Here and Now
Iranians in Wisconsin Share Worries on the Middle East War
Clip: Season 2400 Episode 2435 | 4m 18sVideo has Closed Captions
Iranians living in Wisconsin share their perspectives as U.S. airstrikes continue.
U.S. airstrikes on Iran are continuing, and Iranians living in Wisconsin share their perspectives on worrying about their families and friends as well as their hopes for the future of their homeland.
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Here and Now is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Here and Now
Iranians in Wisconsin Share Worries on the Middle East War
Clip: Season 2400 Episode 2435 | 4m 18sVideo has Closed Captions
U.S. airstrikes on Iran are continuing, and Iranians living in Wisconsin share their perspectives on worrying about their families and friends as well as their hopes for the future of their homeland.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship>> Watching and living the war from afar.
That's what Iranians in Wisconsin face as they worry and wonder about family and friends.
They're cut off from communication "Here& Now".
Reporter Steven Potter spoke with two Iranian people in Milwaukee about being so disconnected from loved ones during these times, and the hopes they have for their homeland after the war.
>> Watching the war in Iran unfold from thousands of miles away is causing a lot of worry for Wisconsin residents like Zahra Fakhri and Ali Soltani.
Communication with loved ones still in Iran is infrequent at best.
>> It's because of the blackout.
There's no way to call them.
So they're calling us directly by the phone lines.
And the quality of the call is terrible.
What they say is always that we're we are okay.
Everything is fine.
>> Have you been in contact with friends and family that you have in Iran?
>> Yes.
Internet is cut off, right?
So my sister just yesterday through landline had called me.
They all have moved to smaller cities, so they're not in Tehran anymore, even in the small cities, a couple places where these are the garrisons and security forces, places that have been hit.
She knew about those.
But Tehran is really a lot of people here, a lot of loud noises, the bombing and scare some people.
Of course.
>> Fakhri and Soltani have different feelings about the United States and Israel beginning the war in Iran and removing the country's supreme leader from power.
>> It was the last option for us.
At first, we were so happy because of the intervention that we were waiting for.
After that, we got really happy and thrilled because of the death of the Khomeini.
But we all knew that it's not just one person, it's a systematic.
We cannot say that and topple that government down just by killing one person.
>> We have always opposed foreign war.
It's a very brutal regime.
So some people, because they were fed up, they they said, oh, United States come and attack that kind of mentality.
But foreign interference will never end up well in the long run.
>> But Fakhri and Soltani do agree that it should be the Iranian people who decide who leads their homeland, and it should not be the leaders of other countries who choose Iran's next government, who should lead Iran.
>> Whoever.
Iranian people inside Iran and Iranian people outside of Iran agreeing with.
>> We want the US, the international community to let the Iranians.
After 120 years of fighting for freedom, we don't want to go back to another dictatorship.
It doesn't matter how you sugarcoat it.
It's a dictatorship.
We don't want to go to one man rule.
We don't want no clergy.
We don't want no Shah.
We want a non-nuclear, secular, democratic republic based on rule of law, that if you don't like somebody, you can vote them out, right?
Just like us, just like France, just like many democratic countries.
>> What resolution are you hoping for in the end?
>> Getting rid of Islamic regime, Iranian people doing their job to make the country free and having a secular government and better place and showing the world what is real Iran and what is real Iranian people, and how it could be a better world with peaceful country in the Middle East.
That's what we are looking for.
>> We want the US and every other country to recognize our right to choose our own form of government.
That is what's dear to us.
And that's what actually, in the long run, is for the benefit of Iran and the international community.
international community.
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