Iran Mandaeans in exile following persecution
Al Arabiya News / AHMED AL-SHEATI
25-Dec-2011 (one comment)

More than 300 Iranian families were forced to leave their homeland in the western province of Khuzestan after facing a series of discriminatory acts for following the faith Sabian Mandaeism which is not officially acknowledged in the Islamic republic.

Sabian Mandaeans had been an integral part of the Iranian social and national fabric especially in Khuzestan where most of the community used to live, said Emad Fawzy, a 44-year-old Sabian Mandaean who immigrated to the United States a year ago.

“This is no longer the case, for after the fall of the Shah we are not even allowed to talk about our faith or our rituals,” he told Al Arabiya.

Enaam Hamed, 39, is not surprised that Iranians harbor all this hate against Mandeans and against Arabs in general, of whom they are considered part.

“I used to work as an Arabic language teacher in Khuzestan and I know how instilling this hatred starts from school curricula,” she told Al Arabiya. “Everything Arab is condemned; our community was part of the Arab community in Khuzestan and its capital Ahwaz.”

Hamed explained that she and other members of her community suffered dual persecution, for being Arab and for being Mandaean and were accordingly robbed of both national and religious rights to which minorities are entitled.

“Iranian authorities refused to list our faith as one of the officially recognized languages.”

According to Hani Salah, a ref... >>>

Simorgh5555

Anti-Arab persecution in Iran.

by Simorgh5555 on

“This is no longer the case, for after the fall of the Shah we are not even allowed to talk about our faith or our rituals,” he told Al Arabiya.

So the 'Zionist' Shah was even more tolerant of Arabs of Khuzestan that the Terrorist Islamic Republic.

DEATH TO THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC.

CONDEMN IT. FIGHT IT. DESTROY IT.  



Share/Save/Bookmark