I want to share an experience I had while working in Teheran for The Boeing Company, training Imperial Iranian Air Force personnel on how to maintain the Boeing 747 aircraft. I’ve also included a copy of a letter I sent Saturday to over 60 friends on my “Stand-Up for America” distribution list.
I hope you will not be offended, but will understand the good feelings I have toward the people of Iran, and my concern for their continued safety, and opportunity to once again become a great and prosperous people and nation.
The following experience occurred sometime in the fall of 1978: My Iranian crew had just completed a major inspection on one of their 747’s. We were waiting for approval to move the aircraft from the hangar to its assigned parking space on the flight-line. As we talked, my direct trainee, Homofar (A military rank between enlisted and officer which identified having a high-school education.) Gharalee said to me, “Mr. Beers, the Shah is an evil man.” I asked him, “What makes you say that?” He replied, “Because he spanks little children.” I said, “Where are you hearing that? He replied, “They broadcast it from the Mosque during prayer.”
I said to him, “I can tell from your rank, you have a high-school education. Does your father have a high-school education?” His reply was, “No, he only went through maybe the 8th grade.” I then asked, “Does your mother have a high-school education?” His reply was, “No, she didn’t even go to school.”
So I asked him, “Gharalee, who do you have to thank that you have a high-school education, Khomeni or The Shah?” He didn’t understand and gave me a blank stare. So, I proceeded to tell him the story of The Shah addressed in the email I sent out shown below.
I then asked, “Do you have brothers and sisters?” He replied, “Yes.” I asked, “Are your brothers in school?” His reply was, “Yes.” I asked, “What about your sisters, are they in school?” He then stated, “Of course.” .Afterward, I again then asked him, “Who do you have to thank that you have a high-school education, and that your brothers and sisters are in school today, Khomeni or the Shah?”
His eyes went wide, and he exclaimed, “Mr. Beers, maybe we are making a big mistake!” There was an older Iranian Warrant Officer standing nearby who had been listening, and he spoke up with tears running down his face, “Mr. Beers, when I was a little boy, the people of Iran loved the Shah. He used to play with us in the streets. When it snowed, he would ski down Phalavi Blvd, and his driver would tow him and the kids back up the hill so they could again ski or sled back down the hill.
Unfortunately, by late 1978 The Boeing Company decided to allow the families to leave, and when I came back to the United States to secure a home for them to live in, I was never able to make it back in. In January 1979 Boeing decided to pull everyone out. The rest is history.
The following is the email I just sent out to my friends on Saturday, June 20, 2009 11:49 PM:
Subject: How "ignorant" does Iran's Khamenei think the people of Iran are? The news from Iran (Iran's Khomeini: Election Over, No More Protests!) brought back strong memories of my experience of living and working with the Iranian people in 1976 through 1978.
When I first arrived in Teheran, Iran in Nov 1976, the Iranian people enjoyed a literacy level they had not had at any time since before the 5th century when they were a powerful and educated people. After the 5th Century, for the most part, only religious leaders and feudal land lords were educated, until the British and United States governments helped Reza Phalavi regain the government seat in 1963. I understand, he initially refused to be "crowned" as "Shah of Iran" because he did not feel "he was worthy," and with a 94% illiteracy rate, the people of Iran were not ready, so he decided to do a "White Revolution" to change that. According to "Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia" //en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Revolution the White Revolution consisted of 19 elements that were introduced over a period of 15 years, with the first 6 introduced in 1963 and put to a national referendum on January 26, 1963. The following 19 elements sound very much "for the people of Iran" and not those of an autocratic despotic dictator:
Sounds like a fair and ambitious plan to help the Iranian people again become a great nation. As you can imagine, the "Land Reforms Program" the "Extending the Right to Vote to Women" and the "Formation of the Literacy Corps" were not not well received by the Supreme Religious Leader and the Mullahs who preferred to keep the people poor and uneducated so they would be easier to control. As a result of implementing these reforms however, I was told, that by 1978, the literacy level of the Iranian people had improved to around 64%. It was pretty clear that Iran in 1976 and 1977 was well on it's way to once again becoming a great nation.
All that changed with the 1976 election of Jimmy Carter as President of the United States. On New Year's Eve, December 31st 1977, I witnessed Jimmy Carter on Iranian National TV, with his arm around the Shah, telling the world "how much he admired the Shah," and explaining how in November he asked Roslyn where she would like to spend New Years Eve, and she had said "with our good friends, the Shah and Shahbanu of Iran."
Unfortunately, Jimmy Carter was "a wolf in sheep's clothing," as before he left Iran, he convinced the Shah that he needed to "show compassion" for the imprisoned Teheran University dissident students and others who had plotted against the government, by releasing them, along with allowing the Ayatollah Khomeini to return from exile. He also informed the Shah, that the government of The United States would no longer back up his government against the dissidents and clergy.
When the dissidents were released in the spring of 1978, they once again, with communist activist support, began to riot, as they saw their release as "weakness" on the part of the government. In August of 1978 the Shah was shot at close range by a trusted son of a military officer who died in a helicopter crash in a storm. We flew two 747's, one carrying the Shah to a hospital in France for emergency life- saving surgery. Upon his return in late August, the Shah appeared weak and gaunt when he again appeared on National TV.
In early September 1978, we were put on curfew from 6 PM to 6 AM as the rioting in the streets increased - Not due to "anti-American sentiment" as reported by the press, but due to "religious disputes" between Shiite, Sunni and Bahai factions in Islam. The communist activists figured by joining the "radical religious furor" they would be able to overthrow the government of the Shah, and once they succeeded, could easily overpower the "weak" religious elements and take over the government. History proved they underestimated these radical religious groups.
It is sad commentary, the people of Iran were duped by their own religious leaders who took away their freedom and opportunity in 1978 and since, to again be a great nation. Do they have the courage today to stand up and fight for freedom? Are democratic nations willing to stand with them to defend the rights of Iranian people to choose freedom and pursue liberty and happiness? Or, is our nation led by another Jimmy Carter who wants to "appease" everyone, and will stand by while autocratic despotic Iranian "political" and "religious" leaders give orders to execute those who "dare" to rise against them?
The only thing we as a nation have to apologize to the world for is not standing up in defense of truth and right, when called upon to do so.
I would hope each of us has the courage to stand up in defense of truth and right, and not allow the subversive efforts of those who conspire to take away our freedoms to succeed. YOU can make a difference! Do not be deceived by "wolves in sheep's clothing" who work to defeat The Constitution of The United States. It is up to each one of us to be vigilant, so we do not wind up wondering "what happened" to our freedom to live, prosper, and Worship Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience.
Thanks for your listening ear. Now, make sure your voices and votes count.
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