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Bahá'í woman recounts the
terror of persecution
After spending months in an Iranian prison,
'I have to tell the world'
01/26/2002
By BERTA DELGADO / The Dallas Morning
News
Back when she was imprisoned with the other
10 women, when she knew that they could all
be killed in that Iranian prison because they
wouldn't deny their Bahá'í faith,
Olya Roohizadegan knew she would always keep
the promise.
If any of us make it out alive, we will tell
our story to the whole world, the 10 women
had promised one another. Only Mrs. Roohizadegan
would live. The other women were hanged. And,
for the past 17 years, she has been telling
anyone who would listen about those women.
"I have to tell the world," said
Mrs. Roohizadegan, now a resident of Sydney,
Australia, who recently spoke at the Dallas
Bahá'í Center. "I didn't
want what happened to me and others to happen
to someone else."
So she travels the world with the help of
Bahá'í communities, going wherever
they will invite her. On this cool January
evening, she did what she always does
keeps the memories of her friends fresh as
she tells their stories and shares their photographs.
In a country in which nearly the entire population
is Muslim, members of the Bahá'í
faith are not recognized by the Shiite Muslim
government of Iran.
Since the Islamic revolution in 1979, more
than 200 Bahá'ís have been killed
and many others have been persecuted, according
to reports. The Bahá'í faith
is Iran's largest minority with a community
of about 350,000 people, according to Bahá'í
reports.
Many Bahá'ís have lost their
jobs and pensions, and have been deprived
of educational opportunities. Bahá'í
holy places and cemeteries have been vandalized
and destroyed. Outcry around the world halted
much of the violent persecution within the
past 10 years.
That is why Mrs. Roohizadegan continues her
crusade speaking and through her recently
re-released book, Olya's Story: A Survivor's
Dramatic Account of the Persecution of Bahá'ís
in Revolutionary Iran (Oneworld Publications,
$16.95)
She also doesn't want to forget it herself.
"The memory comes closer and closer to
me when I speak of it," she said. "I'm
proud of them. The retelling of how much they
sacrificed it's a bitter and sweet
memory."
Mrs. Roohizadegan said guards came to the
door of her family's home in Shíráz
on Nov. 29, 1982, asked her if it was the
Roohizadegan residence, asked if she was Mrs.
Roohizadegan and asked if she was Bahá'í.
She answered "yes" to all three.
They took many of the family's possessions,
and they took her to prison.
"They put a gun to my head and, as my
3-year-old son cried, 'I want my mommy,' they
took me away," she recalled.
They put her in a cell in which she recognized
the faces of other Bahá'í women.
For months, they would endure taunts and vulgarities
and torture. They would repeatedly be pressured
psychologically and physically to give up
names of other Bahá'ís.
"They would give us one bowl of soup
for four of us to eat but with no spoon,"
Mrs. Roohizadegan said. " 'This is not
your home. Eat with your fingers,' they would
say."
As she became weak physically, she grew stronger
spiritually, she said. "I saw the light
in darkness," she said.
Time after time, she and the others refused
to deny their faith. Finally, after a trial
five months later, she was released, she said,
so that authorities could follow her whereabouts
and find Bahá'í leaders. Guards
taunted her, saying her freedom would not
be permanent.
Just more than a week later, a Muslim neighbor
called their home and warned them that guards
were headed there. The Roohizadegans took
their young son (their older sons were away
at school in London), and they fled to Pakistan.
From there, they made their way to London.
But one night, while in Pakistan, she dreamed
about her friends. One of them, Nusrat Yaldá'í,
said to her, "Dear Olya. Don't be sad,
and don't worry about us. Look at me. I am
free like you now, and I've come to see you."
The next day, June 19, 1983, she heard on
the radio that 10 Bahá'í women
had been executed a day earlier in Shíráz.
On this January evening, Mrs. Roohizadegan
speaks to a crowd of some 60 people. They
are young, like 18-year-old Amelia Villagomez
and 14-year-old Roxana Daneshjou, and older,
like Esfandiar Akhtarkhavari and Tahereh Anvari.
And it is a crowd with a heart for her, a
crowd for whom the story hits close to home
because they are of the Bahá'í
faith, and because their brothers or sisters
or daughters or sons or uncles were persecuted
in Iran.
"I was very saddened by her story. Yet
I felt I have an obligation now to go out
and tell people the principles of unity so
their deaths won't be in vain," Roxana
said.
Ms. Villagomez feels the same way. Only she
has felt that for as long as she can remember.
"My great uncle was martyred around
the time I was born, and it's kind of like
the spirit has to live on," she said.
"My Persian roots have given me a deeper
commitment and responsibility to speak for
those who were persecuted."
To hear the stories of women some
of whom were her age makes her realize
that so much is taken for granted in America,
in the world, she said.
"It just reminds me to really examine,
'What is my calling?' " Ms. Villagomez
said.
Mr. Akhtarkhavari and his wife both lost
a brother. They wiped at tears as they heard
Mrs. Roohizadegan speak. Mrs. Anvari lost
her husband, a pharmacist who made it a ministry
of working with the poor.
"We went to the prison to meet with
him 30 minutes before he was persecuted,"
said her son, Nayer Anvari, as he recounted
his father's last words. " 'I'm going
to the presence of God tonight. You should
be happy and greet each other at the cemetery
and don't cry,' he said."
Mr. Anvari said he is glad Mrs. Roohizadegan
is still bringing this story to the forefront.
"It is something which belongs to everybody,"
he said.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE FAITH
Unlike Christianity, Judaism and Zoroastrianism,
the Bahá'í faith is not officially
recognized by the Iranian government.
The Bahá'í faith started in
1844, when a Persian merchant known as the
Bab (which means "gate" in Arabic)
proclaimed that his purpose was to prepare
humanity for a new messenger. The Bab was
executed by Muslim leaders, an event that
Bahá'ís observe annually on
July 9.
One of the Bab's followers was Mirza Husayn-Ali,
who was imprisoned and exiled for his belief
that he was the new messenger. He renamed
himself Baha'u'llah, which means "glory
of God."
Baha'u'llah promoted the equality of the
sexes and counseled humankind to make an effort
to do away with prejudice. Bahá'ís
believe that prejudice is a spiritual disease:
It requires a spiritual solution that can
come only from God.
In the United States, the Bahá'í
faith was spread by a Chicago insurance salesman
in 1893 who had learned of the faith in England.
Bahá'ís have been in Dallas
since the late 1950s.
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