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ENTEZ®AÚM, ¿ABD-ALLAÚH and NAS®R-ALLAÚH, two brothers active in 20th-century Persian
politics.
1. http://www.iranica.com/articles/v8f5/v8f514fig1.html,
diplomat and politician (b. 1274 ˆ./1895 in Tehran, d. 2 Farvard^n 1362
ˆ./22 March 1983). He was the eldest son of K¨oræ^dlaqa@ GÚaffa@r^ and
Sayyed Moháammad Entezáa@m-al-SaltÂana. His father was a diplomat, who
also served as a director-general (mod^r-e koll) of the Ministry of
the Interior (Weza@rat-e keævar) under Rezµa@ Shah, a Sufi affiliated to
the S®af^-¿Al^æa@h^ order, and a leader of the Anjoman-e okòowwat
(q.v.). His grandfather, Sayyed ¿Abd-Alla@h Tafreæ^
Entezáa@m-al-S®altÂana, had been briefly chief of police (waz^r-e
nazám^ya) during the reign of Na@sáer-al-D^n Shah Qa@ja@r
(1264-1313/1848-96).
Upon the completion of his education at the German Technical School
(Madrasa-ye sáan¿at^), the Da@r-al-Fonu@n (q.v.), and the School of
Political Science (Madrasa-ye s^a@s^), ¿Abd-Alla@h joined the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs (Weza@rat-e omu@r-e kòa@reja) in 1298 ˆ./1919 and served
as secretary at the Persian embassy in Washington, D.C. While in the
United States, he studied mechanical engineering, which had always
interested him, and married an American woman, whom he subsequently
divorced. They had a son, Hume Horan, who later joined the U.S. Department
of State and became a leading Arabist. Many years later, in Ord^beheæt
1337 ˆ./April-May 1958, ¿Abd-Alla@h married Farahá Ansáa@r^, granddaughter
of ¿Al^qol^ Ansáar^ Moæa@wer-al-Mama@lek, to whom he was related. Her
grandfather had been minister of foreign affairs several times.
A career diplomat, ¿Abd-Alla@h served in various posts: from 1304
ˆ./1925 to 1306 ˆ./1927 he served in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in
Tehran, and from 1312 ˆ./1933 to 1314 ˆ./1935 he worked in the Ministry's
press department. In 1315 ˆ./1936 he was appointed consul in Prague and in
Ord^beheæt 1317 ˆ./May 1938 charge‚ d'affaires in Bern. He also served as
a member of Persia's permanent delegation at the League of Nations in
Geneva. In winter 1319 ˆ./1941 the Swiss press published articles critical
of Rezµa@ Shah, which resulted in his recall from Bern. Suspended for
several months, he was then appointed head of the small and insignificant
League of Nations section at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (¿A.
Entezáa@m, p. 155).
Following the Allied occupation of Persia in ˆahr^var 1320
ˆ./August-September 1941, he was promoted to head the third political
department (eda@ra-ye sevvom-e s^a@s^) of the ministry and assigned
the task of arranging for the expulsion of German and Italian citizens
from the country. In Esfand 1324 ˆ./March 1946 Entezáa@m was appointed
counsel general in Stuttgart, and in Farvard^n 1330 ˆ./April 1951 he was
recalled to join H®osayn ¿Ala@÷'s short-lived cabinet as minister of
foreign affairs. He was appointed minister of foreign affairs in the
cabinet of General Fazµl-Alla@h Za@hed^ in 1332 ˆ./1953, directly
involving him in the delicate task of arranging the resumption of
diplomatic relations with Britain, which had been severed on 30 Mehr 1331
ˆ./22 October 1952 by Moháammad Mosáaddeq, and more significantly, in the
settlement of the oil dispute. He retained his position and also acted as
deputy prime minister in ¿Ala@÷'s second cabinet (Farvard^n 1334-Farvard^n
1336 ˆ./April 1955-April 1957). On 3 Day 1334 ˆ./24 December 1955, having
spent some six months in Paris partly because of illness, he was replaced
as minister of foreign affairs by ¿Al^qol^ Ardala@n but retained as deputy
prime minister and minister without portfolio (waz^r-e moæa@wer).
The British ambassador to Tehran at the time described him as "a man of
considerable imagination and ability," whose "major contribution to recent
Iranian foreign policy has been the attempt to settle outstanding
differences and establish good relations with Iran's geographical
neighbours" (U.K., P.R.O., Stevens to Selwyn Lloyd, December 28, 1955,
F.O. 371/114811). Entezáa@m was not keen on Persia's hasty adherence to
the Baghdad Pact in October 1955, although in the ambassador's view he
"favoured adherence in principle" (ibid.).
