
A fragile ceasefire in the Israel-Iran war tests the harmony of Los Angeles' huge Iranian community
Tehrangeles
" in West
Los Angeles
is home to the largest Iranian community outside
Iran
.
This cultural enclave, also known as
Little Persia
, is where
Iranian Muslims
, Jews, Christians, Zoroastrians and Bahai have peacefully coexisted for decades.
But the recent war between
Israel
and Iran - a bloody, 12-day conflict paused by a fragile ceasefire - has brought up religious tensions and political debates that rarely surface in this culturally harmonious environment. To complicate matters, the U.S. - an ally of Israel - bombed Iran during the war.
Many Iranian Jews in the diaspora have viewed the onset of the war with "anxious glee," said Daniel Bral, a West Los Angeles resident whose grandfather, Moossa Bral, was the sole Jewish member of parliament in prerevolutionary Iran. He sees family members and others in the community rejoicing at the possibility of their "tormentor" being vanquished.
But Bral feels differently.
Live Events
"I'm just nervous and am completely rattled by everything that is happening," he said. "I understand and sympathize with people's hope for regime change. But I worry about the safety of civilians and the efficacy of the operation removing Iran as a nuclear threat."
But Bral doesn't see the war itself as a divisive issue in the diaspora because antagonism for the current regime is common across religious groups.
"This hatred for the regime actually unifies Muslims and Jews," he said.
Cultural enclave offers a sense of grounding Kamran Afary, a professor of communication at California State University, Los Angeles, who emigrated from Iran in the 1970s and cowrote a book about identities in Iranian diaspora, said the community, for the most part, has nursed a spirit of tolerance and respect, much like his interfaith family. While Afary is spiritual but not religious, other members of his family practice Judaism, Islam and the Bahai faith.
"Interfaith marriage used to be fraught, but even that is common now," he said.
Afary says for him, Tehrangeles, with its row of grocery stores, ice cream and kebab shops, restaurants, bakeries and bookstores, offers solace and a sense of grounding in his culture and roots. There are about half a million Iranian Americans in the Greater Los Angeles region.
The largest wave of Iranians migrated to the area after Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was overthrown in 1979 and Ayatollah Khomeini assumed control, establishing the Islamic Republic of Iran. West Los Angeles, in particular, has the largest concentration of Iranian Jews outside Iran.
A test for long-held bonds Diane Winston, professor of media and religion at the University of Southern California, said Israel's recent fight against the regime in Iran could test relationships between Iranian Jews and Muslims.
"Muslims, who otherwise would be happy to see regime change, might have felt a little differently about it because their antipathy for Zionism is strong," she said.
Winston also observed that in the diaspora, which is concentrated in wealthy cities like Beverly Hills and Westwood, it is not just religion or culture that brings people together, but also their elevated social status.
"They go to the same schools, parties and cultural events," she said. "In general, Iranian Muslims and Jews are not quite as religious as their counterparts back home. Los Angeles is a city where there is room to be orthodox, but also being less religious is not a problem. The less religious Jews and Muslims are, the less antipathy they may have toward each other."
A time of fear and uncertainty Tanaz Golshan was 2 when her family left Iran in 1986. She serves as the senior vice president of Caring for Jews in Need, the Jewish Federation Los Angeles' service arm. She is also the organization's liaison to the Iranian Jewish community.
Judaism for Iranians is "more cultural and familial," Golshan said. Getting together Friday for Shabbat means having Persian Jewish dishes like "gondi," which are dumplings served in soup.
"In my family, we didn't grow up too religious," she said. "We don't think about religion when we go to a restaurant or market. You'll find people in both communities that are extreme and don't want anything to do with the other. But in general, we have a lot of love and respect for each other."
And yet this is proving to be a tense and scary time for Iranian Jews in the diaspora, she said.
"What happens globally can affect security locally," Golshan said, adding the federation's helpline has received calls asking if there are any threats to local Jewish institutions, she said. "There is real fear that temples and community centers could become targets."
On Monday, Golshan's organization and others hosted more than 350 community members for a virtual event titled, L.A. United: Iranian and Israeli Communities in Solidarity.
A call for regime change in Iran Reactions to the war have been nuanced, regardless of religious affiliations. Arezo Rashidian, whose family is Muslim, is a Southern California political activist who favors regime change in Iran. She supports the return of Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the shah, who has declared he is ready to lead the country's transition to a democratic government.
Rashidian said she has never been able to visit Iran because of her activism. The only hope for her return would be for the current regime to fall. This is why the ceasefire has stirred mixed feelings for her and many others in the community, she said.
"It's been an emotional roller coaster. No one wants a war, but we were on the brink of seeing this regime collapse. We were so close," she said.
