Do you think we could see another Revolution in Iran within the next few decades? If so, why? Check out the full Modern History Playlist: th-cam.com/play/PLiPhmAD3I2Jz6goEJlQ1zh6KkbeBWZ2pP.html
@@HikmaHistory Very well done and excellent work as usual!! 👍🏻 And regarding your question, yes I believe there’s another revolution or some sorts of drastic change in the progress in Iran.
Im from Iran, and sir, your video is a masterpiece that truly captures this nations struggles for democracy that started more than hundred years ago and still exists today. Thank you for masterfully documenting this sad story.
Armchair Historian sent me. This was a very educational overview of modern Iranian history. I hope they can manage to find peace both internally and with their neighbors one day soon. Thank you very much for the video! God be with you out there, everybody. ✝️ :)
Revolution wasn’t hijacked by Ayatollah Khomeini and Islamists Again amazing substance excellently presented. I just would like to raise the following points: A- The Farsi text was read very effectively. And hearing it really contributes to the contextualisation and authentication of your piece of work, which endorse the idea that language is much more than just words. B- To say “the 1979 Revolution was hijacked by Ayatollah Khomeini and Islamists”, in my opinion, isn’t fair because they didn’t hijack. What they did was, they outperformed others by their overwhelming presence and deeply resonating slogans. They skilfully took other’s slogans of Justice, equality and freedom and attached them to Islam and left out the others almost disarmed ideologically. And Dr Ali Shariati played a very significant rule in this regard.
Thank you for your polite answer. I see your point (this might just be an issue of semantics) - I meant hijacked in the sense that what people expected to come out of the revolution and what they were promised did not materialise under the Islamic republic. In fact, in many ways, one authoritarian despot was replaced by another. I hope that makes sense.
I'm surprised that you didn't mention the White Revolution that the Shah himself initiated in 1963. Overall, it's another fine work from Hikma History.
Hello, I discovered your channel from LetsTalkReligion. I've been listening to both of your contents for days now. Can I ask for the references you used for this video documentary?
Can you make a video about the persian culture of weeping and crying which is deeply rooted in Persian literature? The story of Siavash is a good example of that where in Ancient Persia his martyrdom was celebrated yearly with funeral parades accompanied by public wailing and weeping. The same is observed and carried over after Islam in the Iranian version of Islam in the tradition of Ashura which commemorates the death of Hussain at Kerbala. The story of Siavash was mentioned in the “Book of kings” which was compiled by Firdosi at the order of one of the Saminid kings in the 10th century during the Persian Renaissance.
You’re correct about Siavash Koshan and even its more ancient predecessor which is Nowruz itself being the very origin of Shia festival of Ashura and Jewish festival of Purim, but keep in mind that those traditions weren’t meant to mark an occasion via mourning however that became more and more the case as Islam took over and the celebrations were replaced by acts of mourning also influenced by Christianity and other forms of Iranian mysticism like Mithraism which has influenced Christianity directly also. A celebratory version of this holiday and ritual has survived in forms of Charshanbe soori (last Wednesday night before Nowruz) and Omar koshan (celebrating The heroic act of Piruz Nahavandi the Magi against Omar)
@@Hermesborugerdian There was so much of religious syncretism in Persia and of course this was inevitable since persian culture and traditions is deeply rooted in history. However Arabia was a blank slate as there was not so much civilization to influence Islam and the new ethos was established on mostly pure islam.
The title if the video is false. Iran had many revolutions, the revolution of 1979 that resulted in the Islamic Republic wasn't simply an Islamic revolution, it later became that. It started as a revolutionary anti-imperialist movement for economic justice and national independence. Before that there where two revolutions, the islamisation of Iran during the abbasid era and the re-establishing of Persian culture and language that followed it. Revolutions come from social forces en-masse pushing society and history in a certain direction. Pahlavi and Mossadeq where not revolutions. They where preludes to 1979. The revolution wasn't against the shah, that's a simplification and doesn't explain the dynamics of history. It was a revolution against Anglo-American imperialism for independence and Iranian agency.
@@HikmaHistory You are probably correct to have done what you did. Great work, by the way. Maybe you can do a vid on how the secularists/liberals got wiped out by Khomeni in the early 1980s and took total theocratic power?
