Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Misha Kordestani, and a son, Milan Kordestani

      • Daryabari married Google engineer Omid Kordestani in 1994 and they had two children together, a daughter, Misha Kordestani, and a son, Milan Kordestani.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bita_Daryabari
  1. People also ask

  2. Daryabari married Google engineer Omid Kordestani in 1994 and they had two children together, a daughter, Misha Kordestani, and a son, Milan Kordestani. Daryabari and Kordestani separated in 2007, and Daryabari married Reza Malek, a surgeon and medical entrepreneur, in 2009. They divorced in 2016.

  3. Kordestani net worth was estimated to be $2.2 billion in 2012, after his divorce from Bita Daryabari. Kordestani has two children with Daryabari, and two with Gisel Kordestani, whom he married in 2011.

  4. Apr 7, 2014 · At 16, Bita Daryabari was sent by her parents—a dentist and a homemaker in Tehran—to live with relatives in St. Joseph, Mo. The year was 1985, and she was part of a wave of immigrants who fled Iran in the years following the Islamic fundamentalist revolution in 1979.

    • Maria Di Mento
    • Senior Reporter
    • maria.dimento@philanthropy.com
  5. She has started Pars Equality Center, a community foundation in 2010 to support the full integration of people of Persian (Iranian) origin in the United States, including refugees, asylees, immigrants and the American-born; and to advocate for their perspectives in American society.

    • Philanthropy , Trustees
    • Atherton, CA
  6. Feb 27, 2011 · She worked in the telecom industry for a number of years before leaving to focus on raising two children, a son, 11, and a daughter, 14. Nazila Dorodian, an Atherton dentist who attended the...

    • Style Reporter
  7. Founder & Executive Director. Bita Daryabari embodies the spirit of humanist philanthropy. She received her Master’s degree at Golden Gate University in California, where she was awarded Alumni of the Year in 2008.

  8. Apr 17, 2013 · Bita, who has been in the U.S. since 1985 and lives in Atherton with her husband and three children, also sees the Center as a conduit of bringing long-exiled Iranians back together. “My purpose is to unite the community regardless of an individual’s political or religious views,” she says.

  1. People also search for