Where were you on Aug 19, 1953?

Recollections of writers, translators, men and women of the pen


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Where were you on Aug 19, 1953?
by Fariba Amini
19-Aug-2008
 

Personally and on behalf of the CIA, I wish to commend you most highly and thank you for your outstanding contribution to Operation AJAX...Your expert knowledge of the country and your personal knowledge of many of the leading actors in the operation were invaluable assets during all phases of the operation. Your competence and tact in dealing with [British] in the preparation of the joint plan and your ingenuity, resourcefulness, and untiring efforts in the planning and preparation of the psychological warfare aspects of the operation cannot be too highly praised. -- A letter addressed to Donald Wilber by Allen W. Dulles, January 30, 1954

I was reading a magazine fresh out of Iran called Negah-e-nou, a literary/political magazine containing essays, analysis and works of numerous Iranian writers as well as book reviews of foreign authors. The last section of the magazine, called Recollections of 28th of Mordad, is dedicated to the 1953 coup, I found quite fascinating. This recollection has been gathered by Morteza Hashemi Pour and was published in the Mordad 1387- August 2008 issue of the journal negahenou.com

A week earlier, I had come across a book By Ali Mirfetroos called Asib Shenasi yek Shekast “Psychology of a Failure,” Farhang publisher, 2008 which is fiercely critical of Mossadegh and how he handled the oil dispute. In it, Mr. Mirfetroos alleges that if Mossadegh had worked with the British and their US counterparts, and had not been so “stubborn,” he would have saved the situation.

He also claims that the coup was not planned ahead of time: “My insistence that the 1953 coup was not planned ahead is not just an intellectual challenge but it is an attempt to depict reality that, in my opinion, is closer to the truth.”

Elsewhere he says: “ Mossadegh with all his love for Iran, with his national pride, with his integrity and self- glorification, had given hope to the Iranian people but because&nbs p; of political and historical obstacles, it was difficult or rather impossible to attain them. Instead of using wisdom and political insight, he used the people’s emotions which are all too typical of populist leaders and movements.“

Replying to this book and the author is a whole different task, one for those who write book reviews as he refers to many scholars in the field. I for one will not engage with those who deny historical facts.

Today, the story of Iran is different from those days, though in some ways there are a few similarities. Even if the Islamic Republic accepts the terms of the US and its Western allies, regarding the nuclear issue, will everything change and will Iran be seen in a different light by opinion makers? Of course, there is absolutely no comparison with the two governments, but if the US administration and its policy makers decide not to negotiate or compromise with Iran at some level, at the en d, it is the nations of both countries who will bear the consequences.

On the occasion of 28 Mordad (Aug 19, 1953) I thought that by translating and summarizing parts of these recollections, some of which are quite fascinating and moving, we might see the past from different perspectives. In many ways, while Iran is being targeted on all fronts, whether right or wrong, the events of Aug 1953 are still with us in the most haunting way. Writers, scholars and people in general, Iranians and Americans alike, continue to be mesmerized with what really took place on those days when a nation’s destiny was changed overnight, trying to analyze these events and to find answers to the many questions they raise. Above all, more than that of any other Iranian political figure of modern times, Mossadegh’s legacy lives on.

*** *** ***

Dariush Ashouri- scholar
I am from the generation of the period of oil nationalization and I remember growing up with the idea of the oil nationalization and the coup d’état of 1953 which caused a wound that gave birth to the 1979 revolution. I was only 12 years old when I had finished school and all over Tehran you could see a different kind of atmosphere prevailing, especially at the university. A lot of people, especially students who were older than me, had joined different political parties.