Following the death in Ord^beheæt 1336 ˆ./May 1957 of Mortazµa@qol^
Baya@t, Entezáa@m served as chairman of the board of directors and
managing director (mod^r-e ¿a@mel) of the National Iranian Oil
Company. In this capacity he promoted younger politicians, such as the
future prime minister Am^r ¿Abba@s Hoveyda@ (q.v.), whom he knew from his
Stuttgart days. He employed him as his special assistant and later made
him a member of the board of directors of the National Iranian Oil Company
(Da@neæju@ya@n, VII, p. 35). Entezáa@m's opposition to the pace and
direction of royal reforms and to the growing royal autocracy, which he
shared with ¿Ala@÷ among others, resulted in his summary dismissal by the
shah. His replacement in AÚba@n 1342 ˆ./November 1963 by Manu@±ehr Eqba@l
(q.v.) was conducted in a manner he found deeply offensive. Ignored in
official circles for fifteen years, Entezáa@m returned briefly to the
political scene after he was summoned by the shah in 1357 ˆ./ 1978.
Entezáa@m did not accept ministerial responsibility but was appointed a
member of the ill-fated Regency Council (ˆu@ra@-ye saltÂanat).
¿Abd-Alla@h Entezáa@m drew much pleasure from spending time in his
engineering workshop and also enjoyed photography. Like his father, he was
a Sufi and became the leading figure in the Anjoman-e okòowwat (q.v.). He
wrote anonymously or under a pseudonym on Sufism in both Persian and
English. Untainted by corruption, he was, in the words of a British
ambassador who knew him well, a "man of charm, modesty, and considerable
ability, . . . spoke excellent English, French, and German, . . . shunned
high society and lacked ambition but had a great capacity for friendship
and was respected by all who knew him. The Shah would never have lost his
throne had he listened to and made full use of men such as Abdullah
Entezam" (Sir Denis Wright, The Times, 23 April 1983).
2. http://www.iranica.com/articles/v8f5/v8f514fig2.html,
also a diplomat and politician (b. in Tehran in 1278 ˆ./1899, d. 28 AÚdòar
1359/18 December 1980). Like his elder brother, ¿Abd-Alla@h, he joined the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs upon completion of his education at the German
Technical School and the School of Political Science. He worked in the
Persian embassy in Paris, as well as in Warsaw. In 1311 ˆ./1932 he
returned to Persia to work in the treaty department of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. During the Anglo-Persian oil dispute of 1311-12
ˆ./1932-33 (see ANGLO-IRANIAN OIL COMPANY) he served as secretary to the
Persian delegation and accompanied ¿Al^-Akbar Da@var and H®osayn ¿Ala@÷ to
Geneva to present the Persian case at the League of Nations. Subsequently,
he served as a member of the Persian delegation to the World Economic
Conference of 1933, worked in the Persian embassy in London, and over the
next four years was charge‚ d'affaires in Bern and deputy head of the
Persian delegation at the League of Nations (N. Entezáa@m, p. 165). In T^r
1317 ˆ./July 1938 he was appointed head of the third political department
of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In this capacity he was described as
"certainly the most effective [head] in recent years" (U.K., P.R.O.,
"Report on Personalities in Persia, 1940," F.O. 371/24582). He was later
appointed Chief of Protocol (ra÷^s-e taær^fa@t) at the royal court.
Following the abdication and departure of Rezµa@ Shah in ˆahr^var 1320
ˆ./September 1941 and until the appointment of Moháammed-¿Al^ Foru@g@^
(q.v.) as court minister in Esfand 1320 ˆ./March 1942, Nasár-Alla@h was
"fully in charge of the court" and developed close ties with
Moháammad-Rezµa@ Shah (N. Entezáa@m, p. 43). His ministerial career began
in Bahman 1321 ˆ./January 1943 with an appointment as health minister
(waz^r-e behda@r^) in Ahámad Qawa@m's cabinet. Thereafter he
successively served first as minister of post, telegraph, and telephones
and as minister of roads in the second cabinet of ¿Al^ Sohayl^ (February
1943-March 1944). He owed his ministerial position to royal favor and to
the desire of prime ministers to placate the shah (U.K., India Office,
"Report on Political Events of 1943," I.O.R. L/P&S/12/3472A). He was
reappointed minister of roads and soon made minister of foreign affairs in
Mortazµa@qol^ Baya@t's cabinet (November 1944-April 1945), but he resigned
in March 1945, joining the Persian delegation at the San Francisco
Conference, which established the United Nations. He served as a member
and later head of the Persian delegation at the United Nations in New
York. From 29 K¨orda@d 1329 ˆ./19 June 1950 until 31 ˆahr^var 1331 ˆ./22
September 1952 he was Persian ambassador to the United States. He also
served as the president of the fourth session of the United Nations
General Assembly in 1948. He was, however, eventually removed from his
ambassadorial post in Washington, D.C., and replaced by Alla@hya@r
S®a@lehá because he did not fully enjoy the confidence of then prime
minister Moháammad Mosáaddeq (Mosáaddeq, p. 84).
