,040 Speaker 1: ousted monarch. He first arrived in Egypt, where he received 327 00:24:06,080 --> 00:24:09,879 Speaker 1: a royal welcome, complete with honor guards and the welcoming 328 00:24:10,000 --> 00:24:14,480 Speaker 1: arms of longtime friend Anwar al Sadat. After a short 329 00:24:14,480 --> 00:24:17,840 Speaker 1: time in Egypt, which was the home of his first wife, 330 00:24:18,119 --> 00:24:22,760 Speaker 1: he was sent to Morocco, expecting a similarly royal reception. 331 00:24:22,920 --> 00:24:28,040 Speaker 1: In Morocco, the Shah was immediately disappointed by a lackluster 332 00:24:28,200 --> 00:24:32,680 Speaker 1: greeting from King Hassan the Second. From Morocco, the Sha 333 00:24:32,840 --> 00:24:36,520 Speaker 1: traveled to the Bahamas and then Mexico. He had gone 334 00:24:36,640 --> 00:24:40,440 Speaker 1: from being treated like a precious crown jewel to being 335 00:24:40,640 --> 00:24:44,320 Speaker 1: tossed around like a hand grenade ready to blow. He 336 00:24:44,400 --> 00:24:48,199 Speaker 1: certainly did not appreciate the change. He believed himself to 337 00:24:48,440 --> 00:24:54,639 Speaker 1: still be royal and expected appropriate treatment. Unfortunately, however, like 338 00:24:54,720 --> 00:24:58,280 Speaker 1: any ousted monarch, the Shah didn't have the luxury to 339 00:24:58,480 --> 00:25:02,880 Speaker 1: reject what he was given. During this time, the Shaw's 340 00:25:02,960 --> 00:25:07,600 Speaker 1: health deteriorated quickly. Very few people knew of the Shah's 341 00:25:07,760 --> 00:25:12,840 Speaker 1: true diagnosis, so upon his arrival to Mexico, doctors actually 342 00:25:12,880 --> 00:25:17,320 Speaker 1: started treating him for malaria without proper cancer treatment. The 343 00:25:17,359 --> 00:25:21,520 Speaker 1: Shah lost thirty pounds. People close to the monarch described 344 00:25:21,520 --> 00:25:26,240 Speaker 1: his appearance as emaciated and jaundiced. Soon it was obvious 345 00:25:26,280 --> 00:25:29,399 Speaker 1: he needed surgery, and he would only get adequate medical 346 00:25:29,440 --> 00:25:33,560 Speaker 1: treatment in the United States, But the Shah had soured 347 00:25:33,680 --> 00:25:37,399 Speaker 1: on his previous ally, and for good reason. The United 348 00:25:37,480 --> 00:25:41,320 Speaker 1: States had originally declared that they would accept the exiled king, 349 00:25:41,720 --> 00:25:44,119 Speaker 1: and the Shah was slated to fly to the United 350 00:25:44,160 --> 00:25:48,959 Speaker 1: States after leaving around for Egypt, but US President Jimmy 351 00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:54,400 Speaker 1: Carter reneged on the deal after Ayatolhomeni threatened to storm 352 00:25:54,480 --> 00:25:58,320 Speaker 1: the US embassy should the Shah enter the United States 353 00:25:59,280 --> 00:26:03,240 Speaker 1: due to the shah worsening cancer condition. However, Carter was 354 00:26:03,320 --> 00:26:06,840 Speaker 1: convinced to accept the Sha into the United States in 355 00:26:06,880 --> 00:26:12,480 Speaker 1: October nineteen seventy nine, nine months after the Shaw's exile began, 356 00:26:13,240 --> 00:26:16,520 Speaker 1: and so the Sha and his entourage flew from Mexico 357 00:26:16,600 --> 00:26:19,720 Speaker 1: to New York and were secreted away to a hospital 358 00:26:19,760 --> 00:26:24,480 Speaker 1: room at New York Hospital. The humanitarian act by the 359 00:26:24,600 --> 00:26:29,680 Speaker 1: United States would prove disastrous, as Iranian students would soon 360 00:26:29,920 --> 00:26:34,320 Speaker 1: storm the US embassy in Tehran and hold embassy officials 361 00:26:34,440 --> 00:26:38,800 Speaker 1: hostage in response to the Shah being accepted into America. 