On that day, I was a youngster who had just turned 15. I would read the many books and party news papers which were available to us. Sometimes I would go to meetings and party gatherings. In our street corner, we would get into discussions with people on the other side of the political spectrum. We lived on Molavi Street. At the corner was the=2 0Gendarmerie headquarters. It was a really painful event for our generation. On the actual day of 28th of Mordad (Aug 19), I saw people bringing down statues and shouting slogans in support of a Republic. This had happened only three days earlier. But the city seemed calm since Mossadegh’s government had forbidden any demonstrations or gatherings. It was two o’clock in the afternoon when we saw men with bayonets with whores from the Shahr No [the New City- the red light district of Tehran] on trucks who were shouting Marg Bar Mossadegh , Zendeh bad Shah (death to Mossadegh, long live the Shah) It was the most amazing scene. Those who were bystanders were from the Tudeh party, ordinary people or Mossadeghis. All of a sudden the mob got out of the truck and started running towards us using their bayonets and clubs to beat us and the bystanders. We ran as fast as we could to get away from them. One of the people with us got a good beating. I went home to listen to our newly bought radio Fada and heard the voice of Mir Ashrafi who was a journalist and one of the leaders of the anti-Mossadegh movement who talked of the “national uprising”. We sat there listening in=2 0bewilderment.

Ezatollah Entezami- actor
Our house was near the Mojassameh square (now the Revolution square). We heard some gun shots. A child was hit and we took him to the nearby hospital. It was full of people. Lots of injured. We finally found the child’s father. The city was noisy, especially near and around Dr. Mossadegh’s house in Kakh Street. Two days before the coup there were slogans for Mossadegh and today they were pro Shah. It appeared that the coup was being directed from Park Gheitaryieh. I had played a few films there. No single political party stood up against the coup, not even the Tudeh party. They burnt down a few theatres. I was working in Sa’adi Theatre. They burned that too. They also arrested a few actors. After a few days, they arrested and held me for 4-5 moths. I later heard that Timsar Bakhtiar [later head of SAVAK] did not like us artists. It was a very difficult time. I left for Germany. It was a repressive atmosphere.

Manoucher Anvar- writer and translator
I was in England at the time. I was an Iranian student studying there. Like so many other students we were shocked to hear the news. We had tears in our eyes and were in total grief. The extent of our grief was as huge as our joy a year earlier when we had heard the news from the radio of the outcome of the Hague Court ruling in favor of Iran. At that time, we were twenty in a room and sitting next to the radio when we heard the good news. We were congratulating one another. There was only one person who was not happy and I am sure that person was having a ball when the coup happened.

Ghamar Aryan- scholar and writer
The 28th of Mordad and the coup against Mossadegh is unforgettable. Everywhere there was talk of Mossadegh and the coup. My husband, Abdi (Dr. Abdolhossein Zarrin Koub) and I we were busy with our own lives. It was on that day that we got married, in the city of Mashad.

Azartash Azarnoush – scholar and writer
I was sixteen years old. At Razi High School, we had been gathering with some of my friends on old Pahlavi Street. The city was crowded. We saw three jeeps near the Marmar Palace [one of the Shah’s many palaces]. One of them got out and threw a knife at us to scare us away. There were 10-15 of us. We ran away but they threw stones at us. We went home in the dark. We were Mossadeghis but didn’t know what to do.

Abdolrahim Ja’afari- founder of Amir Kabir Publishing house
It was ten O’clock when I was standing in front of Nasser Khosrow store. I heard a lot of sound. I thought, like the previous days when there were demonstrations against the Shah and his departure people and military people are running away, but this time the noise was bigger. I came to the southern part of the street, Bouzerjomehri Street and I saw 500 people with ragged clothing and bayonets in hand down on Nasser Khosrow Street. It looked like they had come from the southern part of the city- Zaghe Neshin [one of the shanty districts of southern Tehran]- they had picture of the Shah and a few had clubs in their hands and would shout Marg bar Mossadegh, Marg bar Tudeh . A lot of police and security forces who were on jeeps and army trucks were joining them.

The chant of “we will pay for the skin and the flesh of Tudeh sympathizers” was heard all over the city.

I heard the awkward voice of Mir Ashrafi who was on the radio saying the people have cut the traitor Mossadegh to pieces and Zendeh bad Shah. After he spoke, it was Seyed Mehdi Pirasteh and Zahedi’s turn.

