Mehran Karimi Nasseri | |
|---|---|
مهران کریمی ناصری | |
Nasseri in 2005 | |
| Born | 1945 (1945)[1] |
| Died | 12 November 2022(2022-11-12) (aged 77) |
| Other names | Sir, Alfred Mehran |
| Citizenship | |
Mehran Karimi Nasseri (Persian:مهران کریمی ناصری,pronounced[mehˈrɒnkæriˈminɒseˈri]; 1945 – 12 November 2022), also known asSir, Alfred Mehran,[2] was an Iranianrefugee wholived in the departure lounge of Terminal 1 inCharles de Gaulle Airport from 26 August 1988 until July 2006, when he was hospitalized. His autobiography was published as a book,The Terminal Man, in 2004. Nasseri's story inspired the 1993 filmLost in Transit and the 2004 filmThe Terminal. He returned to living at the airport in September 2022, and died there of a heart attack in November 2022.
Nasseri was born in theAnglo-Persian Oil Company settlement located inMasjed Soleyman, Iran. His father, Abdelkarim, was an Iranian doctor working for the company which allowed Nasseri to grow up relatively affluently.[3] Nasseri has claimed that he was the result of an illegitimate affair, and that his mother was a nurse from Scotland working in the same place but had also claimed a Swedish mother. However, these claims were never substantiated, and it is most likely that Nasseri's mother was an Iranianhomemaker.[4][5] Aged 28, he arrived in theUnited Kingdom in September 1973, to take a three-year course inYugoslav studies at theUniversity of Bradford.[6]

Nasseri alleged that he was expelled from Iran in 1977 for protests against theShah and after a long battle, involving applications in several countries, was awarded refugee status by theUnited Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Belgium. This allegedly permitted residence in many other European countries. However, this claim was disputed, with investigations showing that Nasseri was never expelled from Iran.[4]
He was able to travel between the United Kingdom and France, but in 1988, his papers were lost when his briefcase was allegedly stolen.[7] Others indicate that Nasseri actually mailed his documents to Brussels while on board a ferry to Britain, lying about them being stolen.[8] Arriving in London, he was returned to France when he failed to present a passport to British immigration officials. At the French airport, he was unable to prove his identity or refugee status and was detained in thewaiting area for travellers without papers.[5]
Nasseri's case was later taken on by French human rights lawyer Christian Bourget.[9]Attempts were then made to have new documents issued from Belgium, but the authorities there would do so only if Nasseri presented himself in person. In 1995, the Belgian authorities granted permission for him to travel to Belgium, but only if he agreed to live there under the supervision of a social worker. Nasseri refused this on the grounds of wanting to enter the UK as originally intended.[7]Both France and Belgium offered Nasseri residency, but he refused to sign the papers as they listed him as being Iranian (rather than British) and did not show his preferred name, "Sir, Alfred Mehran" (including the misplaced comma).[2] His refusal to sign the documents was much to the frustration of his lawyer, Bourget.[8] When contacted about Nasseri's situation, his family stated that they believed he was living the life he wanted.[4]
During his long stay at Terminal 1 in the Charles de Gaulle Airport, he could be found, day or night, around the Paris Bye Bye bar, where he wrote in his journal, listened to the radio, and smoked his gold pipe, or ate a meal at McDonald's. The meals were bought for him by strangers, and he sometimes sat on a red bench in the Terminal's first level in a reflective trance.[6] In other accounts, his luggage was always by his side, as he wrote in his diary or studied economics.[10][11]
In 2003,Steven Spielberg'sDreamWorks production company paid a rumoured US$275,000 to Nasseri for the rights to his story, but ultimately did not use his story in the filmThe Terminal.[5]
Nasseri's 18-year stay at the airport ended in July 2006 when he was hospitalized and his sitting place was dismantled. Towards the end of January 2007, he left the hospital and was looked after by the airport's branch of theFrench Red Cross; he was lodged for a few weeks in a hotel close to the airport. On 6 March 2007, he was transferred to anEmmaus charity reception centre inParis's20th arrondissement. From 2008 onwards, he lived in a Paris shelter,[7] though in the wake of Nasseri's death in 2022, theAssociated Press reported that he had recently returned to live at the airport.[12]
In 2004, Nasseri's autobiography,The Terminal Man,[8] was published. It was co-written by Nasseri with British author Andrew Donkin and was reviewed inThe Sunday Times as being "profoundly disturbing and brilliant".[13]
Nasseri's story provided the inspiration for the 1993 French filmLost in Transit, starringJean Rochefort. The short story "The Fifteen-Year Layover", written by Michael Paterniti and published inGQ andThe Best American Non-Required Reading, chronicles Nasseri's life.Alexis Kouros made a documentary about him,Waiting for Godot at De Gaulle (2000).[14]
Nasseri's story was the inspiration for the contemporary operaFlight by British composerJonathan Dove, which was premiered at theGlyndebourne Opera House in 1998.Flight would go on to win theHelpmann Awards at theAdelaide Festival Theatre in March 2006.[15]
Glen Luchford and Paul Berczeller made theHere to Wheremockumentary (2001), also featuring Nasseri.[16]
Hamid Rahmanian and Melissa Hibbard made a documentary calledSir Alfred of Charles De Gaulle Airport (2001).[17]
Nasseri was reportedly the inspiration behind the character Viktor Navorski, played byTom Hanks, fromSteven Spielberg's 2004 filmThe Terminal.[18] However, neither the film's publicity materials, nor theDVD "special features" nor the film's website mentions Nasseri's situation as an inspiration for the film. Despite this, in September 2003,The New York Times noted that Spielberg had bought the rights to Nasseri's life story as the basis forThe Terminal.[5]The Guardian indicated that Spielberg'sDreamWorks production company paid US$250,000 to Nasseri for rights to his story and reported that, as of 2004, he carried a poster advertising Spielberg's film draping his suitcase next to his bench. Nasseri was reportedly excited aboutThe Terminal, but it was unlikely that he would ever have had a chance to see it in cinemas.[4]
Nasseri died of aheart attack on 12 November 2022, at Charles de Gaulle Airport.[19][20][21] An airport spokesperson said that Nasseri was homeless and had returned to live in a public area in the airport in September 2022.[22]
London-based American writer Paul Berczeller, who also scripted, plays Paul, a born spieler who wants to make a film based around (the true story of) Alfred Merhan, an Iranian refugee who arrived in 1988 and spent 11 years in permanent transit on a bench in Terminal 1 while his status was argued over by lawyers. Finally free to enter France, Merhan has gotten so used to his temporary domicile that he doesn't want to leave the building.