A fragile ceasefire in the Israel-Iran war tests the harmony of Los Angeles' huge Iranian community
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.
'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 clichéd 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.'
___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Hashtags

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


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
One Big Beautiful Bill: Family Offices No Longer Need To Fear Death & Taxes
While markets fixate on the latest Federal Reserve signals and artificial intelligence earnings, the most consequential legislation for ultra-high-net-worth families in decades has quietly become reality. The "One Big Beautiful Bill," formally the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, represents nothing short of a seismic shift in how America's wealthiest families will build, preserve and transfer fortunes across generations. The Death Tax Gets Defanged The numbers speak for themselves. Starting January 1, 2026, estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer tax exemptions permanently jump to $15 million per person, double the previous threshold and a complete reversal of the sunset provisions that threatened to slash exemptions back to roughly $6 million. For family offices managing multi-generational wealth, this isn't merely tax relief, it is a fundamental restructuring of the wealth transfer landscape. Under the previous framework, families faced a ticking clock as Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions prepared to expire. Now, with permanent exemptions locked in, strategic planning can extend decades into the future without legislative uncertainty. The shift puts American estate tax policy closer to European models, where many countries have eliminated or dramatically reduced inheritance taxes. More critically, it removes the forced liquidation pressure that has historically fractured family enterprises and agricultural operations. Capital Gains: Stability Reigns Surprisingly, the legislation leaves capital gains rates untouched. There are no modifications to carried interest treatment, corporate tax rates or stock buyback excise taxes. This stability allows family offices to maintain existing investment strategies without fear of unexpected capital gains increases. However, one enhancement stands out: Qualified Opportunity Fund investments now receive tax-free treatment on gains held between 10 and 30 years. This extended window dramatically improves the risk-adjusted returns for impact investing in designated zones, a particularly attractive option for family offices balancing financial returns with social impact mandates. Agricultural Assets: The New Safe Haven For family offices with substantial agricultural holdings such as farms, ranches and forestry operations, the legislation creates unprecedented advantages. The Section 199A Qualified Business Income Deduction expands from 20% to 23% and becomes permanent. Consider the impact: Over 850,000 farms and ranches currently claim this deduction, with usage jumping to 70% among operations where the principal operator is primarily engaged in farming or ranching. The enhanced deduction allows agricultural operators to shield nearly a quarter of their business income from taxation while the expanded phase-in thresholds provide additional flexibility. Single filers now receive full benefits up to $75,000 (from $50,000), while joint filers get protection up to $175,000 (from $100,000). The Land Preservation Play The $15 million estate tax exemption transforms agricultural succession planning. Farmland and ranch properties, typically large and illiquid assets, have historically forced family sales to cover estate tax obligations. The new exemption levels allow families to transfer these operations intact while preserving multi-generational legacies. Additionally, the legislation injects $56.6 billion into farm safety net programs through 2031, enhancing crop insurance and conservation programs. For family offices, this reduces operational risk while creating additional income diversification through conservation initiatives. Business Investment Gets Turbocharged Unlimited bonus depreciation remains intact, allowing immediate expensing of qualifying equipment and improvements. Combined with expanded business interest deductions and modified excess business loss limitations, family offices can accelerate reinvestment without tax penalties. These provisions particularly benefit agricultural operations, where equipment purchases and land improvements represent major capital expenditures. The ability to immediately expense these investments improves cash flow and enables more aggressive growth strategies. WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 03: Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) holds up the final vote tally ... More after the One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol on July 03, 2025 in Washington, DC. The House passed the sweeping tax and spending bill after winning over fiscal hawks and moderate Republicans. The bill makes permanent President Donald Trump's 2017 tax cuts, increase spending on defense and immigration enforcement and temporarily cut taxes on tips, while at the same time cutting funding for Medicaid, food assistance for the poor, clean energy and raises the nation's debit limit by $5 trillion. (Photo by) Strategic Implications The legislation eliminates the uncertainty that has plagued family office planning since 2017. Temporary provisions under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act left many families in holding patterns, hesitant to make long-term commitments amid regulatory uncertainty. Now, permanent rules enable confident multi-generational planning. Family offices can optimize estate structures, accelerate impact investing through enhanced opportunity zones, and pursue agricultural diversification with unprecedented tax advantages. The Bottom Line The One Big Beautiful Bill represents more than tax policy, it is a decisive signal that America's approach to family wealth has fundamentally shifted. By permanently raising exemptions and enhancing business investment incentives, the legislation arms family offices with tools to build and transfer wealth previously unimaginable. For family offices tasked with preserving legacies across generations, the message is clear: the era of fearing death and taxes has ended. The focus can now shift to what families do best: nurture generational prosperity.