In the afternoon, I was with my friend Hassan Sa’adat, the son of Ahmad Sa’adat who was the head of Sherkat Matbou’at, (the Press Company) we started walking down towards Kakh and Shah Streets. [Dr. Mossadegh’s residence was on Kakh Street]. Thousands of people were out and the hooligans were throwing papers from the second floor of an office. Slogans of Marg bar Mossadegh and Marg bar Tudeh (death to Mossadegh and death to Tudeh sympathizers) were everywhere. I suddenly heard gun shots. And every time we went closer to Dr. Mossadegh’s house, the shots were higher. When we finally got there, we saw that the door of the house had been taken out by a tank. There were=2 0holes from the gun shots all over the wall and the house. There was a struggle between those defending the house and the military. In front of the joub (gutter) in front of his house, there were bodies; you could see the inside of their bodies. There were people, who were ransacking his house; they were carrying everything from his house- furniture, door knobs, heaters, rugs even toilet bowls, everything they could get their hands on. Shaban bee Mokh and his collaborators were looking for people to confront, but there was no one to stand up to them. Shaban bee Mokh (Shaban the brainless) [ a wrestler and a thug who was paid to mobilize the anti-Mossadegh mob] later titled himself Shaban Tajbaksh (Shaban who has handed over the throne.)

I saw these events with my own eyes and grieved that it maybe that is the destiny of great men. Who knows maybe these were the same people who just a few days ago were saying, “we will sacrifice our lives, we will write in blood, either death or Mossadegh.”

Ali Ashraf Darvishian- playwright
On that day, I was 12 years old. I heard the news of the coup from radio. I was standing in the Timcheh area of Kermnashah and was in line to get bread. We ran with my brother towards the house and tried to clean up the slogans we had written on the walls of our street. It was sad news. We were cleaning the slogans we had written sometime earlier.

Mahmoud Kashechi- director of Gutenburg publications
On that day, I had come from Mashad to Tehran. My bookstore was in front of the National Garden and near Homa theatre. Nearby, the Boroumand bookstore had been burned down by hooligans. After the coup, we could not print many books and sometimes we would print things clandestinely like Bargardim Goleh Nassrin Bechinim. I have been to almost all the prisons of Tehran since the 28th of Mordad. From the 86 years of my life, I have dedicated 66 years of it in publishing books and journals, all in the service of the people and my country.

Hassan Kamshad-writer and translator
My brother and I Houshang who lived with us in Ahwaz went to visit the city of Isfahan. There we met up with Shahrokh Meskoub [a renowned writer of numerous works and a scholar on Shahnameh who died in Paris in 2005.] We were all jolly walking in Chahar Bagh Street. Shahrokh had come to see his wife. All of a sudden we saw a truck and there were villagers, youngsters and soldiers who were shouting Zendeh bad Shah, Marg bar Mossadegh. Marg bar Tudeh. There were a few of Shahrokh’s wife relatives on the truck as well. We were stunned. Didn’t the shah leave the country? Didn’t Dr. Fatemi, Mossadegh’s foreign minister announced a Republic? There were many trucks and the same slogans were chanted. Suddenly someone saw us; it was Meskoub’s wife’s chauffeur who shouted: “Are you guys crazy? What are you doing here?” He took us with him and it was there that we heard from Erham Sadr, the actor, from Radio Isfahan: “this is Isfahan, half of the world, we hear terrible news from Radio Tehran but the lawful government of Dr. Mossadegh still continues to hold on to its legal rule…”

From Ahwaz we heard that they took all our belongings, took over our house, and burned down everything else. The days and months after 28 of Mordad were the worse days of my life. All over Iran, there was a state of siege. Shahrokh Meskoub was imprisoned and I left the country…

Jamal Mir Sadeghi- playwright and scholar
It was the day of 28th of Mordad. I was insane. I was asking myself how could this happen? Some were shouting slogans. There were hooligans and mobs all over the capital, shouting slogans of Marg bar Mossadegh and Zendeh Bad Shah (Death to Mossadegh and Long live the Shah.) Those who are today talking of democracy did not let our country take its natural route and stood up against the nation and the government. Before the 28th of Mordad when the Shah had left, we were all happy and then Zahedi came with his tanks and again repression found new ways.