Says "Strong leader" then shows Mosadeq...utter B.S. He is often said to be the 'democratically elected prime minster' yet as soon as he got the power..he shuts down the 'majlis' or parliament when the elections result dont match his preference, this was done against the constitutional law and very undemocratic to say the least. The shah had the constitutional right to assign and depose prime ministers and he had every right to get Mosadeq out of office especially after what he acted outside of his domain of influence. When he is lawfully fired...Mosadeq and his minions play the victim card. Typical leftist strategy..they're bully when in power, when they don't get the outcome they want, even when the law and votes confirm it..they blame everyone else and play the victim card.
How and where the hell did u find the Info? Why you cutting reza shah the greats reforms? Father of modern iran? And what we have achieved in mohammad reza shah's era? That our army and economy was between the first 10 countries in the world irans money the most valuable money in the world
Aslamualaikum Hikma History. I am an author who has written a book on the impacts of this revolution. Coincidentally, my book is coming out next week. Is there any way that you can use it or maybe publicise it? How can I contact you, sir? I love your content tho. Keep up the good work!!
38:40 This paper, which did not exist in the world until a few years ago and has appeared in cyberspace in the past few years, is fake. Because at that time there was no green automatic in Iran. In fact, the nationalization of the oil industry had two main urban leaders: Mossadegh, the leader of the wealthy and elite, Kashani, the leader of the masses and the masses. Besides these, there were also sub-leaders: Baghai, Makki, Haerizadeh, Zahedi...and of course Shah. The Tudeh Party (pro-Soviet), which opposed Mossadegh's government in the first year, became its supporters in the second year. Because they realized that they can use him to overthrow the royal regime, without defending the nationalization of the oil industry against Russia and England. All these were only in the cities. The majority of the people, who were rural, were in favor of traditional institutions that had nothing to do with politics. After Mossadegh's failure to solve even the smallest political and economic problem, subordinate leaders who saw the growth of the masses among the press, workers and officers (see Khalil Maliki's letter to Mossadegh in this context) joined Kashani to oust Mossadegh. Unfortunately, fans of 70-year-old Mossadegh first call Mossadegh the only leader of the nationalization of the oil industry and others are against nationalization and even Islamists! Secondly, he calls this legal removal an American coup and divided the nationalists into two branches, Shahi and Mossadegh. While Kashani was a supporter of the Shah for only six months, and immediately he, his son, Bagai, Makki, Haerizadeh, etc., opposed the consortium contract. Mossadegh himself congratulated the Iranian nation on the assassination of the former Prime Minister Razm Ara and his supporters in the parliament approved the law for the freedom of terrorists. In the first year of his government, he used the right-wing to intimidate the masses, in the second year of his government, he used the masses to intimidate the right-wing. In a fake referendum, he said that ninety-nine percent were his supporters, but a few days later, no one came to the streets to support him. Razmara's sin was that he correctly told Mossadegh and other supporters of the nationalization of Iran's oil industry that we do not have the ability to manage the oil industry. Mossadegh understood this when he came to power and wanted to take oil concessions from England and give them to America. America said that it should first pay the damages to England. Both Truman and Eisenhower proposed to pay the loss of England over several years from oil sales to end the oil issue. But Mossadegh did not accept because he knew that if the oil issue ends, his government will end. When Iran's oil was sanctioned, Saudi Arabia and other oil producers increased their production. But later, the Shah, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela formed APEC to be united. Shah was given the title of the Eagle of APEC, because everyone knew that the main operator of APEC was Shah. He spent this income to improve the lives of Iranian people, such as: establishing institutions such as knowledge, health, civil and development corps, free meals in schools, schools, universities and free libraries, free summer camp for elite students of schools, scholarships abroad from the country for the elite students of the universities, eradicating many deadly diseases, eliminating unemployment, increasing the wage rate equal to the inflation rate, reducing the Gini coefficient in the last years of his rule, equaling the daily wage of a simple worker with the price of nine hundred grams of red meat.
If only the United States and Britain didn’t initiate a brutal and illegal military coup against a democratically a elected socialist who granted women rights, all to preserve british petroleum’s dominance in the region.
