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Is The Terminal Based On A True Story?

By Emily Bell

Directed by Steven Spielberg, "The Terminal" is based on Mehran Karimi Nasseri's autobiography "The Terminal Man." According to Nasseri, he was forced to leave his native Iran in 1977 as punishment for protesting against Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the former and last Shah of Iran, while Nasseri was a student in England. After his expulsion from Iran, Nasseri lived in Belgium and was granted refugee status. For several years, Nasseri searched for a country in which to establish permanent residency (via History of Yesterday).

In 1988, Nasseri set off for England, the European nation with which he was most familiar given his time as a student there. According to Nasseri, he lost his travel documents during a layover in France's Charles de Gaulle International Airport. Without his paperwork, Nasseri was denied entry into England, which left him stuck at Charles de Gaulle — where he waited for 18 years, never setting foot outside until illness required him to be hospitalized (via All That's Interesting).

Over the course of his nearly two decades in Terminal 1, Nasseri befriended some airport workers, worked odd jobs within the airport, bathed in the airport's bathrooms, and ate most of his meals at the airport's McDonald's. Nasseri's stay might have gone on even longer if not for a human rights lawyer, Christian Bourguet, who worked to untangle all of the international bureaucratic red tape that kept Nasseri stranded. In the end, Nasseri was given permission to leave the airport and enter a homeless shelter in Paris, where he has resided since 2008 (via H2G2).