PAHLAVI FOUNDATION
H.I.M KING OF KINGS SHAHANSHAH ARYAMEHR
with the passage of time,the future iranian generations who will recount the economic flowering of the iran of yesterday as an unbelieveable event and a "myth"will search through the golden pages of history for the secrect of this system which was so creative and full of dynamism and effort. they will come upon the name of a man who spent so much energy , who constructed so much,who created so many honors and achievements all of which were destroyed by a minority of his nation,who cast everything to the wind and congratulated themeselves in doing so.in a state of reverence they will cite his immortal name with gratefulness and praise, and they will be much grieved.




The
Shah's American Baby
Kenneth C. Crowe
The views expressed by the author in this newsletter are not necessarily the
views of the Foundation.
(THE CONTEXT: Foreign investment in the United States is burgeoning, while public
consciousness of this perennial phenomenon has been raised by the prospect of
Middle Eastern oil money buying large pieces of American corporations and real
estate. The traditional investors in the U.S. have been the Europeans, but in
recent years, nouveau investors
the Japanese, the Arabs, the Iranians
have
appeared on the American horizon. An understanding of the impact of foreign
money and foreign ownership is obscured by a lack of knowledge. The following
article deals with an unusual investment by the Shah of Iran.)
The Pahlavi Foundation's high rise building, under construction at 650 Fifth
Avenue in New York City, would seem at first glance to be a symbolic investment
in America, since the Iranians starting with a fanfare of great intentions for
their bundles of petrodollars have invested so little directly into the United
States.
But there is a deeper significance to the Pahlavi Building, or the Iran Building,
or whatever they decide to call it, in that the structure will represent Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in a role of a philanthropist investing not in just a
conspicuous piece of valuable real estate, but in an American foundation. The
Pahlavi Foundation, founded and headed by the Shah, has created an American
offspring, the Pahlavi Foundation (New York) to own the building at Fifth Avenue
and 52nd Street and to make other investments in the United States. The income
from the high rise, which is expected to range between $2-million and $3-million
a year, will be used to send Iranian students to American colleges and universities.
The Pahlavi Foundation (New York) was incorporated on Dec. 5, 1973 with William
P. Rogers, the former U.S. Secretary of State, as one of the three founding
directors. The other two directors, Frederick P. Glick and Charles A. Simmons,
are attorneys in Rogers' law firm, Rogers & Wells, which has offices in
New York City and Washington, D.C. Foundation executives, interviewed in the
Pahlavi Building on Pahlavi Avenue in Tehran, frankly admit that the Pahlavi
Foundation (New York) was formed to prevent the exposure of the business holdings
and operations of the parent foundation in Iran. U.S. laws granting charitable
organizations a tax-free status also require public disclosure of sources of
income, investments and expenditures.
The Pahlavi Foundation in Iran evokes a mixture of reactions from Americans
working in that Middle Eastern country, who believe it to be anything from a
sham foundation whose real purpose is to serve as the Shah's personal holding
company to the conviction that the foundation spends its income for charitable
and educational programs. The foundation's executives depicted their organization
in the bright light of good works. "I don't know of one penny of Pahlavi
Foundation money which went to the Royal Family or His Majesty," one said,
adding: "You know the Royal Family can get money elsewhere."
While the public doesn't get annual reports, the Shah is supposed to get weekly
progress reports. "He gets a report of the meetings and procedures
Once
a week, the vice executor reports directly to His Majesty on the activities
of the Pahlavi Foundation. I believe it is on Tuesdays," an executive said.
The Shah, who both started the foundation and gave it his family name, is said
to follow the organization's activities with particular interest. "This
is his baby," one of the executives said.
The foundation did publish a Progress Report for public consumption in the London
Times of May 22, 1973. This report traces the beginnings of the Pahlavi Foundation
to 1950 when the Shah issued a proclamation distributing "all the lands
he had inherited among the farmers who were tilling them." The following
year, Bank Omran, which the foundation owns, was formed to provide loans for
seed, fertilizer and farm implements for these farmers.
In 1958, the Shah formally set up the Pahlavi Foundation, according to the Progress
Report. And in 1961, in the midst of a combined anti-corruption and land reform
drive, the Shah ordered the full distribution of the Crown lands by January,
1962, and the transfer of his entire fortune to the foundation. Newspaper accounts
at the time placed the value of this endowment at between $100-million and $131-million.
Dana Adam Schmidt, reporting for the New York Times from Tehran on July 27,
1961, wrote of the Shah's contribution to the land reform: "He inherited
about 1,000 villages covering 7,000,000 acres and worth about $100,000,000 from
his father, Riza Shah Pahlevi. The present Shah has already distributed the
lands of about 330 villages." The official version of the happenings in
1961 as recorded in the Progress Report in the London Times was: The Foundation
was registered as a public endowment in 1961, and from that day on, the entire
personal wealth and property of the Pahlavi Family were devoted to charity and
public welfare."