Lior Sternfeld, professor of history and Jewish studies at Penn State University, said Iranian Jews in the diaspora identify with Iran, Israel and the U.S., and that these identities are "often not in harmony."
"They don't see the Islamic Republic as Iran any more, but an entity to be demolished," he said. "They see Israel more as a religious homeland."
President Donald Trump enjoyed strong support in the diaspora and has now upset his backers in the community because he has stated he is not interested in regime change, Sternfeld said.
Desire for unity and common ground There is a push, particularly in the younger generation, for peace and understanding among religious groups in the diaspora.
Bral says he is engaged in peacebuilding work through his writing and advocacy. "We are cousins at the end of the day, as cliched and corny as that sounds," he said.
Bral's friend Rachel Sumekh, whose parents emigrated from Iran, grew up Jewish in the San Fernando Valley. Sumekh hosts dinner parties with her diverse group of friends as a way of widening her circle across religious lines.
In December, she hosted a gathering for Yalda, an ancient Persian festival with Zoroastrian roots, which is observed on the winter solstice as celebrants look forward to brighter days. Last year, Yalda, which also marks the victory of light over darkness, coincided with Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of lights.
"We created a new tradition bringing people of both traditions together to emphasize how much we have in common," Sumekh said. "This war is just a reminder that as much as our day-to-day lives may be separate, there is still a lot we share in terms of culture and as a people."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Gazette
an hour ago
- India Gazette
"Bravehearts of Indian Armed Forces damaged, destroyed and dismantled "territory of terrorism": Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi
Prayagraj (Uttar Pradesh) [India], July 6 (ANI): Former Union Cabinet Minister and senior BJP leader Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi on Sunday said Indian armed forces completely dismantled the 'territory of terrorism' adding that such a punishment will be remembered by Pakistan for generations to come. While attacking the Congress and the Samajwadi Party, Naqvi said that these political parties are engaged in a 'drive of deception', but the people are repeatedly defeating their arrogance on the 'political pitch'. The reason behind the 'failures of frustrated fraternity is their foolishness to consider Democracy as a Disneyland of the Defaulter Dynasty'. BJP leader Naqvi said that the BJP-ruled state has never discriminated against Muslims in terms of development, irrespective of the fact that most Muslims had displayed stinginess in voting for the BJP for a long time. The time has come when we have to get rid of 'this mood of intolerance and untouchability against the BJP. The BJP is the reality of the country, and ignoring it is not good for the country and the Muslims.' We will have to put a 'shutter of trust on the gutter of fear and confusion'. Naqvi said that we would have to be cautious about the communal infection of the so-called pseudo-secular syndicate, who are history-sheeters of playing the game of communalism wearing the 'veil of secularism'. Those who want to become 'feudal without fiefdom and landlord without land' are trying to paint the BJP as a 'villain' only to block the inclusion of Muslims into the mainstream political and development process. Naqvi said that by defeating 'political untouchability towards the BJP and political intolerance towards Modi Ji', Bharat is witnessing a golden period of Constitutional reforms and inclusive empowerment for the welfare and prosperity of the people. 'Revolutionary and visionary economic, cultural, social, educational, administrative, electoral, health, and agricultural reforms under the able leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi have made India a credible global brand of inclusive reforms and good governance.' Naqvi said that the 'crazy criminal conspiracy' of 'communal lynching of Constitutional and inclusive reforms such as the Waqf Amendment Law' clearly reflects that such people want to continue with their 'legal license of loot'. 'Communal bashing of Constitutional commitment' is dangerous for the country and religion. Every reform of the Modi government is a guarantee of constitutional protection for religious faith and a commitment to reform the administrative system. Commenting on the upcoming Bihar Assembly elections, Naqvi said that those raising questions and creating ruckus on the counting of votes before the people's mandate, have realized that their 'swarm of stopgap' will be knocked out and failed to conquer the 'mountain of mass mandate'. (ANI)


The Hindu
3 hours ago
- The Hindu
Bodoland's indigenous groups face demographic threat: Assam CM
Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma urged the indigenous peoples inhabiting the poll-bound Bodoland Territorial Region (BTR) to analyse the demographic threat from a community 'I will not name' and take precautions. Citing the 2020 National Family Health Survey report, he said the 'fertility rate of 26 indigenous communities' in Assam dropped to 2.1 (from 2.2 children born per woman in the previous report). 'The Bodos, who have fought for self-rule for decades, should understand who or what is their biggest challenge in terms of population. I won't say whose population has increased, but what is certain is that the (non-Bodo) indigenous communities are development partners, not a threat,' Mr. Sarma said at an event in Guwahati organised by the Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC) on Sunday (July 6, 2025). According to 2020 data, the total fertility rate of Muslims in Assam was 2.4 compared to 1.6 for Hindus and 1.5 for Christians. The fertility among Muslims, however, was found to have dropped by 1.3 from 3.6 in 2005-06. Unprecedented peace Mr. Sarma lauded the BTC government headed by Pramod Boro for ensuring 'unprecedented' peace during 'my tenure as the Chief Minister for four years and four months'. He said the self-rule movement in the areas dominated by the Bodos since 1968 led to a series of conflicts, including those of an ethnic kind, and extremism. 'We once thought Bodoland was a lost territory, where peace was impossible. But initiatives undertaken after Narendra Modi became the Prime Minister in 2014 ensured the path to peace,' he said. The Chief Minister said the January 2020 Bodo Peace Accord ushered in a new era of peace. 'It makes me proud that no bullet was fired and no bomb exploded in the BTR. This was unthinkable once,' he added, thanking all the stakeholders, including the Bodo students' body and disbanded extremist groups. Happiness index Addressing the event titled 'Bodoland Speaks: From Vision to Action,' Mr. Sarma underscored the adoption of the Bhutan model of growth index by the BTC authorities. 'Unlike our Gross Domestic Product, which may not reflect the well-being of the common people, Bhutan innovated the Gross National Happiness index, which factors in spiritual, cultural, social, and economic development. The reign of peace and the interactions among different ethnic groups speak for Bodoland's Happiness Mission,' he said. Pramod Boro, the BTC's Chief Executive Member, said cultural preservation and mutual respect among diverse communities have been the foundations of efforts of his government to ensure lasting peace and sustainable growth. 'Scarred by years of ethnic strife, the BTR has been experiencing peace for almost five years, allowing its people to shift focus from survival to progress. We have ensured an atmosphere where people respect each other's culture and heritage,' he told journalists. Celebration of diversity Mr. Boro said Sunday's event was a celebration of BTR's diversity, conveyed through awards conferred on exponents of the folk-art forms. Among several initiatives launched during the event was a publication containing 1,001 words and 1,001 sentences of languages spoken by 18 communities inhabiting the BTR. The BTC, which governs the BTR, has 46 seats, of which six are for nominated members. The council is headed by Mr. Boro's United People's Party Liberal, an ally of the Bharatiya Janata Party. Elections to the BTC are likely by September.


Time of India
3 hours ago
- Time of India
MMK demands Muslim representation, repeal of Waqf Act at Madurai conference
1 2 Madurai: Manithaneya Makkal Katchi (MMK) president M H Jawahirullah on Sunday called for proportional political representation for Muslims and demanded the repeal of the Waqf (Amendment) Act, alleging it was unconstitutional and aimed at dismantling minority institutions. Addressing a state-level public conference organised by the MMK in Madurai, he said the party's struggle was not for power but to uphold secularism, protect minority rights, and promote inclusive governance. Thousands of supporters took part in a four-kilometre rally from P C Perungayam junction to Amma Thidal near Vandiyur Toll Plaza, carrying party flags and placards while raising slogans in support of Muslim representation and Waqf protection. City police deployed additional forces and enforced traffic diversions to ensure order. In his speech, Jawahirullah said that despite making up over 14% of the population, Muslims remain severely under-represented in Indian politics. "We need at least 80 Muslim MPs in the Lok Sabha to match our population. In the Chennai Corporation, only four out of 200 councillors are Muslim. Every party, from the panchayat level to Parliament, must address this imbalance," he said. He urged both ruling and opposition parties, including DMK, Congress, and AIADMK, to ensure fair representation for Muslims. "That is the purpose of this conference," he said. Slamming the recent amendments to the Waqf Act, he claimed they were designed to weaken the Waqf boards and seize their properties. "The BJP government is using the new portal as a tool to loot Waqf assets. We are prepared to launch protests similar to the farmers' agitation if the Act is not repealed," he warned. The conference passed 10 resolutions. Key among them were demands for proportional political representation for Muslims, the repeal of the amended Waqf Act, and the establishment of a fully functional Waqf Development Corporation. The MMK also called for a ban on EVMs and VVPATs, citing a lack of trust in the system. Other resolutions condemned Israel for "genocide" in Palestine and criticised US support. The party demanded that India sever ties with Israel, ban the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, and take a strong stand at the UN. The MMK also condemned Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar's recent remarks on removing 'secularism' and 'socialism' from the Constitution. It praised the Tamil Nadu government for standing up to "fascist forces" and called for Muslim identity and history to be included in school curricula. It also sought better facilities at the Sikkandar Dargah on Thiruparankundram hill in Madurai and improved conditions for undertrial Muslim prisoners. "This is not about electoral seats or political gain," Jawahirullah concluded. "This is about dignity, rights, and a rightful place for Muslims in this country." MMK MLA Abdul Samad, speaking earlier, vowed that the party would resist any attempt to implement the Waqf Act in its current form.