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Iranian Jewish Exodus
Sources: Iranian Revolution records; community histories from Tehran, Shiraz, Isfahan, and Hamadan; migration studies of Iranian Jews in Israel and the United States.
The Iranian Jewish Exodus accelerated after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Iran’s Jewish community was ancient, Persian-speaking, urban and provincial, and deeply integrated into Iranian culture while maintaining synagogues, schools, charities, and distinctive rites. The revolution created uncertainty through Islamization of law, anti-Zionist state ideology, executions of prominent figures such as Habib Elghanian, restrictions on public life, war with Iraq, and fear that communal identity could be conflated with support for Israel.
Migration did not empty Iran completely; a significant community remains, but large numbers moved to Israel, the United States, especially Los Angeles and New York, and Europe. Iranian Jews carried Persian language, poetry, food, music, business networks, and strong family institutions into new settings. The exodus is historically different from sudden airlifts because it has continued in waves shaped by politics, sanctions, family reunification, education, and economic opportunity. It links ancient Persian Jewish continuity to modern global diaspora.