Career: diplomacy and Sufism
Abbas Milani in his book on Eminent Persians says: "Both diplomacy and Sufism became inseparable parts of Abdollah’s character and career." Iran's ambassador to France in 1927, Presented Iran’s case against Britain to the League of Nations in 1933, Iran's ambassador to West Germany, Minister of Finance under Mohammad Reza Shah, then Foreign Minister 1953-56, Negotiated the resumption of diplomatic relations with Britain and the oil contracts after Mossadegh. Chairman of the board of directors and Managing Director of NIOC (National Iranian Oil Company) 1957-63. Dismissed by the Shah after the uprisings of 1963, for suggesting that the pace of reforms should be slowed down. Marvin Zonis wrote on this subject in The Political Elite of Iran. p63 Dealing with the counter elite. According to Zonis, Hossein Ala the court minister, called together a council of elite statesmen to convey their mounting concern to the Shah, in relation to the extreme response of the military to demonstrations against the arrest of Khomeini in June 1963.Patronage and freemasonry
According to Abbas Milani's book '' The Persian Sphinx'', he was the mentor of the Prime Minister Amir-Abbas Hoveida who referred to him as ''arbab'' (the boss). Milani said in ''The Persian Sphinx'' (page 115): "In the mid-1950s when the Shah began to demand absolute obedience from all those around him, and as a token of this submission expected everyone to kiss the royal hand at each audience, Entezam was one of very few people in government who refused to comply." He was also a Freemason, and in 1960, apparently at his behest, Hoveida (spelt Hoveyda by Milani) joined the Foroughi Lodge, newly created in 1960 with Entezam as its grand master. In Ismail Raeen's (also spelt Ra'in) book on Freemasonry in Iran, Faramooshkhaneh va Faramasonery dar Iran Vol3, p505, Hoveida is listed as a Freemason and Entezam as the grand master of the Independent Grand Lodge of Iran. In Religion and politics in modern Iran : a reader, Lloyd V J Ridgeon on p. 150 states that "several Masonic Iranian Lodges connected to the United Grand Lodges of Germany operated from the premises of the Safi Ali Shahi Brotherhood Society in Tehran and Entezam had been a founder member in Tehran since 1960 of one of these, the Mehr Lodge and also guided another, the Safa Lodge, which had been established in 1962 ".Religion and politics in modern Iran: a reader Google BooksSufism
Upon the death of his father he became the leader of the Safi Ali Shahi order of dervishes in Iran. A New Perspective on Mysticism and Sufism: Abdollah Entezam, Introduced and translated by Matthijs van der Bos. In 1977 Entezam wrote a series of articles entitled ‘A New Perspective on Mysticism and Sufism – Nazari tazeh be erfan va tassavof-. He used the pseudonym ‘I do not know’ (la adri) and the articles reported the question and answer sessions of a Sufi Master. The essays were republished after the revolution by Vahid Publishers, under the pseudonym of Abdollah Azadeh in 1984.End of life
At the start of the Iranian revolution, in 1978 the 86-year-old Entezam was offered the role of Prime minister by the Shah, but was said to have turned it down on health grounds. Some have said he was imprisoned by the new Islamist regime and released before his death in spring 1983. However, in the Persian Wikipedia page on him, it is stated that unlike his brother Nasrollah, he was not imprisoned or tortured and that even Ayatollah Khomeini did not want him to be arrested. His obituary appeared in the Times by Sir Denis Wright on 23 April 1983, in which he said: "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 AbdollahReferences
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