Aadel Collection
Their “Crime” is Faith (Reader’s Digest – Dec. 1984)
“CIU 2E'! ll 2F4 1flliE __ Despite all the campaigns waged in their behalf, millions of innocent people in dozens of countries are still persecuted and sometimes killed because of their politics, skin color, ethnic background, class origin or religious beliefs. In revolutionary Iran, the regime of Ayatollah Khomeini has elevated the medieval witch hunt to a national priority. This pitiless effort aims to “cleanse” the Islamic state of the Baha'is, adherents of a peace-loving minority religion, solely because they refuse to renounce their faith. B FxRGUS M. BORDEWICH wo or MY BROTHERS and my brother-in-law were taken away in the night and killed by the Ayatollah's executioners,” says an elderly doctor. “The Pasdars [ revolutionary guards] stripped me of my home, my car, my property, and shut down my medical prac- tice. When they told my nephew that every member of the family, from eight to eighty, was to be killed, I decided to flee.” The old man pauses for a mo- ment, choosing his words. “And yet we are not against the Iranians or Khomeini,” he finally says. “We will never take vengeance on any- one. All we want is to be left in peace t 2 worship as we choose.” The doctor's experience is typi- cal of the unremitting terror that has engulfed the followers of the •Baha'j faith since Shi'ite Moslem fanatics seized power in Iran in ‘979. The Khomeini regime has mounted a steady campaign of persecution against the Baha'is_ killing some 2oo, imprisoning and torturing hundreds more, and forc- ing tens of thousands into exile. “Instruments of Satan.” Since their founding in the x 9 th century by a Persian prophet whom they call Baha'u'llah, or Glory of God, the Baha'is have been regarded by their countrymen as heretics from Islam. But today's Shi'ite radicals have added a new resentment: to 6 , -..-- - - BP000266
THEIR CRJME” IS FAITH them, the generally well-educated and progress-minded Baha'is sym- bolize the late Shah's moderniza- tion attempts, which Khomeini's followers are determined to re- verse. In the words of one powerful religious judge, ‘ The Iranian na- tion cannot tolerate the perverted Baha'is, who are instruments of Satan and followers of the devil and of the superpowers and their agents.” Such sordid accusations are part of the awful nightmare land of today's Iran, where contempt is virtue, cruelty is devotion and igno- rance is wisdom. The 250,000 or so Baha'is who remain in Iran are pacifists by creed—like Ma- hatma Gandhi, they believe that violence begets only more vio- lence—and they submit to their fate with the calm surrender of Christian martyrs. The Baha'is, who number some four million in i66 countries, prac- tice a gentle faith that emphasizes the unity of religions, nations and races, and considers “service to mankind” a form of worship. Much in their can on is common to all the great religions—including Islam. Baha'is are prohibited by their religion from participating in poli- tics, and also believe in strict obedi- ence to the laws of any country in which they live. Indeed, even while their families are being tormented by the authorities, Baha'i draft- ees—despite their faith's pacifism— are serving in Iran's war against Iraq. 62 No fewer than 40,000 of the 300,000 Baha'is who lived in Iran before the revolution have been forced to flee. For those who re- main—stripped of their jobs, homes and dignity—daily life is an on- going agony of fear and death. A well-known Baha'i doctor, who for decades had treated Baha'is and Moslems alike, was beaten to death by a fanatical mob in his own Tehe- ran clinic. A 75-year-old bazaar merchant was murdered when he refused to recant his beliefs. Young Baha'i girls have been abducted and forced to become Moslems. Wives have been jailed when they attempted to visit their imprisoned husbands. Throughout Iran, Baha'i children have been or- dered out of the schools and uni- versities. And the holiest Baha'i shrines have been obliterated. Many Baha'is are dragged away in the middle of the night. “When the Pasdars came for my father,” a 25-year-old woman recalls, “we ex- pected he'd be interrogated and released. After seven months they finally let us see him. He had been tortured and his legs were drag-. ging, but he tried not to show it. He told us that he was happy because he was serving our religion. Then one day they just killed him. They never even told us what he was charged with.” Trials, when they take place at all, are a travesty. “A friend of mine was in the courtroom only ten min- utes,” says one Baha'i refugee from Shiraz. “The judge, a mullah [ reli-