362 00:26:39,840 --> 00:26:44,760 Speaker 1: Because the Shaw's arrival had resulted in an active hostage situation, 363 00:26:45,440 --> 00:26:49,520 Speaker 1: the shaws stay in the United States was uncomfortable beyond 364 00:26:49,600 --> 00:26:53,520 Speaker 1: the medical After only one month in the United States, 365 00:26:53,760 --> 00:26:55,840 Speaker 1: he made it known that he would like to return 366 00:26:56,000 --> 00:27:00,040 Speaker 1: back to Mexico. However, his former host no La no 367 00:27:00,080 --> 00:27:03,959 Speaker 1: longer wished to extend their hospitality to him, and the 368 00:27:04,000 --> 00:27:07,679 Speaker 1: Shah was instead forced to go to Panama, where he 369 00:27:07,760 --> 00:27:11,520 Speaker 1: resided for a short time before going back to Egypt. 370 00:27:12,359 --> 00:27:14,919 Speaker 1: When he landed in Egypt, the Shah was said to 371 00:27:14,960 --> 00:27:17,960 Speaker 1: have teared up at the site of anwar al Sadat 372 00:27:18,080 --> 00:27:22,520 Speaker 1: and military guards waiting to welcome him. Since he had 373 00:27:22,560 --> 00:27:26,760 Speaker 1: fled his home country almost two years prior, Egypt had 374 00:27:26,800 --> 00:27:30,480 Speaker 1: been the only place that welcomed him with the dignity 375 00:27:30,640 --> 00:27:34,639 Speaker 1: that he felt he deserved. Once in Egypt, it became 376 00:27:34,760 --> 00:27:39,000 Speaker 1: clear that the Shah's end was near. An operation revealed 377 00:27:39,040 --> 00:27:42,479 Speaker 1: that his cancer had spread throughout his body. It was 378 00:27:42,520 --> 00:27:47,480 Speaker 1: only a matter of time. On July twenty seventh, nineteen eighty, 379 00:27:47,880 --> 00:27:53,200 Speaker 1: Muhammad Reza Potleve passed away, leaving his dreams of returning 380 00:27:53,240 --> 00:27:57,440 Speaker 1: to Iran one day and continuing the multi millennium tradition 381 00:27:57,720 --> 00:28:06,679 Speaker 1: of the monarchy unfulfilled. That's the story of the last 382 00:28:06,800 --> 00:28:10,840 Speaker 1: Shah of Iran. But keep listening after a brief sponsor 383 00:28:10,880 --> 00:28:14,320 Speaker 1: break to hear a little bit more about that wild 384 00:28:14,560 --> 00:28:22,320 Speaker 1: last party that he threw. One of the most popular 385 00:28:22,400 --> 00:28:27,440 Speaker 1: anecdotes used to illustrate the unnecessary opulence of the anniversary 386 00:28:27,480 --> 00:28:30,680 Speaker 1: party the Shah through is that the Shah bought fifty 387 00:28:30,800 --> 00:28:34,840 Speaker 1: thousand exotic birds for the celebration, only to leave them 388 00:28:34,880 --> 00:28:39,480 Speaker 1: to die once the dignitaries returned home. There's actually no 389 00:28:39,680 --> 00:28:43,360 Speaker 1: evidence to indicate that this relatively famous act of animal 390 00:28:43,400 --> 00:28:47,680 Speaker 1: cruelty actually happened. But there are so many other true, 391 00:28:48,080 --> 00:28:52,040 Speaker 1: fascinating historical tidbits related to that two thousand, five hundredth 392 00:28:52,080 --> 00:28:58,120 Speaker 1: anniversary celebration at Persepolis. Being that the construction of Persepolis 393 00:28:58,120 --> 00:29:01,840 Speaker 1: predated air travel, it's not surprising for you to hear 394 00:29:01,920 --> 00:29:05,360 Speaker 1: that there was no airport at Persepolis for dignitaries to 