Abdollah Shahbazi has been described as a major figure in theorizing and promoting anti-Bahá'í sentiment and antisemitism and as one of the principal ideologues of hate speech against religious minorities in the Islamic Republic of Iran.[9][2] During his youth he briefly cooperated with the Hojjatieh Society, and from the 1980s onward, using state research and intelligence institutions, he produced and disseminated works with anti-Bahá’í and anti-Jewish themes.[1][2][9]
In 1988, Shahbazi founded the "Political Studies and Research Institute", an institution linked to the Intelligence Ministry, which he directed for a decade and which became known for lending scholarly legitimacy to hate-driven narratives.[10] The institution became one of the main centers for promoting Holocaust denial in Iran. The autumn 2006 issue of the journal Historical Studies, published by the Institute, was entirely devoted to Holocaust denial and included articles such as “Did Six Million Really Die?” and “The Truth of the Crematoria.” The Institute also published the book Behind the Holocaust, another attempt to discredit this well-documented historical catastrophe.[1][11] Scholars have viewed this as part of the Islamic Republic’s systematic effort to legitimize ideological antisemitism.
One of the most prominent examples of Shahbazi’s antisemitic work is his five-volume series Jewish and Parsi Plutocrats, British Colonialism, and Iran, which he began publishing in the 1990s. In this series, Jews and Parsis (Zoroastrians in India) are depicted as a global network of “plutocrats” who, according to the author, were linked to Britain, the United States, and Israel and played a conspiratorial role in Iranian affairs. Meir Litvak, Israeli historian, regards the series as a prime example of conspiracy-driven and antisemitic literature and argues that it contributed to reproducing anti-Jewish patterns in the official discourse of the Islamic Republic.[3][4]
Shahbazi is a staunch proponent of the conspiracy theory that “Jewish plutocrats” control the fate of the world. Although he acknowledges that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is a fabricated document, he claims that the Jews themselves forged it so that, once its inauthenticity was revealed, they could discredit any theory suggesting the existence of a conspiracy.[2]
The scope of Shahbazi’s conspiracy theories about the Bahá’ís is so extensive that he even described the systematic persecution of this community by security institutions of the Islamic Republic—regarded by Human Rights Watch as the result of a deliberate policy to strip them of fundamental rights and explicitly characterized as a “Crime against humanity”[12][13]—as a conspiracy to gain sympathy.[2]
Academic critiques have also been directed at these works. Houchang Chehabi, professor at Boston University, analyzing the book Jewish and Parsi Plutocrats, British Colonialism, and Iran, writes:[14]
Particularist and universalist conspiracy belief come together in a multi-volume study of world history by ‘Abdallah Shahbazi, which begins with the rise of the West and analyzes the expansion of Western influence in the world in terms of conspiracies perpetrated by Jews and Masons. One departure from the anti-minority stance of the secular nationalists and conservatives is that fundamentalist conspiracy belief also targets Zoroastrians, whom nationalists consider to be the ‘true’ Iranians. The connection with imperialism is established by ascribing evil intentions to Indian Parsis who, protected by Britain, established contact with their Iranian coreligionists.
Even conservative media have criticized Shahbazi’s methodology. An article on the RajaNews website identifies “hidden Judaism” and “hidden Bahá’ísm” as two major themes in his writings and criticizes his use of such frameworks to discredit political and religious rivals.[15]
In the 1990s, Shahbazi emerged as one of the principal promoters of the conspiracy theory of “cultural invasion” (tahājum-e farhangi), claiming that the West—especially the United States—was recruiting and training Iranian elites in order to undermine the Islamic Republic.[16] This narrative provided a pretext for the security apparatus to launch the repression and killing of Iranian intellectuals, writers, and artists, crimes that later became known as the “chain murders.”[16] After these killings were exposed, critics say that Shahbazi, under the direction of security institutions, sought to whitewash the crimes and, in his multi-volume book Jewish and Persian Plutocrats, British Colonialism, and Iran, claimed that Zoroastrians, Freemasons, Bahá’ís, and Jews had historically collaborated under Israel’s direction to harm Iran.[16] The book was selected as the Islamic Republic’s “Book of the Year” in 2006 and was used for years to stoke anti-Bahá’í, anti-Jewish, and anti-Israeli sentiments and to persecute opponents under labels such as “secret Jew” and “secret Bahá’í.”[16]