Goli Taraghi - author and playwright
It was 28th of Mordad. We were in Naderi Street, going to Mrs. Yelna’s dance school. I was 13-14 years old. All of sudden, there was lots of noise and there were skirmishes outside. We came to the balcony and saw some hooligans. They shouted, “hey look at the girls.” Mrs. Yelna took us inside. I didn’t go to my house directly as it was far, so I we nt to my grandmothers’ house which was near Heshmatdolleh. I saw people carrying things. One had a chandelier, one had a table. Scores of people were carrying different objects. They said, these were objects belonging to Mossadegh’s house. Before that day, they were shouting slogans in his favor. But on this day, his house was being ransacked. And then later, I witnessed statues coming down and going up. It seems that people study history, but never really learns from it.

Abdollah Kowsari- translator
In those years, in early 1950’s, people who could afford, would go out of Tehran to places like Meygoon, Oshan and Feshan [three resort towns outside of Tehran] Since most homes in Tehran did not have air conditioning, it was a way to spend the summer in cooler places. In the summer of 1953, my family had rented a house and we all went to a beautiful garden in Meygoon. There were roaring creeks, ni ce gardens, and small alleys. At night all the Tehranis would get together in the main square of Meygoon and play the accordion and sing songs and have a jolly time.

At another corner, supporters of Mossadegh and Tudeh would get together and have heated discussions. I was only seven years old. Like most people from the middle class, my father was a Mossadeghi so I guess I was too! I remember we used to play in the river nearby and one day, we saw a large, tall man who was far away from all of us and was standing there, smoking a pipe, just looking deeply into the river. They told me it was Dr. Baghaiee [founder of Hezbeh Zahmatkeshan, who supported Mossadegh at first but then turned his back on him and collaborated with the coup organizers].

In those days, the last thing on everyone's mind was the disaster that was shaping and befalling us. I read a verse from a Latin American poet that still shakes me: “A calm street before a crime taking place”… The atm osphere in Meygoon, all the joy and fun in the evenings had nothing to do with the horrific crime taking place [in the capital]. The only thing I remember from the coup is that I saw my father like a lost child on a balcony, hitting on his forehead. No one could grasp the shocking thing that had happened to a nation. No one could grasp the depth of it.

And the rest is history……


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more from Fariba Amini
 
IRANdokht

great article

by IRANdokht on

I enjoyed reading your article. 

Thank you 

IRANdokht


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Also a good source on the subject...

by Antibullshit (not verified) on

Book: "Karnameh Syasi Dr. Mossadegh" published in LA by Sherkate Ketab.


Darius Kadivar

It All boils down to our Constitution

by Darius Kadivar on

The events of 1953 in my understanding could have been prevented if our knowledge and understanding as a nation of the Iranian Constitution was good enough at the time. The 1906 Constitution as drafted at the time was based on the Belgian Royal Constitution where the role of the King was that of a figurehead and that of the Prime Minister and government was one of the governing body. If under Reza Shah the Great the Parliament was not particularly powerful since executive power was concentrated in the hands of the Shah. This was no more the case to my knowledge for his son for up to 12 years where Mohamed Reza Pahlavi reigned and did not rule as in the case of any other European Constitutional Monarch.

The Question I would like to submit to the experts of this era and to Mossadeghis is the following:

Did Mossadegh as Prime Minister breach the Constitution by forcing the Monarch and the Royal family to exile ? 

It seems to me that the Shah whether he was right or wrong, popular or not was after all legally the country's legitimate king. A legitimacy that Mossadegh could not deny despite his own loyalty to his Qajar Roots, since he accepted the position of Prime Minister. To claim that this was done democratically proves that Iran was indeed functioning perfectly as a constitutional monarchy. However the political struggle that appeared at the time led to a humiliating exile for the country's monarch for whatever reason, justified by circumstances or not. In doing so wasn't Mossadegh behaving unconstitutionally by asking the monarch's departure ?

