Posted on 02/04/2009 11:09:50 AM PST by nickcarraway
Some fear the oppression of a little-known religious minority in Iran is intensifying
Naeim Tavakkoli last saw his father Behrouz three years ago in Tehrans infamous Evin prison. Behrouz, a leader in among the 300,000 Iranians who follow the Bahai religion, had failed to come home weeks earlier. Naeim, his mother, and brother searched hospitals and police stations but found no trace. Finally they were told Behrouz had been arrested by the Intelligence Ministry and were allowed to see him.
The three of them sat across from Behrouz on a small bench in a tiny room with two government agents standing behind them, watching and listening. My father was slim, pale, with a long beard. They didnt let him shave, Naeim said in an interview with Macleans. He was limping, wearing a jail uniform, not quite clean. Pajamas, basically.
Naeim told his father he was moving to Canada, and his father wished him well. A few months later, Behrouz was released but Naeim was already in Ottawa, where he now lives. Behrouz later heard from his mother that his father had been forced to sit on a stool for 24 hours at a time and sleep on concrete. He developed kidney problems. But he was free, at least for a while.
Last May, Behrouz was arrested again. Security agents came at six oclock in the morning. Naeims mother asked for time to pack her husband some warm clothes but was told he wouldnt live long enough to need them.
Behrouz has been in jail ever since, part of an escalating crackdown on a religious minority that few outside Iran know much about. Six other Bahai leaders were arrested last spring, five on the same morning as Behrouz. Five more were arrested in January, including Zhinoos Sobhani, who worked for the Organization for Defending Mine Victims and the Centre of Human Rights Defendersboth founded by Irans Nobel Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi. These arrests are in addition to the everyday discrimination suffered by Bahais. They are not permitted to attend university, and their cemeteries are regularly ransacked.
Mohamad Tavakoli, a professor of history and near and eastern civilizations at the University of Toronto, says that there has been longstanding enmity on the part of Shia religious authorities toward Bahaism, a monotheistic religion that originated in Persia during the 19th century. This hostility increased following the Islamic Revolution of 1979 and has become particularly severe under the presidency of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his emphasis on the messianic strains of Shia Islam.
The Bahai are not the only religious minority of Iran. Several thousand Iranians follow the pre-Islamic Zoroastrian religion. In Esfahan, easily Irans most beautiful city, the trendiest cafés are in the Christian Armenian quarters, where young Muslims also gather to talk and flirt. There are at least 20,000 Jews in Iran, more than in any other Middle Eastern country save Israel itself. They are occasionally persecuted, usually because of trumped-up connections to Israel. But there is little grassroots anti-Semitism. Many of the merchants on Shirazs main street are Jewish, and synagogues require no securityunlike, say, in Paris. Iranian Jews, like Christians, have official minority status and are guaranteed representation in the countrys parliament.
The Bahai have no such protection. Whereas Christians and Jews are recognized as people of the book, the Bahai are seen as heretics and political subversives.
Bahaism has become scapegoated as a religion, Tavakoli says. With the emergence of political Islam, Bahaism has been cast as a religion that contributes to the disintegration of, and has been used to bring down Islam.
The founder of the Bahai faith, Baháu'lláh, died in Palestine and has his tomb in what is now Israel, where it is an important place of pilgrimage. Iranian authorities use this connection to denigrate the religion They cast Bahaism as the handmaiden of Zionism, whereas Bahais were in the Holy Land before a lot of the European Zionists came there, and were there before the establishment of the state of Israel, Tavakoli says.
Naeim says the Iranian government, which effectively controls the media and uses it to whip up hatred, drives much of the anti-Bahai hostility. The people are good, he says. But he also recalls that as a boy religious teachers in his school would tell other students that Bahai were unclean, and he would sit on the floor with his fellow students afraid to come too close lest they accidentally brush against him. When he had the opportunity to come to Canada he seized it, joining the thousands of Iranian Bahai who have immigrated here.
He knows that the Bahai have been persecuted since their religion was foundedand his father has been arrested before as well. But he fears that the oppression of Bahai in Iran is reaching a new intensity. He worries about the wave of arrests, the destruction of cemeteries, as if a peoples history itself can be erased. We dont know whats going to happen next, he says. They dont want to leave a trace of anything Bahai.
Most people don’t know this, but it’s worse to be Bahai in Iran than Jewish!
There are examples all over the world of what happens when you give the wrong people power, like my fellow citizens just did.
The Baha’i people have my sympathy for their plight.
The B’ahia fsaith is nothing more than a modern day islamic cult masquerading in Christian tolerant clothing.
Basically, the chief figure in the Baha'i faith claims to be the incarnation of the 12th imam who brings message of transformation to Muslims and other followers.
So what is this religion? Zoroastrianism?
You’re right. It’s a “designer” religion that was created by carving out parts of other religions that the inventors liked.
Ok, I read the article. INteresting.
Then it's the perfect religion for the American "moderate."
Seat of the Universal House of Justice
This building is at the Baha'i World Centre in Haifa, Israel. Haifa was targeted by Hezbollah missiles during the Lebanon War.
Zoroastrians too. One time I brought up the subject of Jews in Iran to an Iranian Zoroastrian & he scowled at me & hissed, “The Jewish Iranians are perfectly fine, we are the ones who are miserable!”
I later asked other Iranians about it & they pretty much agreed.
Baha2i are disliked my Muslims in general. Sunnah consider it ridiculous at best & an unauthorized religion at worst. Shi3a consider it a personal outrage.
There is a Baha2i community in Lebanon, especially in Mashghara. A Shi3i imam, Shaykh Ja3far, went to Iraq or Iran to study (I forgot which) & was converted. He came home to Lebanon & caused scandal when he announced his conversion, removed his turban, & put on a fez. He converted his relatives & that’s how the story of the origins of this community goes.
We got more Baha2i when some Palestinian Baha2i came to Lebanon. Some of them are intermarried with the al-7usayni family. You know, the infamous mufti. One of Lebanon’s most famous Baha2is is Leila Shahid, who was the PLO’s representative in France & now the PA’s representative in Brussels. Also Zeine Zeine, a well known Arab Nationalist.
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