I guess Alexander Sporn {
who made phone calls to his ex patients pretending to be hitler} was right all along.
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/178296#.UxzT5IX5ASkIran, which has embraced all things nuclear, has apparently decided to embrace the man who is seen as one of the fathers of nuclear power – the Jewish scientist, Albert Einstein, a man who was once nominated to be president of the newly-created State of Israel.
However Einstein, according to the Iranians, was no Jew; he was actually a Shi'ite Muslim, a follower of the eighth-century Shi'ite Imam Ja’far Al-Sadiq.
Iranian cleric Ayatolla Mahadavi Kani made the claim in a video that has been circulating in Iran. Kani, who says he is head of a group called Assembly of Experts in the Islamic Republic of Iran, cited documents that claims that Einstein converted to Shi'ite Islam, and that he got the idea for his Theory of Relativity from Islam. The ascension of Mohammed to heaven was “a process which was faster than the speed of light,” and it was from this story that Einstein developed his theory, the cleric said in the video.
According to the ayatollah, “Einstein said, ‘when I heard about the narratives of the prophet Mohammed and that of the Ahle-Beit [prophet's household] I realized they had understood these things long before us.’”
Iranian clerics have made this claim in the past as well. In 2012, the late Ayatollah Hossein Borujerdi said that he had had a relationship with Einstein, who wrote to him that “Shi'ite Islam was the most scientific and just religion in the world.”
Albert Einstein, the German-Jewish theoretical physicist who developed the theory of relativity, was offered the presidency of the State of Israel in 1952, even though he was not an Israeli citizen. "I am deeply moved by the offer from our State of Israel [to serve as President], and at once saddened and ashamed that I cannot accept it,” Einstein wrote, citing as a reason his discomfort with diplomatic matters as his main concern, and his age. “I am the more distressed over these circumstances because my relationship to the Jewish people has become my strongest human bond, ever since I became fully aware of our precarious situation among the nations of the world,” he wrote in a letter turning down the offer. Einstein died three years later, in 1955.