From this point of view I believe that Mossadegh may have overestimated his constitutional rights and politically made the strategic error that proved fatal and ultimately used by the Shah to discredit him.

However unjust a treatment towards Mossadegh for his undeniable services in defending Iran's economic independance, from a political point of view I think he asked for too many concessions from the political establishment ( traditionally loyal to their king) in the name of nationalism in a country where political freedom and democratic experience was not a norm.

Was Mossadegh a Patriot ? Without Doubt Yes.

Was his behaviour Constitutional during this Crisis and particularly in regard to his sovereign ? I am not sure ...

So from this point of view the Term "Coup" seems to me a wrong vocabulary to define the crisis and the way it was concluded. That does not mean that the Crisis was not real nor that the way Mossadegh was used as a scape goat was fair, but Constitutionally it seems to me that it was Mossadegh that commited a "Coup" against the Shah. Maybe not militarily but politically and legally by questioning and undermining his King's legitimacy. His Qajar ascendency could have explained his disdain of the Pahlavi Kings but he had after all been elected as Prime Minister of their Dynasty.

It seems to me that It All boils down to our Constitution. Were it made clear in our minds what was its exact purpose we may have not had this stubborn reaction on both sides that is from Mossadegh against the Shah and the Shah against Mossadegh.

I don't have the answers to this question so if Fariba can enlighten us I would be grateful.

Best,

DK

 

 


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what happend to the previous crowd?

by Faribors Maleknasri M.D. (not verified) on

I would say: NOthing. They had only stil not found the SOURAKH DOAA. It took 25 years untill 1978 as they found it. And as we all see: It had been the right hole. I think on Nuk-technology and transporter raketts. The new modern system is securred for many many hundred years. It can be replaced only by itself. Greeting


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FYI-coup

by Ferdos (not verified) on

FYI- the author's own translation of this title in the back cover of his book is "psycology of a failure." Now if some people don't like it they can ask him to change it!!

As for Mossadegh being a Free Mason. the British and the Americans using hundreds of thousands of dollars bribing the press in Iran tried to discredit Mossadegh using character assasination tactics including that he is a Jew!! Mossadegh was a member of Jamyiat Adamyiat for a while, that has nothing to do with Free Masons. Many politicans and scholars were member of this association.

as for those who still deny that this was a Coup D'etat, please go and read the CIA's own archives, published in the NYTimes. They say we did it (of course with traitors like Zahedi, the thugs, the paid agents in Majlis, the Rashidian brothers, Ashraf, etc. etc. and still our dear monarchists shout loudly that it was not a coup! Ok, then what was it? Jonbesh Melli led by shahr no and Shaban ?!!

I only suggest to all of you to read a little bit of history of your country, but the real history not the one fabricated by either the Pahlavis or the Islamic Republic; though I must confess that under this regime more books have been printed and translated on 28 Mordad than anytime during the Pahlavi rule.

I also suggest that you tell your own side by interviewing some other people.

I rest my case.

F.A.


Abdy Moghbel

28 Mordad 1332

by Abdy Moghbel on

Abdy Moghbel

On 19th August 1953 I was seven years old and lived in Tehran.  My recollection of that day is being on Old Shemiran Road, not very far from Shah Reza Avenue, somewhere between Amol Street and Hoghoughi Street near where we lived.  I saw buses filled to the brim with noisy people who hung out of the windows and the doors and some even on the roof of the bus waving bank notes.  I asked my father who was with me what these people were doing? He said they were waving the bank notes because it had the Shah’s image on it.  Now I know that was the money with which they were bought.


Darius Kadivar

FYI/Yes, Prime Minister: Cabinet Plot Against the PM ;0)

by Darius Kadivar on

With Due respect to the Late Prime Minister Mossadegh and his Cabinet as Well as to you Fariba Jan but I Hope you have a sense of humor nevertheless ... ;0)

I just could not help myself but to post the following  videos.

Plot Against the PM:

And More Power to the People:

Last But Not Least: British Diplomacy:


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Mossadegh was a Freemason too!

by factfinder (not verified) on

Mr/Ms Political Analyst for LA Zoo wrote:

"... and then we let the bastards back in with sign contract to not recruit akhoonds and Freemasoner to spy for them."

