Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
Omid, a memorial in defense of human rights in Iran
One Person’s Story

Faramarz Samandari

About

Nationality: Iran
Religion: Baha'i
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: July 14, 1980
Location of Killing: Central Prison, Tabriz, Azarbaijan-e Sharqi Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Working with or for a foreign power; Corruption on earth; Collaborating with the political police SAVAK; Association with the Shah's idolatrous regime

About this Case

The execution of Dr. Faramarz Samandari, son of Taraz, was announced in the daily Kahyan (July 16, 1980) through a notice issued by the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Justice and confirmed by various other media sources (See: dailies Kayhan (July 14, 1980) Announcement by Prison Warden, Sobh-e Azadegan (July 15, 1980), Bamdad (July 15, 1980), Jomhouri Eslami (July 15, 1980). Information about the life and execution of Dr. Samandari was obtained from an article written by his wife, Mrs. Anita (Carr) Samandari, that appeared in the Baha’i News Issue 603 (June 1981), as well as documents published in the Archives of Baha’i Persecution in Iran (ABPI), the IranWire website and a Facebook post by one of his students (FB Post, 2019). Additionally, the Abdorrahman Boroumand Centre for Human Rights in Iran was able to speak briefly with a ward mate of Dr. Samandari, who was able to provide some information about his time in prison (ABC interview, July 3rd, 2022). 

Dr. Samandari is also one of the 206 Iranian Baha’is listed in a 1993 report published by the Baha’i International Community. The report documents the persecution of the members of the Faith in the Islamic Republic of Iran and lists the Baha’is killed since 1978. Additional information has been drawn from various issues of the The Baha’i World. See for example: Vol. XIX, 1982-1986, Haifa 1994. 

Dr. Samandari was born into a Baha’i family in Babol on February 18, 1933 (Samandari article, Baha’i News Issue 603 and ABPI). He was married and had three children. In 1980 he was an elected member of the Local Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of Tabriz. 

He studied medicine at the University of Tabriz, before completing two years of compulsory military service (ABPI, Bio). Following his discharge, Dr. Samandari was awarded a government scholarship to further his studies in Canada, where he worked and studied for seven years. He became an otolaryngological (ears, nose and throat) microsurgeon and pioneered techniques for hearing aid implantations that have since become common practice (IranWire). When he returned to Tabriz in 1967,  he was appointed as a Professor of Medicine at Tabriz University and worked at Tabriz University Hospital, seeing, according to his wife, sometimes 100 patients a day. According to one of his students, he often personally covered the medical expenses of patients who could not afford care and made house-calls out to ill farmers (FB Post, 2019).  

After the 1979 revolution, the Canadian government advised all Canadian nationals in Iran to leave the country (IranWire). Dr. Samandari urged his wife, who was Canadian, to return to Canada with their children, which she did shortly before the 1979 revolution . Dr. Samandari saw his wife and children for the last time when he visited them in Canada that year and returned to Iran because of his strong sense of duty to his patients. (Article by Mrs. Anita (Carr) Samandari, Baha’i News Issue 603) One of his students wrote in a Facebook post that Dr. Samandari was once stopped by a student when leaving the clinic he worked in and asked why he had come back; Dr. Samandari looked around the courtyard filled with patients of modest means and said “for them” (FB Post, 2019). 

The Baha’is in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Background

The authorities of the Islamic Republic have subjected the members of the Baha'i religious community of Iran - the largest religious minority, with approximately 300 thousand members in 1979(1)- to systematic harassment and persecution, depriving them of their most fundamental human rights. The Baha'i religion is not recognized under the Constitution of the Islamic Republic, and Iranian authorities refer to it as a heresy. As a result, the Baha'is have been denied the rights associated with the status of a religious minority; they cannot profess and practice their faith, and are banned from public functions. Discrimination under the law and in practice has subjected them to abuse and violence.(2) 

Persecution of Baha’is in Iran is not specific to the time of the Islamic Republic but it was in this era that it was amplified and institutionalized. During the Revolution itself, supporters of Ayatollah Khomeini attacked Baha’i homes and businesses and in certain instances, even committed murder.

On the eve of his return from France to Iran, in response to a question regarding political and religious freedom of Baha’is under the rule of an Islamic government, Ayatollah Khomeini stated: “They are a political party; they are harmful and detrimental. They will not be acceptable.” The interviewer asked another question: “Will they be free to perform their religious rites?” The Ayatollah responded: “No.” Khomeini had previously “spoken of the Baha’i threat to the Shah’s regime, Islam, national unity, and national security” in various speeches. (Asoo website, October 6, 2015). 