1979 revolution was just 1952 coup 2.0, as you pointed out Shah was becoming independence of the West and manipulated Oil Price, US didn't like that, at the same time they didn't want Tudeh Communists to take power so Islamists were the best option
Highly informative, and well-organized content bro. The photo showing Major Talbot also features the Prince & Princess of Wales (later HRM King Edward the 7th & HRM Queen Alexsandra). The Prince of Wales (far left of the Shah, his wife on the right of the Shah) looks like he does want to be there, or Shah & his peeps are boring 🙂
I love how he shows Mossadegh when it says strong leaders .. instead of Reza Khan.. who is literally the founder of the modern Iranian state .. I like your content but you are definitely biased against the Pahlavis
Come on dude, you’re nitpicking aren’t ya? In hindsight, I’d agree Reza Khan is a far better example of strong leadership but Mossadegh is more relevant to the topic of the video
Dear HIKAMA, Thank you for another well developed piece, I look forward to viewing your work to gain a greater understanding of Middle Eastern, and Islamic political history. The power fluctuations between Religious and the Secular has many historical precedence, in the end power in any political system is created via the consent of the people, or it eventually collapses. No political philosophy is more unstable, than a Theocracy. The signs of this are apparent in Saudi Arabia, Israel, and of course Iran. Only after the people have come to understand over time, and time again, and again, that neither ruling Elites, nor Religious Beliefs, or Religious Leaders are sufficient to govern. Only then will they take on ( of their own free will ), the disappointing, dirty, difficult, and complicated job of a Democracy.
these problem arose only in modern nation states, all the Islamic and Catholic empires didn't have problems because the Church or the Ulama were important. The kings knew how to bypass them when needed.
Iranians are some of the smartest people in the world. Their science and tech with sanctions is incredible. But their government is their business. Not yours. Not mine. Cheers.
Hard to say. Zand dynasty was still weak and decades behind the modern world. Imho the best scenario for Iran was if constitutionalism survived, for example if the national front of Iran took over, they were highly educated Iranians from different fractions.
Khomeini 👳♂️ is really a special leader. Most of the revolutionary leaders in the history are not able to establish their values in a long term. They either get corrupted or are too principialist. Khomeini was none. He was always realistic, changing the constitution and those who were to radicals or irresponsible. He also, importantly, was a intelectual and a fighter. He created his own theory of "Guardianship" and, when he could be in a comfortable position, he instead lived a life of exile fighting the Sha he eventually destroyed, and after this conducting the unification of the country and a whole new government establishment. He was a spiritual, intelectual and formidable leader.
Here in iran we live in shit. rip the great shah Also : Khomeini wrote in his book that if you fall d*k first into your aunts V the child born isn't a bastard but s*x with that child is wrong
it seems to me that a likely cause for places like Iran's instability is that, due to culture and geography, much of the world is not compatible with the idea of the modern concept of a state. the idea of nations as they exist today is a fairly recent, European idea. Instead of having the history to back up why a nation is a nation, much of the world only exists as nations because of colonialism, and the governments of those new nations had to use force to maintain their power, and now they're kinda all stuck like that. In a cycle of optimistic revolutions and oppression. Its unfortunate, but it seems that events were set in motion over the last 2 centuries that can not be undone.
he is not wrong. just thinking a bit narrow. western interference was ruining iran since before ww1. That was a natura reaction. Similar to Russia and dictatorship of Putin
@@commercialandresidentialpl7337 if waging war and then turning blind to the thousands of kids just hanged or shot for mere street protests and demonstrations isn't concerning, then I am amazed with your notion.
@@abc_cba Waging war against whom? Stop watching western news regarding Iran. There is basically zero Hindu blood that was spillt by the Persian Shias, so why do you harbour such enmity to them?
@@kurdistanfedaisi Iran is not all muslim. Iran is not just Persian. It's an ancient country. Kurds come from Medians - Medians are Iranians. Kurds are Iranians.
hikma you are biased mossadegh and protest against him has been proven that has been agrivated by brits and americans by rosevelts had two attempts at coup which the first one failed mossadegh was the most compotent person if you call islamic republic a regime i prefer it to saudi clan regime so excuse my anger
@@emmanuelucrosacosta1845 then he procceded by mentioning post reveloution protests as peoples just uprising not mentioning arab spring and soros colour reveloutions
This total nonsense of (forg)umentary have nothing to offer but the mainstream Narrative of events in Iran. I am glad to see such things because it makes me sure that our adversaries have no realistic understanding of us. On the one hand this propaganda makes things a little bit hard for us but on the other hand it ensures we will continue to surprise our enemies, those who are abhorred by seeing a powerful economic and political Block in Western Asia that can be a peer competitor to the east and west.
