“Everyone wants to go back,” says one former student.
[ feature ]In 1978, the Tehran American School closed its doors after 24 years in operation. J. Thom McInnis, a high school senior at the time, had a part-time job working for Pan Am. “I remember evacuating many of my schoolmates and their families those last days when I worked at the airport,” he says. “I remember fathers throwing their children over the heads of the crowds at the airport in a bid to get closer to the front of the line for those limited seats out of the country.”
For Anthony Roberts, author of Sons of the Great Satan, the sudden departure from Iran came as a shock. “I was angry. I was pissed off. I didn’t understand it because I was a teenaged boy. Now that I am older, I understand it was the loss that really made me angry.” Overnight, his whole world abruptly changed. He was separated from his closest friends and uprooted from the place he’d come to call home.
When I left Iran, I didn’t know what happened to any of my classmates for 30 years…. It wasn’t like so-and-so went off to this college and so-and-so went off to that college. It was like 24 hours. You can pack one bag. You have to leave now. Nothing set up on the other end. You’re just going home to set up with relatives and go on from there.
Social networking brought the former classmates back together. They started reaching out to one another and now have several active groups on Facebook. Roberts says, “For some of us there were tears. It was like a 30-year-old weight lifted from us.”