Abdollah Shahbazi

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Abdollah Shahbazi
Shahbazi in 2014
Academic background
Alma materThe University of Tehran
Academic work
Disciplinehistory

Abdollah Shahbazi (Persian: عبدالله شهبازی; born 1955 in Shiraz, Iran) is an Iranian historian. Shahbazi has been described by many researchers as one of the most influential figures in promoting anti-Bahá'í sentiment and antisemitism in contemporary Iran, and his writings have been characterized as containing clear patterns of hate speech against religious minorities. These works, employing conspiracy-based frameworks, have contributed to the reproduction of discriminatory views at official and media levels. For this reason, his role in the formation and expansion of minority-hostile discourse in the Islamic Republic has been repeatedly criticized.[1][2][3][4]

Shahbazi graduated from the department of Social Sciences at The University of Tehran and became active in areas of political and historical research during the 1980s. He founded The Political Studies and Research Institute [5] in 1988, and for a decade was in charge of its research activities. In 1995, he reorganized the document center of Iran's "Bonyad" [6] into a professional historical institute, The Institute for Iranian Contemporary Historical Studies.[7]

Shahbazi's father, Habibollah Khan Shahbazi, was the leader of the Sorkhi tribes of Kuhmarre Sorkhi region of Fars Province and led Iran's 1962-1963 tribal rebellion against the Pahlavi dynasty. He was executed together with other dignitaries of southern Iranian Tribes on October 5, 1964.

Shahbazi claimed that Jewish financiers, in coordination with British intelligence, were instrumental in bringing Adolf Hitler to power in 1933.[8] He also alleged that Zionist networks and Jews played a key role in secret British plans to install Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1921.[8]

Publications

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