The reason for the fall of the Iranian monarchy in 1978 (1357) was that the price of oil per barrel was $40. The value of that amount in 1978 was equivalent to $193.66 today (in 2024, the year 1403). Today, the price of oil per barrel is $67.02, which would have been equivalent to $13.78 in 1978. The reason for the fall of the Iranian monarchy was the formation of "OPEC," an organization in which all oil-producing countries sold oil to the West at the price set by OPEC. Iran was the driving force behind OPEC, and this was the reason the Shah of Iran unfortunately fell. The main players behind the overthrow of the Shah were the Democratic Party of the United States (Jimmy Carter), James Callaghan (Prime Minister of the UK), Helmut Schmidt (Chancellor of West Germany), and Giscard d'Estaing (President of France). You can read about the "Guadeloupe Conference" on Google; it's available in both Persian and other languages. The rest of the stories about human rights and so on are nonsense and fabricated by foreigners.
That’s because of American imperialism. Iran voted for democratic leaders but the CIA ousted them and put in brutal dictators , which is what led to a backlash. dumdum victor knows nothing thinks he knows everything
Do you think we could see another Revolution in Iran within the next few decades? If so, why?
Check out the full Modern History Playlist: th-cam.com/play/PLiPhmAD3I2Jz6goEJlQ1zh6KkbeBWZ2pP.html
I do. It will be the anti-Islamic revolution.
Awesome video and history my friend
@@chrissanchez2998 Thank you man!
@@HikmaHistory Very well done and excellent work as usual!! 👍🏻
And regarding your question, yes I believe there’s another revolution or some sorts of drastic change in the progress in Iran.
Did you read the Farsi text?
Sir, your research, the information contained in your videos, which speaks of little known history is much appreciated. Thank you.
Im from Iran, and sir, your video is a masterpiece that truly captures this nations struggles for democracy that started more than hundred years ago and still exists today. Thank you for masterfully documenting this sad story.
As a man who has been raised in a "democracy" it always amuses me to see you people so obssessed with the idea. If only you knew,.
whatever you want, the power is always depends on minority control for majority
Democracy is a failed god.why you still warshiping like a cult
always more info than I can remember in one sitting. thank you
Such a complex event, but so authoritatively covered! Many thanks
Thanks man, I’m trying!
Armchair Historian sent me. This was a very educational overview of modern Iranian history. I hope they can manage to find peace both internally and with their neighbors one day soon. Thank you very much for the video!
God be with you out there, everybody. ✝️ :)
Hi, nice one. I am here 'cause HistoryMarch informed me about your content.
Good luck !
Appreciate that Eduard!
Your docos are inspirational, they teach me so much about both history itself and the writing of good history. Please keep them coming!
Excellent and informative documentary video.
I like the flag on your avatar
Revolution wasn’t hijacked by Ayatollah Khomeini and Islamists
Again amazing substance excellently presented. I just would like to raise the following points:
A- The Farsi text was read very effectively. And hearing it really contributes to the contextualisation and authentication of your piece of work, which endorse the idea that language is much more than just words.
B- To say “the 1979 Revolution was hijacked by Ayatollah Khomeini and Islamists”, in my opinion, isn’t fair because they didn’t hijack. What they did was, they outperformed others by their overwhelming presence and deeply resonating slogans. They skilfully took other’s slogans of Justice, equality and freedom and attached them to Islam and left out the others almost disarmed ideologically. And Dr Ali Shariati played a very significant rule in this regard.
The students disagreed.
@@Thenadathor And the rational for disagreement would be...?
Thank you for your polite answer. I see your point (this might just be an issue of semantics) - I meant hijacked in the sense that what people expected to come out of the revolution and what they were promised did not materialise under the Islamic republic. In fact, in many ways, one authoritarian despot was replaced by another. I hope that makes sense.
It does make sense perfectly, thank you very much ❤
Lovely stuff mate cheers
I'm surprised that you didn't mention the White Revolution that the Shah himself initiated in 1963. Overall, it's another fine work from Hikma History.
HistoryMarche sent me, liked and subscribed
Same
Westerners are so full of themselves, nihilism is the only thing you have left, you believe in exporting liberalism with bombshells.
No one asked
@@balabanasireti no one asked for anything, yet here we all are.
Great work , thank you very much
Nesta > Totti.
Your work is fantastic. Jazakallahu khair
Hello,
I discovered your channel from LetsTalkReligion. I've been listening to both of your contents for days now.
Can I ask for the references you used for this video documentary?
Excellent coverage
Can u fix subtitles please its impossible to watch with it on because it takes up all the screen
Damn it Hakima it's 1 pm I need to sleep but I can't not watch this
يسطا نفي النفي اثبات
1Pm? LOOOOSER
Iran 🇮🇷🇮🇷 and the Iranian people are nearly the world best in knowledge, culture, peace and resistant.
