Although Iranians have lived in the United States in relatively small numbers since the 1930s, a large number of Iranian-Americans immigrated to the United States after the
Iranian Revolution of 1979. Data on this group is well documented by the
United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). According to the
2000 US census, there were 385,488 Americans of Iranian ancestry at that time. Racially, on the census, Iranian Americans have been classified as a
white American group. Most experts believe that the underrepresented number of Iranian-Americans in the ACS is a problem due to the fact that "many community members have been reluctant in identifying themselves as such because of the problems between Iran and the United States in the past two decades." Iranian Americans are most likely far more numerous in the United States than census data indicate. The group estimates that the number of Iranian-Americans may have topped 691,000 in 2004—more than twice the figure of 338,000 cited in the
2000 US census. Roughly half of the nation's Iranians reside in the state of
California alone. Approximately 6,000–10,000 Iranian Americans reside in the city of
Chicago, while up to 30,000 reside in the
Chicago metropolitan area. Some of this population is Iranian Assyrian.
Kings Point, New York, a village in
Great Neck, New York, is said to have the largest concentration of Iranians in the United States (nearly 30%). However, unlike the population in Los Angeles, the Great Neck population is almost exclusively
Jewish.
Nashville, Tennessee has
the largest Kurdish population in the United States, many of whom emigrated from Iran.
Significant Iranian population centers California has the largest concentration of Iranian-Americans. An area along Westwood Boulevard in Los Angeles has been officially designated
Persian Square by the city. It is widely believed that most Iranian-Americans in the United States are clustered in the large cities of California, namely
Greater Los Angeles, the
San Francisco Bay Area,
San Diego,
Sacramento, and
Fresno. According to extrapolated U.S. census data and other independent surveys done by Iranian-Americans themselves in 2009, there were an estimated one million Iranian-Americans living in the U.S., with the largest concentration—about 300,000 people—living in the greater Los Angeles area. For this reason, the Westwood, L.A. area, with its Iranian American residents, is sometimes colloquially referred to as "
Tehrangeles", "Irangeles", or "Little Persia" among Iranian-Americans. In 1985, the
Los Angeles Times estimated 200,000 Iranian-Americans were living in California; and by 1991 the estimate jumped to 800,000, however the accuracy of these numbers could be debated due to a lack of data. Iranian-Americans have formed
ethnic enclaves in many affluent neighborhoods mostly in the
Los Angeles metropolitan area. In
Los Angeles, Iranians were concentrated in
Tarzana,
West Hills,
Hidden Hills,
Woodland Hills,
Beverly Hills,
Calabasas,
Brentwood, and
Rancho Palos Verdes.
Tarzana has the highest concentration of Iranians in Los Angeles County, according to the US census in 2000. Second-generation Iranian Americans living outside major population centers showed high rates of intermarriage and lower
Persian literacy.
Texas Texas also has a large population of Iranian descent. And like California, Iranians in Texas are concentrated in the larger major cities of the state.
Houston has the largest population of Iranians and Iranian expats, with an estimated 70,000 residents (50,000 in 1994), mainly due to the
Texas Medical Center and the presence of large energy companies. Houston contains an Iranian business district including shops and restaurants that has been dubbed "Little Persia" by the
Houston Press. There are many Iranian Zoroastrians and
Baháʼís living there. Some of the more well known residents of the Houston area in the past or present are
Jasmin Moghbeli,
Susan Roshan,
Shawn Daivari,
Farinaz Koushanfar,
Haydeh,
Mahasti and Kavon Hakimzadeh (captain of the
US09S Harry Truman Naval aircraft carrier).
Ibrahim Yazdi was a graduate of
Baylor College of Medicine and
Kamal Kharazi also is an alumnus of
University of Houston.
