-
‘DWTS’ finalist, Paralympian Amy Purdy beat 2% survival odds, lost both legs - 4 mins ago
-
Meet 17-Year-Old Joseph Contreras, Who Got Aaron Judge to Ground Into a Double Play - 15 mins ago
-
Tourist accused of stealing, torturing, and choking flamingo at Las Vegas hotel habitat - 27 mins ago
-
‘Pawn Stars’ host Rick Harrison responds to son Corey’s GoFundMe controversy - 46 mins ago
-
Rahm, Detry, Varner Tied for Lead After Round 3 at LIV Golf Hong Kong - 58 mins ago
-
Oil prices surge amid war in Iran - about 1 hour ago
-
One Country Relegated From World Baseball Classic After Disastrous Start - about 1 hour ago
-
Seiya Suzuki, Shohei Ohtani Help Japan Squeak by South Korea in WBC Pool C Game - 2 hours ago
-
Alysa Liu Changes Mind on Major Decision After Olympic Gold Medal - 2 hours ago
-
Bohemian Club alleged membership list leaked revealing A-list celebrity members - 2 hours ago
A free Iran is their shared dream. But the diaspora remains torn on the best path forward.
“We are not a monolith,” the Iranian Diaspora Collective, an Instagram account with over 81,000 followers, wrote in a post. “Millions of people will never share the same ideology or identity and that plurality is the strength of any free society.”
Los Angeles-based pastor Ara Torosian, a Christian who moved to the United States from Iran in 2010, said it breaks his heart to see the destruction of historic sites and the deaths of innocent people, especially young children.
But from his perspective, the pain people are suffering now rivals generations of suffering from dissidents who did not support the regime. Torosian said he was jailed and beaten when the Revolutionary Guard found Christian items in his Tehran home.
Like many, he rejoiced when the supreme leader was killed. “This is not happiness you see in the streets,” Torosian said. “We celebrate the hope that this regime will end.”
While he has a “hate-love” view of foreign intervention in his homeland, he said his disappointment is largely directed toward Iranians who oppose the strikes altogether.
“We don’t want war, but at the same time what do we do? We tried protesting against the regime and they just killed more people,” he said, referring to this year’s deadly demonstrations in Iran. “War is the only hope for a new Iran.”
Some Iranian Americans, like New York-based activist and commentator Ariana Jasmine, said they understand the reasoning behind those who back the war. But she feels like a “black sheep” within the Iranian diaspora because she is not for it.
Source link