Love Iranians 🇮🇷 from Nigeria 🇳🇬🥂
❤️
This is extremely well done
Good video and lots of new information that I now know
Can you make a video about the persian culture of weeping and crying which is deeply rooted in Persian literature? The story of Siavash is a good example of that where in Ancient Persia his martyrdom was celebrated yearly with funeral parades accompanied by public wailing and weeping. The same is observed and carried over after Islam in the Iranian version of Islam in the tradition of Ashura which commemorates the death of Hussain at Kerbala. The story of Siavash was mentioned in the “Book of kings” which was compiled by Firdosi at the order of one of the Saminid kings in the 10th century during the Persian Renaissance.
how to say that you are stu.pid without saying you are st.upid, say Iranian version of Islam
its the story of zahak and much epic folklores of peoples will and then martyring for war as being noble archytype
How to say you are dum.b without Saying you are d.umb,
say Iranian version of Islam
You’re correct about Siavash Koshan and even its more ancient predecessor which is Nowruz itself being the very origin of Shia festival of Ashura and Jewish festival of Purim, but keep in mind that those traditions weren’t meant to mark an occasion via mourning however that became more and more the case as Islam took over and the celebrations were replaced by acts of mourning also influenced by Christianity and other forms of Iranian mysticism like Mithraism which has influenced Christianity directly also. A celebratory version of this holiday and ritual has survived in forms of Charshanbe soori (last Wednesday night before Nowruz) and Omar koshan (celebrating The heroic act of Piruz Nahavandi the Magi against Omar)
@@Hermesborugerdian There was so much of religious syncretism in Persia and of course this was inevitable since persian culture and traditions is deeply rooted in history. However Arabia was a blank slate as there was not so much civilization to influence Islam and the new ethos was established on mostly pure islam.
Awsome work
Excellent content ❤
The title if the video is false. Iran had many revolutions, the revolution of 1979 that resulted in the Islamic Republic wasn't simply an Islamic revolution, it later became that. It started as a revolutionary anti-imperialist movement for economic justice and national independence. Before that there where two revolutions, the islamisation of Iran during the abbasid era and the re-establishing of Persian culture and language that followed it. Revolutions come from social forces en-masse pushing society and history in a certain direction. Pahlavi and Mossadeq where not revolutions. They where preludes to 1979. The revolution wasn't against the shah, that's a simplification and doesn't explain the dynamics of history. It was a revolution against Anglo-American imperialism for independence and Iranian agency.
What about the Shah's "White Revolution" in the 1960s?
I could've added that but I just felt it was not as significant as the other 3.
@@HikmaHistory You are probably correct to have done what you did. Great work, by the way. Maybe you can do a vid on how the secularists/liberals got wiped out by Khomeni in the early 1980s and took total theocratic power?
Not a revolution, a reaction more like
Excellent video
Says "Strong leader" then shows Mosadeq...utter B.S. He is often said to be the 'democratically elected prime minster' yet as soon as he got the power..he shuts down the 'majlis' or parliament when the elections result dont match his preference, this was done against the constitutional law and very undemocratic to say the least. The shah had the constitutional right to assign and depose prime ministers and he had every right to get Mosadeq out of office especially after what he acted outside of his domain of influence. When he is lawfully fired...Mosadeq and his minions play the victim card. Typical leftist strategy..they're bully when in power, when they don't get the outcome they want, even when the law and votes confirm it..they blame everyone else and play the victim card.
HistoryMarche sent me!
How and where the hell did u find the Info? Why you cutting reza shah the greats reforms? Father of modern iran? And what we have achieved in mohammad reza shah's era? That our army and economy was between the first 10 countries in the world irans money the most valuable money in the world
Thank you
Why does this brother's voice sound like the Smile to Jannah guy?
*correction:* Sharia law just means Law law. Instead say Islamic Sharia.
Like chai tea
Aslamualaikum Hikma History.
I am an author who has written a book on the impacts of this revolution. Coincidentally, my book is coming out next week. Is there any way that you can use it or maybe publicise it? How can I contact you, sir?
I love your content tho. Keep up the good work!!
Same here
Love from India
Wow that's grt... Will hope that it gets publicised
Will like to see your book! Hope he publicises it
38:40 This paper, which did not exist in the world until a few years ago and has appeared in cyberspace in the past few years, is fake. Because at that time there was no green automatic in Iran.
