1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910137526203321

Autore

Goldin Farideh <1953->

Titolo

Leaving Iran : between migration and exile / / Farideh Goldin

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Athabasca University Press, 2015

Edmonton [Alberta] : , : AU Press, , 2015

ISBN

1-77199-139-9

1-77199-138-0

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (302 pages) : digital file(s)

Collana

Our lives: diary, memoir, and letters

Disciplina

305.8924073

Soggetti

Jews, Iranian - United States

Iranian American women

Iranians - United States

Refugees - United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Contents; Prefatory Note and Acknowledgements; Preface; 01 1975, Portsmouth, Virginia; 02 February 1979, Israel, Kiriat Sharet; 03 Baba: September 1980, Tel Aviv; 04 October 1980, New Orleans; 05 Baba: 1981, Tehran; 06 1982-83, Chesapeake; 07 Baba: 1983, Shiraz; 08 1983-84, Chesapeake; 09 Baba: 1983-84, Shiraz; 10 1984, Chesapeake; 11 Baba: 1984, Tehran; 12 1984, Chesapeake; 13 Baba: 1984, Rome; 14 December 1984, Norfolk; 15 Baba: 1985-86, Tel Aviv; 16 Baba: 1987, Philadelphia; 17 1987, Portsmouth; 18 Baba: 1987, Shiraz; 19 1987, Portsmouth; 20 1989, Nags Head; 21 1991, Portsmouth

22 Baba: 1992, Shiraz23 1992, Norfolk; 24 Baba: 1992, Shiraz; 25 1966, Shiraz; 26 Baba: 1992, Shiraz; 27 1993, Norfolk; 28 Baba: 1994, Tel Aviv; 29 1994, Baltimore; 30 Baba: 2003, Holon; 31 2002-03, Norfolk; 32 2005, Tel Aviv; 33 2006, Norfolk; 34 Baba: December 2006, Holon

Sommario/riassunto

In 1976, at the age of twenty-three, Farideh Goldin left Iran in search of her imagined America. She sought an escape from the suffocation she felt under the cultural rules of her country and the future her family had envisioned for her. While she settled uneasily into American life,



the political unrest in Iran intensified and in February of 1979, Farideh’s family was forced to flee Iran on the last El-Al flights to Tel Aviv. They arrived in Israel as refugees, having left everything behind including the only home Farideh’s father had ever known.Baba, as Farideh called her father, was a well-respected son of the chief rabbi and dayan of the Jews of Shiraz. During his last visit to the United States in 2006, he handed Farideh his memoir that chronicled the years of his life after exile: the confiscation of his passport while he attempted to return to Iran for his belongings, the resulting years of loneliness as he struggled against a hostile bureaucracy to return to his wife and family in Israel, and the eventual loss of the poultry farm that had supported his family. Farideh translated her father’s memoir along with other documents she found in a briefcase after his death. Leaving Iran knits together her father’s story of dislocation and loss with her own experience as an Iranian Jew in a newly adopted home. As an intimate portrait of displacement and the construction of identity, as a story of family loyalty and cultural memory, Leaving Iran is an important addition to a growing body of Iranian–American narratives.