For your information sir, Dr Mossadegh joined forces with Ayatollah Kasahni, until the latter pulled out of the union, and more significantly Mossadegh was a well known member of Iran's Freemasonary.

See this:

//books.google.com/books?id=a64OAAAAQAAJ&pg=P...


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A few corrections and additions

by Mac Historian (not verified) on

Amini:

Aseeb-shenasi is not translated to Psychology. It means the Forensics. The correct translation is: The Forensics of a Failure.

Entezami:

Teymoor Bakhtiar was a mere colonel serving in Kermanshah and was only promoted to General a few months after 28th mordad and there was certainly not any security apparatus named Savak until 1956.

Kamshad:

Mr Kamshad, or perhaps the translator, has missed out the fact that he and Shahrokh Meskoub were members of the Tudeh party (Meskoub was one of the instructors of the Party).


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In Memory of A Great Man

by Iraniye' Asil (not verified) on

You shall never be forgotten:

Rest In Peace - Dorood Bar TO


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dear witness

by Anonymous8 (not verified) on

you said

"But was it really a coup, as American authorities trying to please the Islamic regime would want us to believe it?"

Come on!!! This is a national disgrace. Clinton officials only grudgingly admitted that it even happened using general langauge that avoided direct responsiblity only on the last weeks of his presidency.

Bush and Cheney have never even admitted that it happened. To this day, they don't talk about it. 95% of Americans aren't educated about it. Who is "trying to please" the Islamic Republic? What are you talking about?


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the question is

by Political Analyst for LA Zoo (not verified) on

have you learned to identify your enemy? That is what we are still failing, we only talk about the dead and gone with the winds.

Let's close the British embassy in Iran for the first time in our history, kick them out of Iran for 20 years until we rebuild our country to where it was 50 years ago, and then we let the bastards back in with sign contract to not recruit akhoonds and Freemasoner to spy for them.

Know your enemy and stop rhetorics.


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First, was it really a coup?

by Anonymous witness (not verified) on

On 25th Mordad 1332 (16 August 1953) I was passing through Isfahan. A huge crowd, in excess of 10,000, had packed Isfahan's Naqshe-Jahan sqaure and a man on top of a truck who was their cheer leader was shouting into a loudspeaker: Ya Marg Ya Mossadegh! The crowd were repeating the same slogan.

Three days later, on the fateful date of 28th Mordad (19th August 1953) I was returning to Tehran through Isfahan and saw the same man, at the same venue, on the same truck, facing an equally large crowd, blowing into the same mega-phone: Javeed Shah, Javeed Shah! The crowd were chanting the same.

Was it the same crowd? If not,what happend to the previous crowd? Were they all hidden in their homes? Surely, a populist prime minister as Mossadegh was supposed to have been, could not have been abondoned by his people? Or were they all, a crowd in a excess of 10,000 bought out by he CIA money? If so how much money must have been spent and how were they paid? Surely this could not have been a fitting display of loyalty by the supporters of allegedly the most popular prime ministter in recent history?

In the days and the weeks after the fall of Mossadegh there was no major (or even minor) uprising in support of the fallen hero. Where is the list of the killed or executed people who rose to reclaim their hero? Apart from the foul-mouthed Dr Fatemi who was executed months later no one else lost their lives for their beloved prime minister. Most of his allies including Bazargan were allowed their full pensions and ran their successful businesses in the private sector. Their properties were not confiscated nor their children were left without shelter or food. Dr Fatemi's own son was a recipient of a government grant!

If we accept that 28 Mordad was a coup, this must have been the most bloodless coup in the world. Iranian people must surely be the most fickle nation ever!

But was it really a coup, as American authorities trying to please the Islamic regime would want us to believe it?

Think about it rationally and not emotionally.


sadegh

Thanks for sharing...I

by sadegh on

Thanks for sharing...I enjoyed reading it immensely...

Ba Arezu-ye Movafaghiat, Sadegh