In fact, the nationalization of the oil industry had two main urban leaders: Mossadegh, the leader of the wealthy and elite, Kashani, the leader of the masses and the masses. Besides these, there were also sub-leaders: Baghai, Makki, Haerizadeh, Zahedi...and of course Shah. The Tudeh Party (pro-Soviet), which opposed Mossadegh's government in the first year, became its supporters in the second year. Because they realized that they can use him to overthrow the royal regime, without defending the nationalization of the oil industry against Russia and England. All these were only in the cities. The majority of the people, who were rural, were in favor of traditional institutions that had nothing to do with politics.
After Mossadegh's failure to solve even the smallest political and economic problem, subordinate leaders who saw the growth of the masses among the press, workers and officers (see Khalil Maliki's letter to Mossadegh in this context) joined Kashani to oust Mossadegh. Unfortunately, fans of 70-year-old Mossadegh first call Mossadegh the only leader of the nationalization of the oil industry and others are against nationalization and even Islamists! Secondly, he calls this legal removal an American coup and divided the nationalists into two branches, Shahi and Mossadegh. While Kashani was a supporter of the Shah for only six months, and immediately he, his son, Bagai, Makki, Haerizadeh, etc., opposed the consortium contract.
Mossadegh himself congratulated the Iranian nation on the assassination of the former Prime Minister Razm Ara and his supporters in the parliament approved the law for the freedom of terrorists. In the first year of his government, he used the right-wing to intimidate the masses, in the second year of his government, he used the masses to intimidate the right-wing. In a fake referendum, he said that ninety-nine percent were his supporters, but a few days later, no one came to the streets to support him.
Razmara's sin was that he correctly told Mossadegh and other supporters of the nationalization of Iran's oil industry that we do not have the ability to manage the oil industry. Mossadegh understood this when he came to power and wanted to take oil concessions from England and give them to America. America said that it should first pay the damages to England. Both Truman and Eisenhower proposed to pay the loss of England over several years from oil sales to end the oil issue. But Mossadegh did not accept because he knew that if the oil issue ends, his government will end. When Iran's oil was sanctioned, Saudi Arabia and other oil producers increased their production.
But later, the Shah, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela formed APEC to be united. Shah was given the title of the Eagle of APEC, because everyone knew that the main operator of APEC was Shah. He spent this income to improve the lives of Iranian people, such as: establishing institutions such as knowledge, health, civil and development corps, free meals in schools, schools, universities and free libraries, free summer camp for elite students of schools, scholarships abroad from the country for the elite students of the universities, eradicating many deadly diseases, eliminating unemployment, increasing the wage rate equal to the inflation rate, reducing the Gini coefficient in the last years of his rule, equaling the daily wage of a simple worker with the price of nine hundred grams of red meat.
Maybe discontent is the default state of the Iranians. Could be diet-induced or something, I dunno.
Well their food is the best I've ever tasted so I doubt it.
If only the United States and Britain didn’t initiate a brutal and illegal military coup against a democratically a elected socialist who granted women rights, all to preserve british petroleum’s dominance in the region.
wonderful video
1979 revolution was just 1952 coup 2.0, as you pointed out Shah was becoming independence of the West and manipulated Oil Price, US didn't like that, at the same time they didn't want Tudeh Communists to take power so Islamists were the best option
History marche sent me. Hello there😊
Bro, make a video about Hotak Afgans
Highly informative, and well-organized content bro. The photo showing Major Talbot also features the Prince & Princess of Wales (later HRM King Edward the 7th & HRM Queen Alexsandra). The Prince of Wales (far left of the Shah, his wife on the right of the Shah) looks like he does want to be there, or Shah & his peeps are boring 🙂
Thanks man!
@@HikmaHistory you're very welcome, and cheers.
I love how he shows Mossadegh when it says strong leaders .. instead of Reza Khan.. who is literally the founder of the modern Iranian state .. I like your content but you are definitely biased against the Pahlavis
Come on dude, you’re nitpicking aren’t ya? In hindsight, I’d agree Reza Khan is a far better example of strong leadership but Mossadegh is more relevant to the topic of the video
And for the record, I’m deffo not biased vs Pahlavi’s. I have a few strong grievances against them but in no way am I against their entire regime
Dear HIKAMA, Thank you for another well developed piece, I look forward to viewing your work to gain a greater understanding of Middle Eastern, and Islamic political history. The power fluctuations between Religious and the Secular has many historical precedence, in the end power in any political system is created via the consent of the people, or it eventually collapses. No political philosophy is more unstable, than a Theocracy. The signs of this are apparent in Saudi Arabia, Israel, and of course Iran. Only after the people have come to understand over time, and time again, and again, that neither ruling Elites, nor Religious Beliefs, or Religious Leaders are sufficient to govern. Only then will they take on ( of their own free will ), the disappointing, dirty, difficult, and complicated job of a Democracy.
these problem arose only in modern nation states, all the Islamic and Catholic empires didn't have problems because the Church or the Ulama were important. The kings knew how to bypass them when needed.
