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Freedom for the Baha’i

Panel discusses the plight of imprisoned members of the Baha’i faith in Iran

Vanguard staff

Published: Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Updated: Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Baha'i leaders

Photo courtesy of Baha'i World News Service

Baha'i imprisoned in Tehran: Top from left:Fariba Kamalabadi, Vahid Tizfahm, Jamalodin Khanjani, Afif Naeimi and Mahvash Sabet. Bottom from left: Behrouz Tavakoli and Saeid Rezaje.

A four-member panel put on by the Portland Baha’i community at Portland State on Friday, July 10, recruited an audience of about 50 people.

The panel discussion took place in the Multicultural Center on the date marking the one-year anniversary of the imprisonment of Baha’i leaders.

In Iran, the Baha’i are singled out for religious persecution because their religion postdates the Muslim faith, and imprisonment and execution are possible consequences of practicing Baha’i. As a result, a professed Baha’i and seven leaders of the Iranian Baha’i community are facing that reality in a Tehran prison.

One of the panelists at the event was Merat Bagha, who came to the United States in 1978 just before the revolution. While he studied at Oregon State University, his mother, a Baha’i, was arrested and held in the same prison where the seven Baha’i leaders reside currently.

“In 1982 she was given a sham trial, found guilty and then executed,” Bagha said. “Her only offense was being Baha’i.”

Jacqueline Left Hand Bull, an administrator of a health board that serves American Indian tribes in the Pacific Northwest, a published author and member of the Baha’i faith, was one of the panel attendees.

“We need to gather in groups like this, large and small, to bring international awareness to this issue,” Left Hand Bull said. “International awareness and attention is what has allowed the prisoners to remain safe thus far.”

The Baha’i discourage participating in partisan politics, and Left Hand Bull said that because of this belief, Baha’i are not represented in the Iranian government and others are needed to advocate for their rights.

“Of all people, [the Baha’i] have suffered dreadfully over the last 30 years. It is worse than ever now,” she said.

Also imprisoned are many students who were arrested in the protests against the outcome of the country’s recent presidential election.

John Ng, another panelist, is an associate professor at the Oregon Health and Sciences University and an active member of Health for Humanity, an organization run by the Baha’i and aimed at promoting health throughout the world.

As a way to get involved, Ng suggested contacting government representatives and encouraging them to address the issue of human rights by favoring House Resolution 175 and Senate Resolution 71, which declare support for the Iranian Baha’i.

Panelist Dr. Mike Balter, an adjunct professor at PSU who has managed welfare and mental health services for children and families for 40 years, said “We also need to change our perspectives and find spiritual solutions to problems like this.”

 

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4 comments Log in to Comment

grammarian
Sun Jul 26 2009 10:44
correction: "Freedom for the Baha’is"
Baha'i is an adjective and a singular noun.

"In Iran, the Baha’is are singled out for religious persecution because their religion postdates the Muslim faith, and imprisonment and execution are possible consequences of practicing the Baha’i Faith. As a result, a professed Baha’i and seven leaders of the Iranian Baha’i community are facing that reality in a Tehran prison."

Judith Auslander
Thu Jul 23 2009 14:44
Hopefully, the outcry of the community at large will help free these 7 innocents. Judith Auslander
Loie Mead
Thu Jul 23 2009 00:07
The Daily Vanguard lives up to its name. Your attention to the great injustices continually suffered by Baha'is in Iran is deeply appreciated by the entire Baha'i community. The quality of your reporting is outstanding . I would certainly have been in the audience at PSU, if I had been in town on August 10. Since I could not be present, I am especially grateful to the Daily Vanguard's staff for this descriptive article.
Jim Ferguson
Wed Jul 22 2009 22:15
I applaud the Portland Baha'i community for their efforts to bring the plight of the Iranian Baha'i community to the attention of the people of this region. In this enlightened age, it is unconscionable to witness the deprivation of the most fundamental and basic of human rights to any group, no matter where they reside in the world, and to remain silent. If we do not speak out for these oppressed people who would we expect to speak out for us if we were in a similar situation? We all would hope someone was advocating on our behalf. I have written to my congressmen and senators and encourage everyone to do the same in support of the legislation in support of the Iranian Baha'i community.

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