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Menashe Amir

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Menashe Amir

Menashe Amir (Template:Lang-he, b. 1940) is a long time Persian language broadcaster on the Israel Radio International, a channel of Kol Yisrael (lit. "Voice of Israel"). He is a former head of the Israel Broadcasting Authority's Persian language division. He is also a leading Iranian expert in Israel and a chief editor of the Foreign Ministry's Persian web-site.

Biography

Menashe Amir was born in Tehran, Iran, on Dec. 27th 1939 in a secular Jewish family. He has grown up in the ancient Jewish quater called "Mahleh". His primary education made in a christian missionary school called "Nour-Va-Sedaghat", and continued his secondary education in two Jewish schools named "Etehad" (Allianc) and "Kouresh" (Cyrus). He began his Journalist profession at the age of 17, in "Kayhan" evning newspaper. Amir made aliyah (immigration) to Israel on Oct. 19th 1959.[1] He has been working as a journalist and a broadcaster for over 55 years, and broadcasting to Iran for over 52 years.[2] Amir became popular in Israel during his coverage of the 1979 Iran hostage crisis. Currently retired from his post in the Israel Broadcasting Authority, he continues to host his radio program.

Radio program at "Kol Yisrael"

Amir is hosting a daily 1.5 hour radio program in Persian,[3] which is broadcast every evening to Iran on a shortwave.[4] The program includes a call-in portion, with Iranian listeners calling a special number in Germany.[5] While no hard data is available, the show is very popular in Iran and some experts estimate that up to 5 million Iranians listen to it.[6] Beside political discussions, the program also broadcasts the music banned in Iran. Iranian newspapers often denounce the radio as the "Zionist regime radio", and rebuke the radio program assertions.[7]

In the aftermath of the 2009 Iranian presidential election, the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed the "Zionist radio the bad British radio" for misleading the public.[8] This was widely interpreted as a reference to Menashe Amir's program on Kol Yisrael and a reference to BBC Persian.[9]

References

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