Hushang Ansary, an active philanthropist, has been a "founding benefactor" of the
Houston Museum of Fine Arts. The George Bush Presidential Library has a gallery named after him. Iranians in Houston particularly came under the spotlight when Iranian student and activist Gelareh Bagherzadeh was murdered in Houston in 2012. The perpetrator,
Ali Irsan, was later convicted and sentenced to death for the crime, an
honor killing in retaliation against Bagherzadeh's encouragement of Irsan's daughter to leave Islam and marry a Christian man. The other notable Iranian in Texas that gained national attention in recent years was
UT Austin's
Omid Kokabee who was imprisoned in Iran for political reasons. The
Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area is estimated to have over 30,000 Iranian-Americans. Iran's first astronaut
Anousheh Ansari for many years was a resident of
Plano, Texas, a suburb of
Dallas-Fort Worth. Dallas' Iranian community was large and influential enough to host US Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo for a private visit in April 2019. And San Antonio and Austin each are said to have 3000–5000 Iranian American residents each, who are mostly attracted to large academic centers of excellence such as
South Texas Medical Center and
UT Austin or the climate of the
Texas Hill Country area that is not un-similar to the southern Iran
Zagros Mountains region. The largest concentration of
Mandaeans from
Khuzestan outside the middle east are settled in the San Antonio area. The Shah of Iran was also last hospitalized at San Antonio's
Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center in
Lackland Air Force Base during his last days. This is the same base that trained many pilots of Iran's Royal Air Force before the 1979 revolution. File:4shanbeh jashn.jpg|Public party during
Chaharshanbe Suri in San Antonio. File:Rooznameh Dallas.jpg|
Shahrvand newsletter has been published in Dallas for over 20 years. File:Chelokababi san antonio.JPG|A popular Iranian restaurant in southern Texas. File:Kavon Hakimzadeh (1).jpg|
Kavon Hakimzadeh the captain of the
USS Harry Truman is a Texan by birth.
Religion Many Iranian-Americans are non-Muslim due to the religious composition of those fleeing the
Iranian Revolution, which included a disproportionate share of Iran's religious minorities, as well as subsequent ex-Muslim asylum seekers and other conversions away from Islam. Many Iranian Americans identify as
irreligious or
Shiite, but a full one-fifth are
Christians,
Jews,
Baháʼís, or
Zoroastrians. Additionally, there are also some Iranian
Mandaeans, but they are very small in number. According to Pew Research, about 22% of those who left Islam in the United States are Iranian Americans. A 2012 national telephone survey of a sample of 400 Iranian-Americans, commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans and conducted by Zogby Research Services, asked the respondents what their religions were. The responses broke down as follows:
Muslim 31%,
atheist/
realist/
humanist 11%,
agnostic 8%, Baháʼí 7%,
Jewish 5%,
Protestant 5%,
Roman Catholic 2%,
Zoroastrian 2%, "Other" 15%, and "No response" 15%. The survey had a cooperation rate of 31.2%. According to
Harvard University's
Robert D. Putnam, the average Iranian is slightly less religious than the average American. In the book
Social Movements in 20th Century Iran: Culture, Ideology, and Mobilizing Frameworks, author Stephen C. Poulson adds that
Western ideas are making Iranians
irreligious. There are religious and
ethnolinguistic differences among the Muslim, Jewish, Baháʼí, Zoroastrian, Christian,
Armenian,
Azerbaijani,
Kurdish, and
Assyrian groups. Calculating the percentage of
Christian Iranian-Americans is difficult because most Iranian Christians (especially those raised in the faith) are of
Armenian or
Assyrian origin; and, apart from identifying as Iranian, a number amongst them also strongly self-identifies as Armenian or Assyrian, rather than as (or apart from) Iranian.
Ethnicity The majority of Iranian-Americans are ethnic
Persians, with sizeable ethnic minorities being
Iranian Azerbaijanis,
Armenians,
Iranian Jews,
Kurds,
Assyrians,
Mandaeans,
Turkmen,
Baloch,
Arabs, among others. According to Hakimzadeh and Dixon in 2006, members of religious and ethnic minorities such as Baháʼís, Jews, Armenians, and Assyrians were disproportionately represented amongst the early exiles of the 1978–1979 revolution. Nearly all Iranians who reside in the United States are either
citizens (81%) or
permanent residents (15%) of the United States (2008 survey). Iranian-Americans regard their
culture and heritage as an important component of their day-to-day life and their overall identity within the United States. == Integration ==