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Counterpunch Weekend Edition
October 15 - 17, 2010
We're Better Than This
Admiring Ahmadinejad and Overlooking Activists

By BITTA MOSTOFI

Every year during his visit to the United Nations General 
Assembly, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad holds a series of strategic dinners 
and meetings.  This year, one of his dinners in New York was held 
for American anti-war, social justice and peace activists, and I 
attended it.

I firmly believe in diplomacy and dialogue and am disappointed 
each year with the growing lack of international cooperation and 
failing leadership. We saw the same thing surrounding 
Ahmadinejad’s trip to the UN.  The United States and Iran refuse 
to talk to each other so they talk around one another hoping that 
their messages will get delivered to those they are seeking to 
court.  Lost in translation between these two countries and the 
static political posturing they use are the people of Iran and the 
United States.

While I didn’t know if I would have the opportunity to ask any 
questions or raise any issues at the meeting, I was hoping that I 
would be one among many that would challenge Ahmadinejad over 
Iran’s human rights violations.

Unfortunately, after over one hour of speeches from other 
activists in the room, I found myself feeling disappointed and 
dismayed. One after another, the guests at the dinner delivered 
prepared statements, posing no questions or challenges to the 
Iranian delegation. Mostly, people expressed outrage over U.S. 
foreign policy. They lauded Ahmadinejad as a hero for standing up 
to the bullying of the United States government and likened the 
meeting to Malcolm X’s encounters in Africa with revolutionaries 
fighting against colonialism. Many apologized for decades of dire 
U.S. policy towards Iran, while calling for self-determination for 
Iran and confidence in Ahmadinejad.

Speech after speech failed to address any calls for solidarity 
with the brave young men and women in Iran who took to the streets 
and demanded their rights in the face of government suppression. 
Iran has upwards of 500 political prisoners and the highest rate 
of capital punishment in the world. In the last year government 
critical newspapers have been shut down and countless journalists 
imprisoned. An estimated 44 people were killed in street protests 
in the last year.

I recognize that many in the room were not there to excuse the 
Iranian government’s brutality, but their silence was striking. A 
fundamental role we have as American peace and social justice 
activists is to oppose our government’s threats towards Iran, 
while building solidarity with the Iranian people. Activists 
calling for solidarity at the dinner acted as though we stood in a 
town hall with our Iranian counter parts; however the fact is we 
stood in a room with the Iranian state, not its people.

Students, human rights defenders, and common folk currently 
languish in Iranian prisons for doing the very thing we did on 
this night – criticize their own government. This reality is the 
only thing that gave me the courage to stay at this dinner. I 
stood up and expressed my concern for my Iranian counterparts by 
stating, that attorneys in Iran like Nasrin Sotoudeh, and student 
activists like Bahar Hedayat and Majid Tavakoli have been 
imprisoned for criticizing Ahmadinejad.  I went on to suggest that 
Ahmadinejad honor fundamental human rights and proposed a 
moratorium on executions and insisted that law be upheld in the 
judiciary. I spoke just a dozen feet away from him and looked at 
him the entire time. As I named the Iranian activists he put his 
head down and began writing.

Nothing I did or said was radical or out of line. But in the 
aftermath of the other attendees’ shocking adoration for 
Ahmadinejad and their shameful silence as to the Iranian 
government’s human rights abuses, I felt extreme and alone.

I refuse to be an apologist for any government’s moral 
bankruptcy—including my own. As a lawyer, I speak out for 
immigrant rights and attacks on civil liberties and I do not 
believe that we have any chance at a real and lasting dialogue if 
we see our struggle through the prism of any state. We need to 
find a better way to speak truth to power, whether that power is 
here at home or just in town for the week.

Some will say that first and foremost we must not impose our 
viewpoints on Iranians. They will also say that the protests were 
orchestrated and carried out by western spies.  But I know people 
in Iran, friends, loved ones, and ordinary Iranians who were 
beaten in the streets, hospitalized, and arrested because they 
exercised their right to protest their government.

I add that Iran, like nearly every other state, is a signatory to 
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), 
which it has consistently violated. This covenant expresses what 
most people inherently know their rights are as human beings. It 
upholds the right of all people to self-determination, to freedom 
of expression, to receive and impart information, and to the 
freedom of assembly.

Who have we become as a peace and social justice movement when we 
accept and repeat as fact Iranian state propaganda dismissing the 
recent uprisings in Iran and the continued bravery of activists 
defending their rights? Just as J. Edgar Hoover likened civil 
rights activists to communists in order to de-legitimize them, so 
too has the Iranian government used the accusation of western 
spies to dismiss the relevancy of any resistance. They have thus 
stated that thousands of people voicing dissent and protest do not 
have the will to serve as their own actors.  It is a grave failure 
on the part of peace and social justice activists to assume this 
position and belittle our Iranian counterparts. We must not turn 
our focus away from the Iranian activists we aim to work in 
solidarity with.

I believe strongly in the old adage “speak truth to power.” I was 
taught long ago, through the antiwar and peace movement - the very 
community that was at this dinner - that our job must include 
speaking up for those who have had their voices suppressed when we 
have the ability to do so. It also means having the knowledge and 
experience to have a nuanced conversation about the obstacles we 
face and not simply taking part in the self-censorship, deference 
to power, and accepted frameworks that have come to define any 
discourse in politics and diplomacy.

We have a tremendous task ahead of us. Many people have sacrificed 
a great deal in both countries to do this important work. Iranians 
took tremendous risks not only on the streets of Iran, but also 
with the videos and messages they delivered across the internet so 
that we would know the truth about their resistance. We believe in 
their right for self-determination and our voices must demand it. 
We owe them better than this.

Bitta Mostofi is an Iranian-American immigration and civil rights 
attorney who can be reached at bittamost...@gmail.com

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