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Deep Reads: Abandoned by Trump, a farmer and a migrant search for a better future
As an American farmer, JJ Ficken, 37, was perpetually subject to weather, labor, loans, overhead, markets, health, politics. None of it was predictable, and all of it was a threat. The industry's survival has long depended on the deals made between millions of Americans willing to brave all that uncertainty and a federal government willing to sustain them, through grants, subsidies, insurance, financing, payouts and disaster relief. But then President Donald Trump, in the earliest days of his second term, threatened to break tens of thousands of those deals, suspending billions in agricultural funding and decimating the staffs that managed it. Swept up in the freeze was JJ and the $50 million grant program he'd signed up for along with 140 other farmers across the country. All of them had agreed to hire and, in many cases, house domestic workers or lawful immigrants willing to take jobs that Americans would not, but with the reimbursements in doubt, farmers worried they'd miss payrolls, default on loans or face bankruptcy. This story follows JJ and Otto Vargas, 24, as JJ recruits, meets and starts working with Otto – all while JJ wonders whether the government will ever pay him back. John Woodrow Cox reported, wrote and read the piece. Sarah Blaskey co-wrote the story. David Ovalle contributed to the report. Bishop Sand composed music and produced audio for the piece. Subscribe to The Washington Post here.

Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
Tight security in Iraq as Shiite pilgrims gather in Karbala for Ashoura commemoration
BAGHDAD (AP) — Tens of thousands of pilgrims arrived in the Iraqi city of Karbala on Saturday ahead of Ashoura, the holy day on which Shiite Muslims commemorate the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, grandson of the Prophet Muhammad. The annual pilgrimage is one of the largest religious events in the Shiite world. Ashoura holds deep religious and historical significance for Shiites, marking the 680 AD Battle of Karbala, in which Imam Hussein, along with his family and companions, was killed after he refused to pledge allegiance to the Umayyad caliphate, cementing the schism between Sunni and Shiite Islam. For Shiites, the commemoration has come to symbolize resistance against tyranny and injustice. The event on Sunday comes in the wake of unprecedented regional escalation, following the recent Israel-Iran war, as well as other dramatic developments including the fall of Syria's former president Bashar Assad -- an ally of Iran -- in December and the killing of Hassan Nasrallah, longtime leader of the Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah. The streets of Karbala were carpeted in red and lined with stations offering food and water to the pilgrims, who came from Iraq's provinces and from abroad, including large numbers from Iran, the Gulf states, Lebanon and Pakistan. Black-clad men, women, and children gathered around the shrines of Imam Hussein and his brother Abbas, performing traditional mourning rituals including chest-beating, elegies, and lamentations. Although the occasion is religious in nature, some participants chanted against Israel and the United States as they processed through the streets of Karbala. Many banners also expressed support for the ' Axis of Resistance,' a cluster of Iran-backed factions and governments. Iraqi Interior Minister Abdul Amir al-Shammari arrived in Karbala on Saturday and held an extended meeting at the operations command headquarters with senior security and intelligence officials and representatives of the Popular Mobilization Forces, a coalition of mostly Shiite militias that are officially under the command of the Iraqi military. The interior ministry said in a statement that the session focused on tightening control over the city's entrances and intensifying intelligence and field operations to safeguard the massive crowds. Members of the Islamic State and other groups following an extreme interpretation of Sunni Islam, who consider Shiites to be apostates, have carried out attacks during Ashoura gatherings in Iraq and other countries in the region over the years. 'The resistance's weapons are what protected Iraq, and they will not be surrendered—no matter how great the internal or external pressure,' Abu Ali al-Askari, a spokesperson for Iraq's powerful Kataib Hezbollah militia, which is closely aligned with Iran, said during the commemorations. His remarks came amid renewed national debate over the future role of armed factions in Iraq, especially in the wake of the recent regional escalations. The government of northern Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdish region said in a statement Saturday that a drone had crashed overnight in an open area near the regional capital of Irbil and that 'some groups affiliated with the Popular Mobilization Forces carry out such attacks with the aim of creating chaos.' It called for the federal government in Baghdad 'to put an end to these acts of sabotage and take the necessary legal action against their perpetrators.' The Iraqi army responded in a statement that the accusation against the PMF was 'unacceptable' and 'issued in the absence of evidence' and said it could 'provide hostile parties with justifications to undermine Iraq's stability.'