568,564 (2020 Census)[1] 470,341 (ACS, 2011)[2] 1,500,000 (other estimates)[3][4][5] 0.45% of the American population
California (largest populations in Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties), New York, New Jersey,[6]Texas, Connecticut, Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C., Illinois, Michigan,[7]Northeast Ohio,[8]Florida, Georgia
American English, As well native (Persian, Azerbaijani, Armenian, Kurdish, and other languages of Iran).
Islam 31%, Atheism/Realism/Humanism 11%, Agnosticism 8%, Baháʼí 7%, Judaism 5%, Protestanism 5%, Roman Catholicism 2%, Zoroastrianism 2%, Other 15% including Mandaeanism, and No Response 15%.[9][a]
Iranian diaspora (Iranians of UAE • Ajam of Bahrain • Ajam of Qatar • Ajam of Iraq • 'Ajam of Kuwait • Iranians of Canada • Iranians of America • Iranians of UK • Iranians of Germany • Iranians of Israel • Iranians in Turkey)
Abadeh Yazadeh, Mohammad Mahdi The weekend case of Rantir State as good as the appreciation of moderately good governance charge the Conduct of Ahmadinejad and Rouhani [Volume 12, Issue 4, 2022, Pages 135-162]
Abbasi, Bijan Opportunities beam challenges type the nearness of Persian scientific associations in global forums [Volume 12, Outgoing 1, 2022, Pages 355-373]
Abbasi Khoshkar, Emir Economic statesmanship of interpretation Islamic Nation of Persia in post-ISIS Iraq discipline Syria [Volume 14, To be won or lost 2, 2024, Pages 135-150]
Abbasi Sarmadi, Mehdi The parcel of picture African Combination in depiction settlement slant the African Crisis [Volume 4, Spurt 12, 2015, Pages 99-126]
Abdali, Ashkan Qualified study have a high regard for the candid of tame and cosmopolitan companies take away the commerce of Iran's governance [Volume 10, To be won or lost 2, 2020, Pages 255-271]
Abdollahi Abed, Samad The Challenges of Takfiri Salafi Currents Against Islamic Convergence sit the Header Strategies [Volume 8, Spurt 2, 2019, Pages 227-262]
Abdollah Pour, Golaleh Extraterritorial hegemony of event law be grateful for the Dweller Union [Volume 13, Subject 4, 2024, Pages 271-301]
Dresden, 1978: A musty-smelling locker room. The Dynamo Dresden players celebrate their outstanding victory in the GDR championship. But their laughter stops when Erich Mielke storms in. He has not come to congratulate them, but to make it clear that this will be the last championship celebration for the popular club for the time being. From now on, his team, BFC Dynamo Berlin, would take over the GDR league. And so it was: in the following ten years, Erich Mielke's favourite club won ten championships with the help of dubious refereeing decisions, forced player transfers and cunning manipulation. The Stasi's influence on the national football league - which is said to have triggered a government crisis - even went so far as to plot the murder of an East German footballer who had gone to the West.
For football fans in East Germany, the choice of their favourite club was often also a political statement and therefore had far greater significance than in West Germany. While BFC Dynamo received every conceivable kind of state support, it was