Habib Sabet | |
---|---|
1964 | |
Born | Habib Sabet 1903 |
Died | 1990 (aged 86–87) |
Occupation | Businessman |
Known for | Founder of the first television station in Iran |
Habib Sabet (Persian:حبیب ثابت; 1903 – 1990) was a businessman and follower of theBaháʼí Faith.[1][2] He is considered one of Iran's major industrialists.[3]
Sabet was born in Tehran in 1903.[1] Both his maternal and paternal grandparents wereIranian Jews who had converted to the Bahá’i Faith.[4] He began to involve in business selling tobacco and renting bicycles.[5] In 1925 he went to Beirut where he started his transport services between Tehran and Baghdad.[6] In the 1950s his business activities expanded and mostly included car dealerships, manufacturing, and agricultural machinery.[5]
One of his companies was Firooz Trading Company.[7] He wasgranted the franchises of many American and European brands, includingGeneral Electric,Kelvinator,Westinghouse andVolkswagen.[8] In 1955 he managed to acquire the rights to bottlePepsi Cola in Iran.[5] However, the same year due to the anti-Baháʼí movements and the fatwa ofAyatollah Hossein Borujerdi against Pepsi Sabet became the target of the attacks.[5]
Sabet was also the founder of Iran's first television station.[3][9] His television station was called "Iran Television" which was launched in Tehran on 23 October 1958.[7]
Sabet left Iran before theregime change in 1979,[6] and he spent his remaining years inParis, France. He died at theCedars-Sinai Medical Center inLos Angeles of congestive heart failure in 1990 at the age of 86.[6][10] He had theSabet Pasal built inTehran, a palace modeled after thePetit Trianon in Versailles.[11] His companies and other assets were confiscated by the Islamic government of Iran shortly after its establishment.[6]