Teaching career Naifeh’s father told her from an early age that he wanted her to become a teacher, advice which she was initially determined to ignore.
Foreign postings In Meshed, Iran, Naifeh worked as assistant to the American
consul. All Americans were ordered to leave the city in 1952, due to the political turmoil that resulted a year later in the
overthrow of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh. Marion and George Naifeh moved to the capital city of
Tehran, where she worked in the visa section and he served as the radio officer. Before Mossadegh was ultimately overthrown, the Naifehs left for
Baghdad,
Iraq, where they served in
The American Friends of the Middle East, an organization founded by journalist
Dorothy Thompson. The Naifehs returned to the United States in 1956, re-entering private life and briefly running a beverage company in Tulsa, Oklahoma. They returned to the Foreign Service in 1961, moving to Baida, a new capital of Libya, and the smallest U.S. embassy in the world at the time. Naifeh's husband served as public affairs officer, both in Baida and eventually in the nearby city of Benghazi. From Benghazi, the Naifehs were assigned to the Nigerian capital of Lagos, where George served as cultural affairs officer. They moved again, to the American consulate in
Karachi, Pakistan, where he also served as cultural affairs officer. After a year spent in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, where George served as diplomat in residence at the
University of Minnesota, the Naifehs went abroad again 1974 to Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, where he served as public affairs officer. Four years later they moved to their last post,
Amman,
Jordan, not far from
Ajlun, the Jordanian town where Naifeh’s father-in-law was born, before emigrating to the United States at age 10. ==Married life==