Following the coup of Morda@d 1332/August 1953 (q.v.) he was
reappointed ambassador to the United States and served until his
replacement by the cabinet minister ¿Al^ Am^n^, who was "lobbying a little
too obviously for the premiership" (U.K., P.R.O., Titchener to Riches, 18
November 1955, F.O. 248/1557). In February 1958 Nasár-Alla@h was appointed
ambassador to France, where he stayed until April 1962. In July 1962 he
was appointed minister without portfolio in the cabinet of Asad-Alla@h
¿Alam, with whom he had maintained close ties. He was elected chairman of
the inaugural congress (10-12 Ord^beheæt 1354 ˆ./30 April-2 May 1975) of
the Resurgence party (H®ezb-e rasta@kò^z-e mellat-e Èra@n), that the shah
had created, as the single permissible party—a development interpreted as
a sign of the declining power of ¿Alam's rival, Prime Minister Hoveyda@
(Da@neæju@ya@n, VII, p. 188).
According to a 1963 report by the United States embassy, the Entezáa@m
brothers were active members in an informal gathering (dawra),
which was formed around ¿Al^ Am^n^ and met every Wednesday for over twelve
years. Like other members of Am^n^'s dawra, the Entezáa@m brothers
were active participants in a number of other such gatherings
(Da@neæju@ya@n, XX, p. 17). The two brothers were, however, very different
in character and disposition. The flamboyant and sartorially elegant
bachelor, Nasár-Alla@h was also considered to be a capable official but
devoid of those qualities which accounted for the prestige and respect
accorded to his brother (see, e.g., GÚan^, XI, p. 28).
Bibliography: J. ¿Abdoh, Ùehel sa@l dar sáahána@-ye
qazµa@÷^, s^a@s^, d^ploma@s^-e Èra@n wa jaha@n, ed. M. Tafreæ^,
Tehran, 1368 ˆ./1989. I. Afæa@r, K¨a@táera@t wa asna@d
Z®ah^r-al-dawla, Tehran, 1351 ˆ./1972. Da@neæju@ya@n-e peyrow-e
kòatátá-e ema@m, Asna@d-e la@na-ye ja@su@s^, Tehran, n.d. ¿A.
Entezáa@m, "Gu@æa-^ az waqa@ye¿-e æahr^var wa ±egu@nag^-e raftan-e
atba@¿-e AÚlma@n," Sa@l-na@ma-ye donya@ 19, 1342 ˆ./1963, pp.
155-58. N. Entezáa@m, K¨a@tÂera@t-e Nasár-Alla@h Entezáa@m, ed. M.
R. ¿Abba@s T®ayara@n^, Tehran, 1371 ˆ./1992. Q. GÚan^, Ya@dda@ætha@-ye
doktor Qa@sem GÚan^, ed. S. GÚan^, 12 vols., London, 1980-84. M.
Kat^ra@÷^, Fera@ma@soner^ dar Èra@n, Tehran, 1347 ˆ./1968. GÚ.-H®.
Mosáaddeq, Dar kena@r-e pedar-am: K¨a@tÂera@t-e doktor GÚola@m-Háosayn
Mosáaddeq, ed. GÚ.-R. Naja@t^, Tehran, 1369 ˆ./1990. E. Ra@÷^n,
Fara@mu@æ-kòa@na@ wa fera@ma@soner^ dar Èra@n, 3 vols., Tehran,
1348 ˆ./1969. United States Embassy, Tehran to Department of State, "The
Iranian Intellectual Community, 21 December 1963," text in Da@neæju@ya@n,
XX, pp. 2-26. Idem, "The Iranian one-party state, 10 July 1957," in ibid.,
VII, pp. 184-94. D. Wright, "Abdullah Entezam," The Times, April
23, 1983. Interviews with members of the Entezáa@m family, in particular
with Mrs. Farahá Ansáa@r^.
(FAKHREDDIN AZIMI)
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