Persian Jewish community in Israel remembers flight from Iran

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 38

  • @Dead.scream
    @Dead.scream 2 года назад +17

    Persian Jews living in land of Aryans happily and safely if it wasnt for the mess usa and british made in Iran we would never end up leaving our motherland.

  • @kamranahoora7670
    @kamranahoora7670 Год назад +5

    As IRANIAN citizen I LOVE and RESPECT DEEPLY my dears fellow JEWISH countrymen so much.
    Does NOT matter what we always see them as IRANIAN and love them.
    I wish success and prosperity for them.
    IRAN ALWAYS IS YOUR HOME.
    ❤️🙏✌️🌹❤️🇮🇷🤝🇮🇱❤️🌹✌️🙏❤️

    • @standforhumanitariancauses4756
      @standforhumanitariancauses4756 11 месяцев назад

      I'm an Iranian, and don't believe in any religions. But for any Iranian to be a Muslim, it's like for a Jewish person to be a Nazi. Arab Muslims invaded our nations, and forced Islam upon us. Islam goes against our culture and tradition. Those Ayatollah In Iran, are NOT Iranian by blood, They're Arab descendant Lebanese and Iraqis that hate Persian Iranian culture.

  • @parvizazari6879
    @parvizazari6879 9 месяцев назад +2

    We are all Iranians regardless of religion, language and ethnicity
    .We are a proud nation and we have been blessed living next to each other side by side in peace and harmony for thousands of years.

  • @seppo011
    @seppo011 Год назад +3

    She sang gole sangam ( my flower of stone) so sad 😞

  • @trenton7
    @trenton7 5 месяцев назад +2

    The Jewish community in Iran have lived there since after the Babylonian exile. They are more Iranian than a lot of us Iranians.

  • @IranianImmortal
    @IranianImmortal 2 года назад +10

    Persia 💪

  • @denkoxh8610
    @denkoxh8610 9 месяцев назад +1

    They Persian Jews should be allowed to visit Iran and I believe Iranians would welcome them with open arms. At the end of the day, politics aside, Persian people are hospitable and good mannered. Muslim, Christian or Jewish, it doesnt matter ❤

  • @keithrichardson3942
    @keithrichardson3942 2 года назад +3

    Cook book please before the culture disappears xxx

  • @PesarTarofi
    @PesarTarofi 2 года назад +2

    Aw sad song she sang at the end, cultures should always try to survive political turmoil regimes come and go, i think all the people in the middle east should look toward each other and build security and prosperity its better to spread friendship then terror

  • @ciaronsmith4995
    @ciaronsmith4995 9 месяцев назад

    What? There are tons of Iranian Jews in Israel and on Iranians parliament!
    Israel should focus on Arab/European countries.
    Iran always treated its Jews well! Truth hurts!

  • @bahramebrahimi6643
    @bahramebrahimi6643 4 месяца назад

    looking forward to a day when our jewish countrymen and women will come back to a free Iran.

  • @AdoptedCats
    @AdoptedCats 2 года назад +5

    I love Persian Jewish Culter, Mizrachim. (East)
    I pray for remaining 28,000 to 30,000 Persian Jewry in Iran today for their safety and protections in Yeshua Ha'Mashiack.
    Besides, there are many Kurdish Jews in Iran as well. 
     