The Progress Report gave an outline of the philanthropic activities of the foundation
including a total of 6,850 students being granted scholarships or loans for
advanced degrees; 7,636 children being cared for in 88 orphanages, foundling
homes, nurseries, hostels, youth aid centres and vocational schools; book translations;
writing awards; grants for the repair of mosques; and the underwriting of the
costs of sending athletes to the Olympics.
Irans Blue Chips
The foundation is better known among Americans in Iran for its business ventures:
the Bank Omran; luxury hotels, such as an interest in Tehran's Hilton; factories;
and oil drilling ventures.
An urbane foundation executive readily agreed that the Pahlavi Foundation has
extensive business investments, just as the Rockefeller Foundation or the Ford
Foundation in the United States. "In Iran, you don't have such things as
bonds and stocks. Our fixed income producer, which is equivalent to blue chip
stocks in the United States, is real estate. We are interested in fixed, secure
income. We invest in hotels, buildings and apartments, That provides us with
fixed income
Stock is now becoming available (in Iran). We have invested
some in what we consider the prime industries."
He explained the evolution of the Pahlavi Foundation's investment in New York
City: "The management of the Pahlavi Foundation presented the proposal
to His Majesty, and he approved it
We're putting up a building of 36 stories.
The object is to generate an income in order to grant scholarships, fellowships
to Iranian students
The idea was to generate some money in the U.S. locally."
There are about 25,000 Iranians studying in the U.S. The executive indicated
that the construction of the high rise, for which a name has yet to be chosen,
would cost about $30-million. He said the anticipated income from the building
would be "very small, some two to three million dollars net per year."
In urging the U.S. Internal Revenue Service to grant the Pahlavi Foundation
(New York) its tax exemption, Eugene T. Rossides of the Rogers & Wells law
firm wrote: "This program is not only important to Iran but will also bring
significant benefits to the United States because future leaders in Iran will
have received part of their education in the United States and will have developed
associations and friendships here. The program will be an important factor in
fostering and strengthening Iranian-U.S. friendship and relations." The
exemption was granted.
The purchase of the site on the southwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 52nd Street
came in the summer of 1973 while Rogers was still Richard Nixon's Secretary
of State and months before the New York branch of the foundation was incorporated.
Reports filed with the IRS show the land had a market value of $7,883,333, and
was being carried on the foundation books at $12,508,894. The foundation has
demolished the DePinna Building, a nine-story structure built in 1928. The group
which sold the land to the foundation had intended to tear down the DePinna
Building themselves, planning to replace it with a high rise similar to the
one being built by the Pahlavi Foundation. The new office tower will house various
Iranian government offices, the Iranian consulate, the National Iranian Oil
Company; possibly an exclusive private oilmen's club; as well as providing office
space for private corporations.
Some Conclusions:
The location of the Pahlavi Foundation's property on Fifth Avenue just north
of Rockefeller Center, St. Patrick's Cathedral, and the 51-story Olympic Towers
office-apartment building complex can only be described as exquisite. The foundation's
investment could easily be interpreted as a symbolic gesture of the new greatness
of Iran, because it is placed where it will be seen by the nation's and the
world's tourists and businessmen strolling along Fifth Avenue. I agree with
an assessment offered by an American businessman in Tehran with an intimate
knowledge of Iranian politics and finance: "There's certainly some prestige
involved, but that in itself is not enough of an explanation. It's more an eleemosynary
aspect than the prestige."
Received in New York on June 4, 1976
©1976 Kenneth C. Crowe
Kenneth C. Crowe is an Alicia Patterson Foundation award winner on leave from
Newsday. He is studying the investment and movement of foreign funds into the
United States with emphasis on the OPEC nations' oil monies. This article may
be published with credit to Newsday and Mr. Crowe as a Fellow of the Alicia
Patterson Foundation.
AND THIS IS WHAT JIMMY CARTER AND OTHER ENEMIES OF THE SHAH DID TO IRAN BACK IN 1979
AND BY MAKING IRAN AN INSTABLE COUNTRY AND PUSHING FOR ISLAM ,THEY UNLEASHED THE WORLDWIDE TERRORISM.
PEOPLE OF THE WORLD HAVE ALL WITNESSED THAT IN THE PAST 30 YEARS.
AS IRANIAN-AMERICANS WE ARE THANKFUL THAT AFTER YEARS OF INVESTIGATIONS FBI FINALLY
CAUGHT UP WITH "ALAVI FOUNDATION" FORMERLY PAHLAVI FOUNDATION. AND WE SHALL SEE THE DAY
THAT THE MURDEROUS REGIME OF MULLAS IN IRAN ,WILL BE REMOVED BY PEOPLE'S WILL.
CHECK OUT THE FOLLOWING LINKS TO LEARN MORE ABOUT "ALAVI FOUNDATION"
LEFT LINK"ALAVI FOUNDATION" Iranian Mystery on 5th Avenue
RIGHT LINK "ALAVI FOUNDATION " front organization for the iranian regime"
FBI moves to seize Muslim properties
Assets include N.Y. skyscraper, Shiite mosques, schools run by non-profit group tied to Iran
FBI moves to seize Muslim properties
President of Alavi Foundation Indicted for Obstruction of Justice