Memoirs of Ardeshir Zahedi, Vol. II (1954-1965) [Persian]

خاطرات اردشیر زاهدی (جلد دوم): از سفر هند و پاکستان تا واقعه 21 فروردین (شامل اسناد و عکس ها)

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Description

خاطرات اردشیر زاهدی نکات بسیاری از ناگفته های عصر پهلوی را در خود دارد. در جلد دوم کتاب، اردشیر زاهدی از تلاش های خود برای یافتن همسر مناسب برای شاه که پس از جدایی از ثریا اسفندیاری مجرد می زیست، پرده بر می گیرد و ماجرای دیدار و انتخاب فرح دیبا و ترتیب آشنایی و نهایت ازدواج او را با شاه شرح می دهد. علاوه بر این او به روابط ایران و انگلیس در دهه شصت میلادی می پردازد.
بخش عمده جلد دوم کتاب را اسنادی شکل می دهد که از نظر تاریخ دیپلماسی ایران اهمیت دارد.

Publication details

Binding

Cloth (Hardcover)

Dimensions

6 x 9 inches

ISBN

978-1-588140-65-4

Printing

512

Publication Date

2010

Notes

165 photographs and 106 documents

Author

Ahmad Ahrar (editor)

Veteran Iranian journalist Ahmad Ahrar is presently the editor in chief of the Kayhan newspaper published in London.

Ardeshir Zahedi اردشیر زاهدی

For three decades Ardeshir Zahedi played one of the most significant roles in the political history of modern Iran. As a trusted adviser, confidant, son-in-law, and friend, he played an influential role in the life of the last Shah from 1953 until the king’s death in Egypt in 1980. As a diplomat, he twice served as ambassador to the United States, ambassador to the Court of St. James and for seven years as foreign minister of Iran. He has known and worked with seven U.S. presidents. In the early fifties, he was witness and principal aide to his father in the tumultuous rise and fall of Mohammad Mossadegh and the appointment of his father as prime minister. This volume reveals, with honesty and detail, the intimate life of Iranian political society and the imperial court. It recounts in detail the background and events of the summer of 1953 that led to the fall of Mossadegh and the coming to power of Fazlollah Zahedi, the author’s father. Also included in the book are previously unpublished documents that shine a new light on the events. Ardeshir was born in 1928. He is a descendant of two families that have shaped the history of Iran. His father, Fazlollah Zahedi (1897–1963), served as prime minister and was an important political and military figure of the Pahlavi period. His mother’s father, Hossein Pirnia Motamen ol-Molk, served as the first prime minister of Iran after the establishment of the constitution in the early twentieth century. During World War II, when Ardeshir was twelve, his father, who was the commander of the Isfahan military division, was arrested by the British and imprisoned in Palestine. After the war Ardeshir ventured abroad to study in Beirut and the United States. He returned to Iran to play an important role in the political life of his country alongside his father and the Shah, Mohammad-Reza Pahlavi. A few years later, he and Princess Shahnaz, the Shah’s first child, fell in love and were married. The narrative of the courtship and marriage, which sadly lasted only seven years, is recounted in the next volume of his memoirs. In 1968, as foreign minister, on behalf of Iran he signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. In 1977, while ambassador to the United States, he helped negotiate and free 149 hostages held by Hanafi Muslims at the B’nai B’rith headquarters.