:1 fEAT FIRSIYIIIJ PONT;- S JC?FED, FIX It L 1 d for typos, photocopies and handwntten errors There are even solutions for different colored stationery Liquid Paper We'll have ____ ii.r i you uiiixeuup m no time . -- LIQUiD PAPERe The Perfect Solution. ‘ 19 4 Là uid PperCpo , ,on gious teacher}, asked her if she was a Baha'i. ‘Yes,' she replied. He asked if she would become a Mos- 1cm. She answered ‘No.' ‘Then the Koran says you must be executed,' the mullah said. She was hanged instantly.” Unlike Christianity, Judaism, and Zoroastrianism (another Per- sian religion), the Baha'i faith was never recognized as a separate reli- gion by the constitution of Iran, where there is a mandatory death penalty for renouncing Islam. “The fundamentalist mullahs and their followers feel a religious duty to eliminate the Baha'is,” explains a European diplomat with long ex- perience in Iran. “They ask the Baha'is to convert. If the Baha'is refuse, then, in the mullahs' eyes, they are guilty of a religious crime and have to be executed.” Price of a Purge. Repression has been particularly vicious in the countryside. Frenzied mobs led by rabble-rousing mullahs roam from town to town to harass Baha'is. In one desert hamlet, an elderly Baha'i farmer and his wife were burned alive. Even death is no refuge. In the city of Shiraz, Shi'ite mobs pulled Baha'i corpses out of their graves in search of jewelry. In the major cities, the persecu- tion is led by the Pasdars and by the revolutionary committees, which have been set up in every workplace to investigate employees' beliefs and to purge the Baha'is and others with whom they disagree. Those who don't recant are fired. Recent 64
reports from Teheran indicate that ‘more than io,ooo Baha'is have been arbitrarily dismissed, had their pensions canceled or been ordered to repay the salaries they earned before being fired. Nowhere is the government's determination to wipe out the Ba- ha'is clearer than in its systematic suppression of the Baha'is' Nation- al Spiritual Assembly, the body responsible for managing the com- munity's religious affairs in Iran. From the start, Baha'i community workers had been frequent victims of Shi'ite zealots; then, in 1980, the nine members of the Baha'i Assem- bly were arrested, and disappeared without a trace. In 198 1 eight of the nine new assembly members were summarily executed (one 65 was “lucky” to be. out ick). Un- daunted, the Baha'is elected yet another new assembly. In August 1983 the Iranian government de- clared participation in any Baha'i administrative activity a crime. Honoring their obedience to local laws, the Baha'is disbanded all their remaining institutions in Iran. But the killings and persecu- tions have continued. Life on the Run. Every tale told by Baha'is I interviewed in Austria, Switzerland, Canada and the Unit- ed States is a study in tragedy. The story of Mariam and Daryoush,* both active in Baha'i community affairs, is typical. Mariam is an articulate university graduate in ‘Names have been changed to protect rda- tives in fran. THEIR ‘CPJME” IS FAITH THERE WILL BE NO CHRIST AS R'. .',. “Red” has become our symbol in the fight to stop suffering and cruelty. This poor Irish Setter could barely stand when our investigators reached him. Our vets tried to save him, but we were too late. Red's owner just let him starve to death, We were alerted to this tragedy by a neighbor. This winter and its cold weather will bring us more strays, more aban- doned, starving and sick animals. We cannot help them all, but we try to help as many as we can. We're a team of professionals working 365 days a year (even Christmas Day). We're doing our best, but we cannot continue without your help. A dollar goes a long way with us. This Christmas more than any before, we need your help in trying to eliminate some of the suffering. Please! The animals need your help! LOOK AT ALL THE GOOD WORK YOUR CONTRIBUTION MAKES POSSIBLE We investigate and fight to stamp out cruelty. We run 3 animal shelters and a low.cost spay/neuter and medical clinic. We have a retirement home for aged animals and a zoo for disabled wildlife. We find homes nationwide for abandoned animals. We publish HUMANE NEWS, the world's largest circula- tion humane publication. We desperately need your support. We use more than 5½ tons of food each week and gratefulty acce,pt donations of pet food and trading stamps. “r ' . th ,,, s .'.. - ' .— . ,,‘ ‘—— i saxe cup ana mail today HERE'S MY DOIfATION. Put me on the team! NAME: ADDRESS: ______________________ CITY ______ STATE ______ ZIP ______ IF YOU WiSH 10 USE YOUR CREDIT CARD CREDIT CARD _______ EXP. _______ NUMBER Your donation is tax deductible and entitles you to a year's subscription to HUMANE NEWS. ASSOCIATED HUMANE SOCIETIES 124 G Everareen Ayenue. Newark. New Jersey 07114