    Hi

    • @abbalives7168
      @abbalives7168 2 года назад

      Talking about jews. Not christians

    • @AdoptedCats
      @AdoptedCats 2 года назад +4

      @@abbalives7168 By Dariush
      Coming to Faith
      I was born in Tehran, Iran, in 1957. I grew up in a Jewish home, but only went to synagogue two or three times a year. At the time, Iran was a secular Muslim nation with a Jewish population of roughly 70,000 centered in Tehran. Though Iran was friendly to Western culture, the nation never embraced the Jewish people. I remember watching my fellow Iranians in the streets chanting “death to the Jews” before a soccer game in which Iran was to compete with Israel. Today, only a few thousand Jews remain.
      In 1975, I moved to the United States to attend college. There, I met Eliezer Urbach, then a missionary with Chosen People Ministries. I was intrigued by the idea that Jesus was the Jewish Messiah and even attended a meeting, but left uninterested. Some students followed up with me and showed me unconditional love as they explained the Gospel and Jesus’ fulfillment of the Messianic prophecies in the Hebrew Scriptures. Not only did I come to faith in Messiah Jesus, but I became even more interested in my Jewish heritage and continued to celebrate the biblical holy days.
      I soon told my parents, who were still living in Iran, of my new faith. Though they initially showed indifference, as I witnessed to them, they became nervous. They spoke with a rabbi in Israel who explained that I had been brainwashed by Christian missionaries. My parents became extremely concerned and demanded I return to Iran. I agreed, but hid my passport and return ticket after I arrived for fear they would take them from me.
      Tried and Tested in the Faith
      In Tehran, and later in Jerusalem, my parents took me to two rabbis in an attempt to talk me out of my beliefs. Ultimately, they decided to enroll me in a yeshiva (a strict Orthodox Jewish school) for troubled youth in New York.
      The yeshiva was designed to be totally self-sufficient; students had very few reasons even to go outside, and quitting school was out of the question. Still, despite their efforts to change my mind, I only became more convinced of my faith and resolved to leave the yeshiva.
      While in New York, I became friends with Sam Nadler, a Jewish believer who later served with Chosen People Ministries. In order to move out of the yeshiva unnoticed, I began slowly to move my belongings into Sam’s home. Finally, one weekend, I left and never went back.
      Once back in Colorado, I told my parents what had happened. They cut off my financial support. I kept my address hidden from them and worked my way through college. I eventually moved to Los Angeles, met my wife, and participated in an Iranian church.
      After the Iranian Revolution, my parents moved to Los Angeles. Seeing my continued love for my Jewish identity, their hearts softened toward me, my family, and my faith. Today, my family and I participate in outreaches to Iranian Jews and Muslims in the Los Angeles area.

    • @abbalives7168
      @abbalives7168 2 года назад

      @@AdoptedCats your just a christian. Leave us jews alone. Your an abomination to God an idol worshipper

    • @maghi218
      @maghi218 2 года назад +4

      @@AdoptedCats I was born in Tehran, where I went to school and went to university,We Muslims study with Jews and Christians in the same educational place,I remember we did not feel religious difference at that time, the only thing that mattered to us was how to help each other,to deceive university professors, or to choose easier lessons with kind professors……or daily plans to go to all coffee shops in Tehran or planning for childish mischief😈….What you portrayed of Iran is an image of your mind with skeptical fears

    • @AdoptedCats
      @AdoptedCats 2 года назад +2

      @@maghi218 Thank you for reply. I know Persian Communities are above religious differences which dated back when Cyrus the King of Persia helped Jews. The Persian Jews celebrates Nowruz honoring Cyrus. I think that the only the culture flourishes between Central Asian Jews.
      Azerbaijan Jews, Kurdish Jews, Persian Jews, Bukharian Jews of Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan Jews, Tajikistan Jews, Turkmenistan Jews, Kyrgyzstan Jews, *we celebrates together Nowruz. Happy Newruz to You. Mizrachim

  • @happy_man_x
    @happy_man_x 2 года назад +4

    Persian Women are fine

    • @onlineactivity2349
      @onlineactivity2349 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/Emw0KFp4NEg/видео.html

    • @Agtsmirnoff
      @Agtsmirnoff 8 месяцев назад

      I'm a Jew (non-Persian) and my finance is Persian, I agree 100%

  • @SalesforceUSA
    @SalesforceUSA 2 года назад +3

    I am from Iceland. I am an Aryan.

  • @NimNim2024
    @NimNim2024 Год назад +2

    They are not Iranians their loyalty is to Israel and jews and they are Semite and not Aryan Iranians. A lot of them came post ww2 from Russia.

    • @tFighterPilot
      @tFighterPilot Год назад +6

      A tiny minority, maybe. The great majority of Iranian Jews have lived there for thousands of years.

    • @mahsa7045
      @mahsa7045 Месяц назад

      ​@@tFighterPilotThat's true, many of them were killed by Arabs and many others were persecuted and forced to convert to Islam after the Arabs attacked Iran.

  • @yuval1716
    @yuval1716 2 года назад

    .