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Community July 2, 2009  RSS feed

Baha'i meeting marks one-year anniversary of imprisonment of seven

By Stephanie Bertholdo bertholdo@theacorn.com

CHAMPIONS OF FAITH—Jan Stevens, an anchor at KFWB News 980, is pictured with Iraj Kamalabadi, brother of Fariba Kamalabadi, who has been imprisoned in Iran for her faith. Stevens opened the meeting with a history of the Baha'i faith and background about the religious persecution of its members. CHAMPIONS OF FAITH—Jan Stevens, an anchor at KFWB News 980, is pictured with Iraj Kamalabadi, brother of Fariba Kamalabadi, who has been imprisoned in Iran for her faith. Stevens opened the meeting with a history of the Baha'i faith and background about the religious persecution of its members. The imprisonment of seven members of the Baha'i Faith in Iran has not been forgotten by local Baha'is.

Followers of the religion who live in Westlake Village, Agoura Hills, Thousand Oaks and Calabasas met on June 25 at Westlake Village City Hall to mark the oneyear anniversary of the imprisonment of Fariba Kamalabadi, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Afif Naeimi, Saeid Rezaie, Behrouz Tavakkoli and Vahid Tizfahm, who were arrested on May 14, 2008, at their homes in Tehran on charges of espionage. Mahvash Sabet had been arrested on March 5, 2008, in Mashad.

Jan Stevens, an anchor at KFWB News 980 and a Baha'i member, opened the meeting with a history of the faith and the religious persecution suffered by its members since its inception in Iran, then known as Persia, in the mid-1800s.

"Human rights are human rights no matter where we live," Stevens said.

The Baha'i Faith is based on a belief in one God, and all of the world's religions are valued.

"The purpose is to establish the peaceful kingdom of God on earth," Stevens said. Baha'i teachings are underscored by the belief in a divine creator, the oneness of humanity, the equality of men and women, and the tenet that "science and religion should go hand in hand," Stevens said.

A quote from Baha'i teachings that was presented to the crowd encapsulates the philosophy behind the faith: "The earth is but one country and mankind its citizens."

The Baha'i population in Iran is about 300,000, which is said to make it that country's largest minority religion. Since the 1979 revolution in Iran, 20,000 Baha'is have been executed for not denouncing their faith or imprisoned in such harsh conditions that they died of starvation or disease, Stevens said.

"They were spirited away in the dark of night and never heard from again," she said of past persecution of Baha'is.

The latest spate of arrests is similar. According to Stevens, the charges against the seven were "trumped up," and they have all been denied access to their attorney, Shirin Ebadi, an Iranian rights activist who won the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize. A tentative trial date has been set for July 21, but Stevens said it was unofficial and could be delayed. If the Baha'i members are found guilty, the penalty could be death, she said.

The espionage charge stems from the fact that the Baha'i World Centre, which was built before the founding of Israel, is in Israel's city of Haifa.

Iraj Kamalabadi, the brother of prisoner Fariba Kamalabadi, spoke to the group about the horrible living conditions his sister and the other Baha'i captives have faced in Iran's Evin Prison. For the first four months they were held in solitary confinement in a 4-by-6-foot concrete room. They were given one blanket and were only allowed to wear the clothes they'd been wearing when they were arrested.

During solitary confinement they were interrogated for up to 15 hours per day, fed very little, and denied sleep and sunlight.

"Even the bread they are given is moldy," Kamalabadi said. "It was done on purpose (so they) would die a gradual death. Officials can say they didn't kill them."

When the prisoners were released from solitary confinement they joined the general prison population in conditions that were not much better. Kamalabadi's mother visited his sister and told her son that she couldn't recognize her own daughter.

"She was only bone and skin," he said. Apparently his sister had caught a cold; she was denied any medical treatment, and it turned into pneumonia, Kamalabadi said. Others were denied prescription medications for high blood pressure or cholesterol.

Nancy Roshanian, an Oak Park resident, attended the meeting in Westlake Village to support the release of the seven prisoners. She told The Acorn about her grandfather, Abbas Haddad, who, at the beginning of the 1980 Iranian Revolution, was beaten in his home, had all of his belongings stolen and died within six months.

"Because of our religious beliefs we are persecuted," Roshanian said. "It's gotten worse since the Islamic Revolution came to power.

A call for action

The Baha'i community is pushing for action by the U.S. government. They are calling upon the community to write to the Senate to pass Senate Resolution 71, which "condemns the government of Iran for its statesponsored persecution of the Baha'i minority in Iran and the continued violation of the international covenants of human rights."

The U.S. House of Representatives also has a bill pending. House Resolution 175 calls for the immediate release of the prisoners, including the release of all individuals who are being held without due process and a fair trial.

Stevens suggests interested parties write to their senator or congressmember and urge them to sign both resolutions.