Word to the wise.
Iran is its own entity.
hikma history can you do a video on east or south east asia muslims living in 11th till now
Hi Hikma and everyone! This is a bit off topic, but what is the music used in the first 20 seconds or so of the video?
Iranians are some of the smartest people in the world. Their science and tech with sanctions is incredible.
But their government is their business.
Not yours. Not mine. Cheers.
If I said that the none of these events will ever happened if the Zand dynasty remained in power, would I be correct?
After the death of Karim Khan Zand they went through an entire decade of infighting, going through 7 de jure rulers from 1779 to 1789
Hard to say. Zand dynasty was still weak and decades behind the modern world.
Imho the best scenario for Iran was if constitutionalism survived, for example if the national front of Iran took over, they were highly educated Iranians from different fractions.
Great documentary ❤
Which is easier to understand?
Middle East geopolitics and history?
or
When she says "I'm fine"
@HistoryMarche sent me
Why are Iranian diasporas in the West not violent like other muslims btw? I've noticed that
Average Iranian flees the violent muslims in power back home. Why become like them?
Because mostly of the iranian are atheists
Revolutions always end up adopting the worse aspects of the previous regimes.
Khomeini 👳♂️ is really a special leader.
Most of the revolutionary leaders in the history are not able to establish their values in a long term. They either get corrupted or are too principialist.
Khomeini was none.
He was always realistic, changing the constitution and those who were to radicals or irresponsible.
He also, importantly, was a intelectual and a fighter. He created his own theory of "Guardianship" and, when he could be in a comfortable position, he instead lived a life of exile fighting the Sha he eventually destroyed, and after this conducting the unification of the country and a whole new government establishment.
He was a spiritual, intelectual and formidable leader.
Here in iran we live in shit.
rip the great shah
Also : Khomeini wrote in his book that if you fall d*k first into your aunts V the child born isn't a bastard but s*x with that child is wrong
And let's not forget all those people he executed when he came into power
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let's not forget all the Muslims Aisha killed by starting a civil war against Ali son of Abi Talib
The theory of Guardianship predates Khomeini and goes back to an Iraqi scholar, and Khomeini took part of the Guardianship theory from his teachers.
He just fucked up my country.
Mossadegh was the greatest leader of them all. Very balanced and strong, and was not a tyrant unlike Khomeini or the Shahs
Not true. You are mistaken.
Mossadegh was only better than the Shah. He was rubbish.
Admirable attempt at reading the Persian lol
Historically accurate, culturally and religiously very disrespectful to the shia iranians.
Only to bet short on Stock market....3times
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As an Iranian I state this video is very very DISSAPOINTING
I think I learned more on how the US operates rather than Iran 😂
WE NEED EARTH, THE LANDS NATURAL ESSENTIALS TO SURVIVE
Iran has made Muslim proud. Thank you iran . Where are Arabs on Gaza war ??
37:03 There they go again! Putting you’re do you
Long live the Islamic Republic of Iran
it seems to me that a likely cause for places like Iran's instability is that, due to culture and geography, much of the world is not compatible with the idea of the modern concept of a state. the idea of nations as they exist today is a fairly recent, European idea. Instead of having the history to back up why a nation is a nation, much of the world only exists as nations because of colonialism, and the governments of those new nations had to use force to maintain their power, and now they're kinda all stuck like that. In a cycle of optimistic revolutions and oppression. Its unfortunate, but it seems that events were set in motion over the last 2 centuries that can not be undone.
Iran has been more or less in its modern borders for centuries though
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Use your brains
The CIA is an even greater monster
he is not wrong. just thinking a bit narrow. western interference was ruining iran since before ww1. That was a natura reaction. Similar to Russia and dictatorship of Putin
the same as CCP is a reaction to hundren years of humiliation
people get scared to become colonized. people accept any one who gonna "protect them" to run the country.
