
On the Nose The Fault Lines Shattering the Iranian Diaspora
Mar 24, 2026
Manijeh Moradian, Barnard professor and feminist activist; Narges Bajoghli, Johns Hopkins anthropologist and Iran scholar. They unpack how war, sanctions, and propaganda are fracturing Iranians worldwide. They trace pro-monarchy currents, online harassment tearing families apart, and the urgent call for anti-war, anti-imperial feminist politics. The conversation centers on diaspora polarization and paths toward solidarity.
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How Sanctions And Media Polarized The Diaspora
- The Iranian diaspora rapidly polarized into a pro-monarchy/pro-war faction and an anti-war/leftist faction after years of targeted media and sanctions.
- Narges Bajoghli traces this shift to Trump-era 'maximum pressure' sanctions and funded Persian-language media that amplified a far-right social media apparatus.
Media Made Pahlavi A Diaspora Leader
- Reza Pahlavi rose from peripheral exile figure to central pro-monarchy symbol largely via 24-hour Persian satellite networks based in London.
- This media push coincided with calls (e.g., from Pahlavi) during strikes that preceded a violent state massacre, accelerating polarization.
Women Life Freedom Sparked Everyday Revolution
- The Women Life Freedom movement was a deep grassroots cultural revolution expanding gender, minority, and queer rights in Iran.
- Manijeh Moradian argues it opened everyday social change beyond dress codes, creating a broad civic energy that the state then violently suppressed.