395 00:29:05,440 --> 00:29:09,320 Speaker 1: fly into for the event. As such, guests made their 396 00:29:09,320 --> 00:29:13,080 Speaker 1: way to the event in a myriad of ways. US 397 00:29:13,080 --> 00:29:16,680 Speaker 1: of Vice President Spiro Agnew, for instant flew in from 398 00:29:16,720 --> 00:29:21,000 Speaker 1: the Shiraz airport in a helicopter. That fact irked some 399 00:29:21,400 --> 00:29:25,280 Speaker 1: Persian Gulf sheikhs, however, because they had to travel the 400 00:29:25,400 --> 00:29:30,840 Speaker 1: thirty miles in air conditioned Mercedes limousines, an incredibly tough ride. 401 00:29:30,920 --> 00:29:36,040 Speaker 1: I'm sure. The parade during the celebrations featured droves of 402 00:29:36,120 --> 00:29:41,120 Speaker 1: men representing different eras of Persian civilization, from Cyrus the 403 00:29:41,160 --> 00:29:45,440 Speaker 1: Great to the Sasanians to Parthians, Safavids all the way 404 00:29:45,600 --> 00:29:49,960 Speaker 1: to Cossack brigades of the early twentieth century. This last 405 00:29:50,040 --> 00:29:54,760 Speaker 1: group paid tribute to Muhammad Rezashah's father, who himself was 406 00:29:54,800 --> 00:29:59,000 Speaker 1: a Cossack before his successful rise to power. There was 407 00:29:59,080 --> 00:30:03,440 Speaker 1: also a true two hundred men strong representing the Acamenians, 408 00:30:03,760 --> 00:30:06,560 Speaker 1: and these men were given a strict directive in the 409 00:30:06,600 --> 00:30:10,680 Speaker 1: months leading up to the parade no shaving. In order 410 00:30:10,720 --> 00:30:15,280 Speaker 1: to accurately represent the styling of Achaemenian soldiers, these men 411 00:30:15,360 --> 00:30:18,880 Speaker 1: would have to grow long beards. The Shah and the 412 00:30:18,920 --> 00:30:23,360 Speaker 1: planning committee were so committed to authenticity that they turned 413 00:30:23,400 --> 00:30:26,880 Speaker 1: down a Japanese firm's offer to outfit all of the 414 00:30:27,000 --> 00:30:33,160 Speaker 1: soldiers with fake beards, real beards only. My final anecdote 415 00:30:33,200 --> 00:30:38,600 Speaker 1: relates to notable absences from the celebration. Even though the 416 00:30:38,720 --> 00:30:44,440 Speaker 1: infamous five hour dinner was almost entirely French, French President 417 00:30:44,640 --> 00:30:50,440 Speaker 1: Georges Pompadou declined to go. In quite a backhanded statement, 418 00:30:50,960 --> 00:30:54,960 Speaker 1: President Pompadou said, if I do go, they would probably 419 00:30:55,120 --> 00:31:08,240 Speaker 1: make me head waiter. Noble Blood is a production of 420 00:31:08,400 --> 00:31:13,400 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio and Grim and Mild from Aaron Mankey. Noble Blood 421 00:31:13,520 --> 00:31:17,680 Speaker 1: is created and hosted by me Dana Shwarts, with additional 422 00:31:17,840 --> 00:31:22,920 Speaker 1: writing and researching by Hannah Johnston, Hannah Zuick, Mira Hayward, 423 00:31:23,120 --> 00:31:27,240 Speaker 1: Courtney Sender, and Lori Goodman. The show is edited and 424 00:31:27,440 --> 00:31:32,480 Speaker 1: produced by Noemi Griffin and rima Il Kahali, with supervising 425 00:31:32,560 --> 00:31:38,160 Speaker 1: producer Josh Thain and executive producers Aaron Manke, Alex Williams, 426 00:31:38,160 --> 00:31:43,040 Speaker 1: and Matt Frederick. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the 427 00:31:43,120 --> 00:31:47,400 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your 428 00:31:47,440 --> 00:32:22,160 Speaker 1: favorite shows.