Fun fact, the CIA and MI6 supported Ayatollah Kashani (a radical Islamist) against Mossadegh in the 50's.
34:00 explained around this timestamp
Why the whistles
Make Iran great again ✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️🤷🤷
It’s a shame that these videos only says half truths because they get paid by big powers and they are byes.
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10:24
The original Aryan nation. Lol
That's what Iran means. The Land of the Aryans.
@@ciaronsmith4995 I know. I’m an Indo Aryan myself
It is the original Aryan nation what's your problem
Like Maidan revolution, Arab Spring Revolution, The Trump revolution
داداش چه فارسی ای حرف زدی ناموسا
-Revolutionary-
*Regressive*
400 seconds to Tel Aviv.
@@commercialandresidentialpl7337 if waging war and then turning blind to the thousands of kids just hanged or shot for mere street protests and demonstrations isn't concerning, then I am amazed with your notion.
@@abc_cba Waging war against whom?
Stop watching western news regarding Iran.
There is basically zero Hindu blood that was spillt by the Persian Shias, so why do you harbour such enmity to them?
@@commercialandresidentialpl7337 You're saying there was no protest and there was no repression and that the government is beloved by the people?
are you still without toilets
Free KURDISTAN
Free your momma first
Kurds are Iranians.
Kurds are Muslims, and Iranians are Muslims. Egypt was ruled by Turks for a long time, and Afghanistan was ruled by Arabs. Ethnicity isn't important.
@@موسى_7 Definitely I agree with you. So let the Turks, Arabs and Persians give back the lands of the Kurds
@@kurdistanfedaisi Iran is not all muslim. Iran is not just Persian. It's an ancient country. Kurds come from Medians - Medians are Iranians. Kurds are Iranians.
hikma you are biased mossadegh and protest against him has been proven that has been agrivated by brits and americans by rosevelts had two attempts at coup which the first one failed mossadegh was the most compotent person if you call islamic republic a regime i prefer it to saudi clan regime so excuse my anger
did you watch the video? he actually says that
@@emmanuelucrosacosta1845 earlier in the video he presented the american version of the story him being a communist smear and dictatorial
@@emmanuelucrosacosta1845 then he procceded by mentioning post reveloution protests as peoples just uprising not mentioning arab spring and soros colour reveloutions
First
Hikma is full of western bias
This total nonsense of (forg)umentary have nothing to offer but the mainstream Narrative of events in Iran. I am glad to see such things because it makes me sure that our adversaries have no realistic understanding of us. On the one hand this propaganda makes things a little bit hard for us but on the other hand it ensures we will continue to surprise our enemies, those who are abhorred by seeing a powerful economic and political Block in Western Asia that can be a peer competitor to the east and west.
Never been a fan of Iran
- King Leonidas
Iran not a fan of you peon
- Emperor Gordian III, Philip and Valerian.
It's the most important civilization ever by a long way in my view. So it's irrelevant what you think, frankly.
@@HarrysHouseChannel Iranians weren't fans of him either.
The reason for the fall of the Iranian monarchy in 1978 (1357) was that the price of oil per barrel was $40. The value of that amount in 1978 was equivalent to $193.66 today (in 2024, the year 1403). Today, the price of oil per barrel is $67.02, which would have been equivalent to $13.78 in 1978. The reason for the fall of the Iranian monarchy was the formation of "OPEC," an organization in which all oil-producing countries sold oil to the West at the price set by OPEC. Iran was the driving force behind OPEC, and this was the reason the Shah of Iran unfortunately fell. The main players behind the overthrow of the Shah were the Democratic Party of the United States (Jimmy Carter), James Callaghan (Prime Minister of the UK), Helmut Schmidt (Chancellor of West Germany), and Giscard d'Estaing (President of France). You can read about the "Guadeloupe Conference" on Google; it's available in both Persian and other languages. The rest of the stories about human rights and so on are nonsense and fabricated by foreigners.
All those revolutions, yet still so backwards XD
That’s because of American imperialism. Iran voted for democratic leaders but the CIA ousted them and put in brutal dictators , which is what led to a backlash. dumdum victor knows nothing thinks he knows everything
400 seconds to Tel Aviv.
@commercialandresidentialpl7337 your mom don't even last 10 seconds when she is with her 5th boyfriend of the week so what's your point?
@@AMultipolarWorldIsEmerging That was at the behest of the bri'ish, blame them
@@commercialandresidentialpl7337 Watch out, don't want it to land in Azerbaijan like certain other machine