Arrest and Detention 

Dr. Samandari was arrested on April 22nd1980 and held in Tabriz Prison, in the Band-e Seganeh ward. According to an IranWire article, he had been arrested along with a group of other Baha’is who were holding a meeting. During his detention he was interrogated about his political activities and whether he had any affiliations with Israel (BPI, Will). He was permitted a weekly visit by a close family member (Samandari article, Baha’i News Issue 603), but was generally kept indoors to avoid members of the community seeing him in the prison courtyard (IranWire). On a few occasions, he was sent to the prison infirmary to treat fellow inmates. 

A wardmate of Dr. Samandari told ABC that on one occasion, Dr. Samandari had insisted to help a group of fellow inmates clean the toilets of the ward, despite their insistence that they had enough volunteers (Interview July 3rd, 2022). 

Trial 

There is no information about a trial held for Dr. Samandari. However, according to his wife, a number of hearings were held during which he was pressured to renounce his faith in return for his freedom (Samandari article, Baha’i News Issue 603). 

Charges 

Charges against Dr. Samandari were announced in Kayhan Newspaper (July 18th, 1980 ) on behalf of the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Justice as “effective collaboration with the corrupt Pahlavi regime and the dissolved SAVAK, cooperation with the occupying regime of Israel and the International Zionism, forwarding reports, cultural information, political, geographical, military, collecting and forwarding money and financial support to the criminal government of Israel, fighting against Islam and Muslims by direct assistance to Israel, and spreading prostitution and vice”. 

Because of the unanimous international condemnation of the persecution of this quietist (apolitical) religious community, Iranian authorities do not always admit that the Baha'is are being punished for their religious beliefs. Therefore, judicial authorities have often wrongfully charged Baha'is with offenses such as "being involved in counter-revolutionary activities," "having supported the former regime," "being agents of Zionism," or "being involved with prostitution, adultery, and immorality." 

Evidence of Guilt 

There is no information about the evidence used against the defendant. 

Defense 

In his Will, Dr. Samandari reaffirmed his faith, stressing that he “[did] not participate in political activities…[had] no information about financial contributions to Israel or about connections to Zionism.” He specifically assured his family that he did not “follow the path of error” and had “avoided defilements'' (ABPI, Will). Defending her husband, Mrs. Anita Carr noted in a published article that "these four unjust charges are always levelled at Baha'is.'' She said "Baha'is all over the world, including those from Iran regularly undertake pilgrimages and send contributions to Israel [because] the Baha'is international administrative centre is in Haifa, Israel, where the founder of the Faith Baha'u'llah died in exile in 1892 [Prior to the establishment of the State of Israel]. One of the basic teachings of the Faith is the equality of men and women. Baha'i women reject the use of the chador, or veil, upon which Shi'te tradition insists. The Muslim clergy denounce these individuals as loose women and accuse the Baha'i community of spreading prostitution and corruption'." 

The representatives of the Baha'i community stress that their members are being persecuted for their religious beliefs. They refute the validity of charges such as counter-revolutionary political activities or spying leveled against them in Iranian courts. They point out that the fundamental principles of their religion require them to show loyalty and obedience to their government and refrain from any political involvement. 

Judgement 

The Islamic Revolutionary Court of Tabriz declared Dr. Faramaarz Samandari guilty of “waging war against God and his prophet and spreading corruption on earth” and sentenced him to death by firing squad (Kayhan, July 16, 1980). He was also referred to as being the “head of the Assembly of Baha’is of East Azerbaijan”. He was executed alongside a close friend at dawn on July 14, 1980. His body was buried in accordance with Baha’i law and in the presence of over 1,000 friends (ABPI, Bio). 

In his Will, Dr. Samandari gave thanks to all his friends and cellmates and said goodbye to his children, his “dear Anita” and his parents.

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1- Originally published in the Winter 1980/81 Issue of The Green and White, the University of Saskatchewan (Canada) Alumni Association Magazine.
2- ‘Slow Death for Iran’s Baha’is’ by Richard N. Ostling, Time Magazine,20 February 1984. Also see ‘The Persecution of the Baha’is of Iran, 1844-1984, by Douglas Martin, Baha’i Studies,volume 12/13, 1984, p. 3. There is no information about the current number of Baha’is in Iran.
3- The Islamic Republic Penal Code grants no rights to Baha'is, and the courts have denied them the right to redress or to protection against assault, murder, and other forms of persecution and abuse. In so doing, the courts have treated Baha'is as unprotected citizens or "apostates," citing eminent religious authorities whose edicts are considered to be a source of law equal to acts of Parliament. The Founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Khomeini, made execution a punishment for the crime of apostasy and decreed that a Muslim would not be punished for killing an apostate.

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