NRO
 
 
_Ahmadinejad Arrives in New York on a Wave of  Religious Repression_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/277589/ahmadinejad-arrives-new-york-wave-reli
gious-repression-paul-marshall)  
_September 19, 2011 10:22 A.M._ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/277589/ahmadinejad-arrives-new-york-wave-religious-repression-paul-marshall)
  
By _Paul  Marshall_ (http://www.nationalreview.com/author/207099) 

 
When Iranian president Mahmoud  Ahmadinejad visits New York for the U.N. 
General Assembly, he is due to dine on  September 21 with students from the 
Columbia International Relations Council and  Association (CIRCA). A CIRCA 
spokesman _says_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/277382/dinner-ahmadinejad-mona-charen)  
they are “thrilled to have this opportunity.” The  
students should use the opportunity to press Ahmadinejad on the following: 
Currently Iran is outdoing itself in repression. In the aftermath of its  
violent attacks on the democratic opposition following the 2009 elections, 
the  regime has been increasing arrests not only of political opponents but of 
the  religiously differing. Jamsheed Chosky reports that Ayatollah Ahmed 
Jannati,  chairman of the Council of Guardians and adviser to Ahmadinejad, has 
denounced  non-Muslims as “animals who roam the Earth and engage in 
corruption.” 
The government continues to target Baha’is. In 2008 it arrested seven Baha’
i  leaders and charged them with, inter alia, “insulting religious 
sanctities” “and  “propaganda against the state.” When Nobel laureate Shirin 
Ebadi 
agreed to  defend them, she was attacked in the government-controlled media 
and denied  access to her clients’ files. In March 2011, the seven were 
told without  explanation that, despite an appeals courts lowering their 
sentences, they would  serve the original term of 20 years. 
Since the regime bars Baha’is from higher education, and much else, they 
have  formed a private Baha’i Institute for Higher Education (BIHE). On May 
22,  authorities raided 39 homes of BIHE administrators, staff and students. 
At least  seven are still detained. On September 10, a senior lawyer for the 
detainees,  Abdolfattah Soltani, _was himself arrested_ 
(http://news.bahai.org/story/849) . Soltani co-founded the Defenders  of Human 
Rights Center 
along with four other lawyers including Ebadi. The center  was shut down by 
police in December 2008. 
Arrests of Christians have accelerated and the regime is demonizing them as 
 conspirators, “parasites,” and ‘like the Taliban.’ It has also _seized 
6,500 bibles_ (http://dynamic.csw.org.uk/article.asp?t=press&id=1219) . In 
2009, one leader _reported_ 
(http://www.compassdirect.org/english/country/iran/1816)  that “there are more 
arrests, of Christians as  well as Baha’i, in 
the last several months … [than] maybe the whole 30 years  before.” 
Early this year, after _passing_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/255861/away-manger-paul-marshall)  a 
death sentence for apostasy on pastor 
Yousef  Nadarkhani, the government conducted a massive roundup of Christians. 
As is  becoming _common_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/256755/iran-escalates-attacks-christians-paul-marshall)
  in the region, it started its 
_repression_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/262407/iran-widens-crackdown-religious-minorities-paul-marshall)
  at Christmas. 
According to Middle East Concern, the Supreme Court has instructed the  
Revolutionary Tribunal of Gilan Province to review Nadarkhani’s case,  
specifically whether he had been a Muslim. If the Tribunal concludes that he  
had, 
then the Supreme Court’s ruling is that he should be killed unless he  
recants his Christian faith. Reportedly, the review will begin on September 25. 
 
Among many other arrests, Behnam Irani, a member of Nadarkhani’s church, has  
been detained in Karaj since May 31 and five others have begun serving 
one-year  sentences in Shiraz. 
Zoroastrians are also under increasing pressure. Ayatollah Khomeini had a 
particular hatred of Zoroastrians because  of their links to Persian history 
and nationalism. He accused the Shah of  wanting “to revive Zoroastrianism.”
 Current Supreme leader Khamenei continues  this animus and has referred to 
them as kaffers (infidels), a term  usually reserved for Iran’s 
non-recognized religious groups 
On August 2, Mohhsen Sadeghipour began serving a sentence of 4.5 years in  
prison, 74 lashes, and a fine for “anti-regime propaganda by propaganda for 
the  Zoroastrian faith and organizing ancient ceremonies.” Sadeghipour’s 
brother in  law, Pouria Shahpari, was arrested on August 22 for blasphemy, 
also because of  “propaganda for Zoroastrianism.” Pending appeal, he was 
sentenced to 2.5 years  and 74 lashes. Sadeghipour and Shahpari _were  
punished_ 
(http://www.freedomessenger.com/archives/31383)  simply for defending and 
promoting their faith. 
Of course, the regime also persecutes Muslims. After Khamenei gave a speech 
 in Qom denouncing “false mysticism” and the dangers of religious 
minorities,  including Sufis, it has arrested members of the Gonabadi dervish 
community.  Amnesty International reports that, on September 3, members of the 
Basij militia  gathered in Kavar armed with batons and chanting anti-dervish 
slogans, and set  fire to stores displaying photos of dervish leaders. 
Subsequently, at least six  people were shot and hospitalized. About 60 _were 
arrested_ 
(http://www.irandailybrief.com/?p=4440&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=september-16-2011-human-rights)
 . 
The regime also followed its increasing practice of arresting lawyers who  
defend minorities. Three attorneys who have defended dervishes, Amir Eslami, 
 Afshin Karampour, and Omid Behruz have been arrested _this month_ 
(http://www.irandailybrief.com/?p=4440&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=sep
tember-16-2011-human-rights) . 
Iran’s religious repression is not some minor quirk. As Nina Shea and I  
recount in our forthcoming book _Silenced_ 
(http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/ReligionTheology/Islam/~~/dmlldz11c2EmY2k9OTc4MDE5OTgxMjI4OA==)
 
, it is at the heart of the regime’s  ideology. Dissidents and dissenters 
are charged with “friendship with the  enemies of God,” “hostility towards 
friends of God,” “fighting against God,”  “obstructing the way of God and 
the way towards happiness for all the  disinherited people in the world,” “
dissension from religious dogma,” “insulting  the Prophet,” “insulting Islam,
” “propagation of spiritual liberalism,”  “promoting pluralism,” “
calling into question the Islamic foundations of the  Republic,” and, our 
favorite, “creating anxiety in the minds of … Iranian  officials.” 
Like all ideologies, it can rebound on its creators. Ahmadinejad has 
himself  recently been accused of “_witchcraft_ 
(http://www.khabaronline.ir/news-138776.aspx) ,” “experimenting with  
exorcism,” and “communicating with 
genies.” Mullahs have _denounced_ 
(http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/8838/irans-leadership-struggle-reveals-secular-islamist-split)
  his 
administration as containing “deviants,  devils and evil spirits.” The regime’s 
greatest weakness may be its religious  one. 
Ahmadinejad obviously doesn’t expect to hear much criticism about these or  
other matters in New York. Despite the fact that, when he spoke at Columbia 
in  2007, he denied that there were any homosexuals in Iran, this month the 
regime  has already _executed three men_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/sep/07/iran-executes-men-homosexuality-charges)
  for “lavat,” 
homosexual conduct. The  CIRCA students will make their meal most worthwhile if 
they 
persistently and  consistently, and by name, raise these and other  cases.

-- 
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