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This Happened

This Happened — May 15: A Preaching Legend Takes To The Road

Billy Graham’s 1957 crusade began at Madison Square Garden in New York City on this day. The crusade drew a total of 2.3 million people over the course of its four-month run, with an average attendance of around 18,000 people per night.

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Who was Billy Graham?

Billy Graham was an American evangelist and prominent Christian leader who rose to international fame in the mid-20th century for his dynamic preaching and mass revival meetings.

Was Billy Graham rich?

Graham was known for his frugal lifestyle and modest personal finances. It is worth noting, however, that Graham did oversee significant fundraising efforts throughout his career, which helped to finance his large-scale evangelistic crusades and support a wide range of charitable organizations. However, the funds raised were typically used to support the mission of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and related organizations, rather than to enrich Graham personally.

What was Billy Graham's message?

Billy Graham's message focused on the core beliefs of Christianity, including the need for personal salvation through faith in Jesus Christ. He emphasized the importance of repentance, forgiveness, and living a life of faith and service to others.

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Geopolitics

Iran's Protests Sealed The Bond Between Expats And Those Who Never Left — Now What?

Mass protests which lasted for months in Iran last year galvanized Iranians at home and abroad, in a way not seen since the 1979 revolution. That unity must be maintained as political capital for the next time Iranians challenge the Islamic Republic.

A woman waves the Iranian flag sitting on a trafifc light.

A woman waves the Iranian flag sitting on a trafifc light during a march in Paris to denounce the Islamic regime in Iran, December 11, 2022.

Remon Haazen via ZUMA
Yusef Mosaddeqi

-Analysis-

From the 1979 revolution that brought Iran's Shia clerics to power, to the mass protests of late 2022, Iranians came to accept the idea of an intrinsic divide between those living in post-revolutionary Iran, and those who fled or have simply left during the decades since.

The regime's own propaganda eagerly fueled visions of a hostile, if worthless, population living abroad: supposedly without roots or identity, 'Westoxicated,' to cite one of the regime's cherished terms, selfish, superficial and above all, oblivious to the realities of life in Iran.

Many inside Iran must have absorbed the negative narrative on expatriates, or kharejneshinan, given the regime's relentless hate-mongering, and judging by the resentful treatment Iranians visiting from abroad have sometimes received. Many will have been chided for abandoning their country or "knowing nothing" of the struggles of those who have lived out decades of their lives in a homeland that has become stifling. Others may have been accused of visiting Iran for cheaper medical treatments, or to relive the good old days for a few weeks, before returning to better lives abroad.

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