Students and faculty at universities across the United States include relatives of Iran’s political elite, even as Iran’s leaders continue to speak out against the United States in public statements. According to the New York Post, the children of senior Iranian officials have studied or taught at prestigious universities such as the University of Massachusetts, Union College in New York, and George Washington University in Washington, DC.Given these individuals’ family ties to the Iranian regime, their presence in U.S. academic institutions raises questions. Critics say there is a stark contrast between Iran’s public hostility to the United States and the Iranian elite’s private choice to send their children abroad for education and careers.
One of the cases involves Fatemeh Ardeshir-Larijani, the daughter of senior Iranian official Ali Larijani. Ardeshir-Larijani is a physician and teaches at the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. Her profile was later removed from the university website amid protests and calls for her to leave.Supporters of action against her see potential concerns arising from her family’s ties to a regime seen as hostile to the United States. A U.S. congressman has written to Emory University saying her employment should be reconsidered because of her “family relationship” with a sanctioned Iranian official.
In New York, Leila Khatami, the daughter of former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami, teaches mathematics at Union College in Schenectady. Her biography and photo have reportedly been removed from the college’s staff page following wider coverage of her background.
Other examples include Zeinab Hajjarian, the daughter of Saeed Hajjarian, a prominent adviser to Iran’s political system and a faculty member at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. The other is Ehsan Nobakht, an associate professor at George Washington University School of Medicine and the son of Ali Nobakht, Iran’s former deputy health minister.
Zahra Mohaghegh Damad, Ali Larijani’s niece and the daughter of a senior Iranian cleric, serves as an assistant professor of nuclear, plasma and radiological engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
This phenomenon is not limited to just one or two people. According to the New York Post, there are 4,000 to 5,000 relatives of prominent Iranian officials living in the United States, with some also living in Canada and Australia. These family members benefit from opportunities abroad that are not available to ordinary Iranians.
Critics use the word “aghazadeh,” which means “noble-born,” to describe the children of Iran’s powerful political families. They say the children are given special opportunities to study and work abroad that ordinary Iranians don’t have. Opponents say it shows a double standard in Iran, where ordinary people may face restrictions on travel and freedoms, while elites and their children benefit from privileges.Supporters of the regime’s critics argue that allowing these individuals to live and work freely in the United States could inadvertently provide them with a platform for academic discussion and influence. They said it could affect how American students and the public view the Iranian government.
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