THEIR “CRIME” IS FAITH he late 205. Expelled from her job for her beliefs, she began tending Baha'i children barred from gov- ernment schools. Meanwhile, the • Pasdars were hunting Daryoush, her husband, who owned a small • factory. The Pasdars were looking for Daryoush because they knew him to be a counselor to Ba! a'i youth, an “official” in government eyes. The “subversive” texts he taught were documents of various world religions, including the Bi- ble—and the Koran. Finally, Daryoush was forced to go underground, and Mariam lived for the next several months at her mother's home. “One night, eight Pasdars burst in the door and de- manded my husband,” Mariarn says. “Not finding him, they dragged me off to prison and inter- rogated me eight hours a day. They . told me that if I renounced my religion everything would be all • right. But how can you deny some- • thing you believe in?” Released after 14 days, Mariam discovered that her home, car and bank accounts had been confiscated along with those of her parents. Daryoush remained on the run for nearly eight months. In the end, the couple escaped to Canada. The largest group of Baha'i refu- gees, about 7500, has settled in the, United States. Many have also been accepted by Canada, Australia, the Scandinavian countries and a few Latin American states. But since the early 198os, the outflow has been reduced to a mere trickle. If a Baha'i tries to leave legally, his passport is lifted and he is jailed. For those who wish to escape, there is almost no alternative to the har- rowing trek across the desei t to Pakistan or ‘through the rugged mountains to Turkey. Power of Faith. Many Baha'is arrive at the border without money, friends or protection. The iooo or so Baha'i refugees in Pakistan have been receiving about $50 a month per person from the United Na- tions High Commission on Refu- gees, but a number of them have been waiting a year to be accepted by a third country. Several hundred more are waiting in Turkey for permission to emigrate. Because the Baha'is won't strike back at the regime, states Gerald Knight, a British Baha'i who serves as the faith's U.N. representative for human rights in New York, the only hope for these gentle people is in diplomacy and international pro- test. Since the persecutions began, quiet representations have been made to the Iranian government by the U.N. Secretary General. More- over, resolutions condemning per- secution of the Baha'is have been adopted by the U.N. Commission on Human Rights, the European Parliament, the U.S. Congress, and the parliaments of Australia, Cana- da, West Germany and other coun- tries. International efforts have so far, at best, only slowed the pace of the persecution. For the moment the Baha'is are hopefully watching the result of 67
the May 25, 1984, decision of the U.N.'s Economic and Social Coun- cil to appoint a special representa- tive “to make a thorough study of the human-rights situation” in Iran, and to report to the Human Rights Commission. Much, of course, depends on the investigator, yet to be named, and on the Iranian response. In Iran, meanwhile, the stage remains set for genocide. The threat of total extermination will hang over the Baha'is as long as fanatic religious leaders, with their totalitarianism of hate and bigotry, remain in power. If Iran were to lose its war with Iraq, or if its economy were finally to collapse, it could scarcely be surprising if the radical mullahs looked to the Baha'is as scapegoats and put in- to effect the “final solution” that they seem to have had in mind all along. The Baha'is pray that the world will come to their aid, by continu- ing to accept Baha'i refugees and by putting economic and diplomatic pressure on Iran. To endure the nearly unendurable daily life inside Iran, however, they will look ulti- mately to their own faith. “We arc not bitter,” Gerald Knight says, with the sense of self- assurance and conviction that rises through the words of nearly all Baha'is. “We don't hate the people who are killing our fellow Baha'is. Rather, we take our example from the people who are being killed— they are filled with love for their tormentors. In them we see the power of God.” Letter Perfect c4 WELL-MEANING CUSTOMER of the famed Neiman-Marcus department store was prompted to send Stanley Marcus this letter: Dear Mr. Marcus: I have been receiving beautiful and expensive brochures from you at regular intervals. It occurs to me that you might divert a little of the fortune you must be spending for this advertising matter to raise the salaries of your more faithful employees. For instance, there's an unassuming, plainly dressed little man on the second floor who always treats me with extreme courtesy when I visit your store and generally persuades me to buy something I don't really want. Why don't you pay him a little more? He looks as though he could use it. Yours truly, Mrs. WS By return mail came Marcus's reply: Dear Madam: Your letter impressed us so deeply that we called a directors' meeting immediately, and thanks solely to your own solicitude, voted my father a $ao-a-week raise. Yours truly, Stanley Marcus. —Bcnnett Ccrf n Saturday Review THEIR “CRIME” IS FAITH 68