Voices from behind bars: imprisoned Baha’i leaders write to president of Iran

By December 18, 2013Media Releases, Uncategorised
Voices from behind bars: imprisoned Baha’i leaders write to president of Iran
Seven imprisoned Baha’i leaders in Iran: Front (left to right): Behrouz Tavakkoli, Saeid Rezaie. Rear (left to right): Fariba Kamalabadi, Vahid Tizfahm, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Afif Naemi, Mahvash Sabet.

Seven Baha’i leaders have sent a joint letter from their prison cells in Iran to President Hassan Rouhani about his proposed “Charter of Citizen’s Rights”.

The imprisoned leaders, two of whom have siblings in Australia, call for laws to protect the human rights of the people of Iran and for the introduction of structures to prevent the arbitrary interpretation of the law.

They also recommend review of the nation’s school curriculums, and a free and open discourse in which all Iranians can reflect on the state of their country and the character of the society in which they wish to live.

The seven point to their own 20 year jail sentences, the longest of any prisoners of conscience in Iran, as one of the salutary lessons that demonstrate the need for such action.

“In all the years that we had the honour to serve the Bahá’í community of Iran, the authorities had full knowledge of our involvement in this work,” they write.

“Then, one day, as a result of warped thinking and on the whim of certain individuals in authority, it was decided that our service should be deemed illegal, and consequently, we have spent nearly six years behind bars.”

During his election campaign this year, President Rouhani promised a charter aimed at ending discrimination on the basis of race, sex or religion. A draft version was posted on his website on 26 November 2013, and citizens were given 30 days to comment.

Experts are warning that the proposed charter has provisions which would extend and entrench current widespread discrimination against the 300,000 Baha’is, the country’s biggest non-Muslim religious minority.

One of the seven leaders, Fariba Kamalabadi, has a sister and a son living in Australia. Another, Behrouz Tavakkoli, has a brother in Adelaide. The other leaders are Vahid Tizfahm, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Saeid Rezaie, Mahvash Shahriari, and Afif Naimi.

The text of the letter:

Your Excellency, Dr. Hassan Rouhani,

In the life of every nation there are moments of profound significance, when seemingly simple actions can turn the tide of history, when age-old misunderstandings can begin to be resolved, and when a new chapter in the destiny of its people can begin. Your Excellency’s recent public call for participation in a common discourse about the rights and responsibilities of citizens has kindled in hearts the light of hope that such a moment may have arrived for the people of Iran and for the destiny of this sacred land. Appreciating this invitation, we are impelled by a moral duty towards our homeland, and especially by a deep concern for the youth of our country, to add our voice to this significant discourse.

We take this action from within our prison cell, notwithstanding the considerable obstacles in our path, as a band of law-abiding citizens who more than five years ago were arrested and have since suffered imprisonment simply for our efforts to manage the internal affairs of the Bahá’í community of Iran. We write this letter at this critical and decisive juncture lest history should judge us harshly as having failed in our duty.

Dr. Rouhani, Your Excellency,

Although the sole fact of demonstrating an interest in reviewing and upholding the rights of the individual is in itself highly significant, we find it necessary here to state emphatically that, in our view, the oneness of all peoples and their fundamental liberty are not merely civil and legal constructs—they are spiritual principles whose source is the one Divine Creator, who made all humankind from the same stock.

The people of Iran, justifiably, wish to prosper and flourish in their individual and collective lives. They wish to see their children advance, their youth tread the path of progress, and their nation enjoy a state of peace and tranquillity.

Yet, surely, none of these aspirations can be accomplished unless social and legal conditions make it possible for all the constituent elements of society to be treated equally and well, for all individuals to be accorded their basic human rights, and for no one to be subjugated and oppressed by reason of their ethnicity, gender, religious belief, or any other distinction.

The present discourse on the rights of citizens centres on a charter currently being drafted, yet we believe that, beyond seeking comment about the contents of that document, your invitation is an opportunity for us all to reflect on the state of our country and consider the character of the society in which we wish to live.

For such a reflection to be effective, it seems essential that we should first ask ourselves searching questions about the state of our society and the environment in which we wish to raise future generations.

We must look deep into our hearts. Given that our land has suffered every kind of prejudice, discrimination, aggression, and social ill—a suffering whose consequences are apparent in all departments of our nation’s collective life—we must ask ourselves: what are truly the most vital principles that would fulfil our highest aspirations for our nation, and what are the means to establish these principles?

How do we respect the nobility of every individual? How will a constructive environment be fostered in which all the different constituent parts of society can thrive? What are the necessary conditions that would enable women to contribute their full share? How do we wish children to be treated?

How do we enable minorities—ethnic, religious, or other—to make their contribution to the betterment of society shoulder to shoulder with others? What is to be done so that differences of views and beliefs are properly respected? How do we eradicate violence from our society? How do we guarantee the right to education for all? These are among the thoughts that should inform us as we search for the principles that must guide our society and shape the formulation of the rights of its citizenry.

Your Excellency,

Seeking the views of the various elements of society about the future can, of course, represent a first step towards building a progressive country, but what is of foundational importance is that the nation’s school curriculums be reviewed to ensure that the soil is prepared in which a progressive culture may take root, a culture established upon fundamental principles such as the nobility of humankind and the equality of all before the law.

To document the citizens’ rights and enshrine them in a charter may well be an important initiative in the course of a country’s development, but if such a charter is not carefully drafted or, worse still, if it is deliberately crafted as a means to exclude, it could be used as a tool for justifying discrimination and perpetuating oppression.

Therefore, beyond the benefits that accrue from a free and open discourse and appropriate educational programmes, it is imperative for the protection of the people’s rights, first, to enact laws that explicitly protect these rights, and, second, to fashion the necessary structures that prevent an arbitrary interpretation of the law.

The dismissal of thousands of Bahá’í citizens from government posts, the execution of more than two hundred innocent Bahá’ís, the expulsion of thousands of students from universities, the sentences handed down during the past eight years to hundreds of Bahá’ís—indeed, what has happened in our own case, and the judicial process that led to a twenty-year jail sentence for each one of us—are all salutary lessons that illustrate our point and amply demonstrate the need for safeguards in how the law is applied.

In all the years that we had the honour to serve the Bahá’í community of Iran, the authorities had full knowledge of our involvement in this work. Then, one day, as a result of warped thinking and on the whim of certain individuals in authority, it was decided that our service should be deemed illegal, and consequently, we have spent nearly six years behind bars.

Your Excellency,

If no effective solutions are devised, under conditions where individual rights can be trampled upon so arbitrarily, who can be certain that the fate that has befallen us today will not befall him tomorrow.

In closing, we wish Your Excellency every success in your sincere service to the great nation of Iran in the path of justice, freedom, and equality.

Respectfully,

Vahid Tizfahm, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Saeid Rezaie, Mahvash Shahriari, Behrouz Tavakkoli, Fariba Kamalabadi, Afif Naimi

Read the current update on the human rights situation of the Baha’is in Iran

To read further commentary on the Charter, visit:

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