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

Mohammad Movahed

About

Age: 42
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Baha'i
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: 1979
Location of Killing: Shiraz, Fars Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Enforced disappearance
Age at time of alleged offense: 42

About this Case

Information on the disappearances of Mr. Mohammad Movahed, son of Mohammad Ali Sheikh Movahed (a prominent cleric from the city of Shiraz) and Ms. Zakieh Baladi, was published in the Archives of Baha’i Persecution in Iran website (May 14, 2019), the Martyrs of the Baha’i Faith website (August 22, 2008), and Tavana website (May14, 2019). Mr. Movahed left an audiotape behind in which he provided his biography and an account of his conversion to the Baha’i faith.

Mr. Movahed was born in 1938-39 in the city of Shiraz in a religious Islamic family. His father was a teacher at the Agha Baba Khan seminary in Shiraz and had a large number of student clerics. Like his father, Mr. Movahed had seminary education [and was a cleric].

On Friday, August 26, 1966, at a mosque in Tehran, Mr. Movahed revealed to his students and his brothers that he had been studying the Baha’i faith for eight years and that he believed in the Baha’i faith. Mr. Movahed thought that he might not leave the mosque alive that day (Martyrs of the Baha’i Faith). His belief in the Bahai’ faith was unfathomable for his friends and family as well.

Upon returning to Shiraz, Mr. Movahed engaged in a great many discussions with other clergymen. According to him “… Then there was a lot of discussion. At the end of the meeting I said ‘I am a Baha’i; do what you will’… Then one of the leading clerics wrote a letter to the Prosecutor’s Office (during the reign of the Shah) telling him that someone had become a Baha’i and that he and others knew that that person would revert back to Islam and will not stay Baha’i because he was not a bad person, but that in the meantime, the people would kill him, and that would be to the advantage of the Baha’i sect and to the detriment of Islam; he must be protected somehow, and it’s best if we take him to an insane asylum. The Prosecutor’s Office accepted that argument, and the Police Force Information [Section] and the State Information Organization approved the decision, and I was taken to an insane asylum.” (Mr. Movahed’s conversation on audiotape). Mr. Movahed was hospitalized in the insane asylum for 95 days. While there, clerics from various cities would go to see him on a daily basis in order to talk to him and bring him back to Islam, but he would not let go of his belief in the Baha’i faith. (Baha’i Martyrs). After enduring much harassment and pressure in Shiraz, Mr. Movahed moved to Tehran. (Archives of Baha’i Persecution in Iran website).

Mr. Movahed was married in 1975-76 and his wife also converted to the Baha’i religion. He had two children.

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*- 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.**

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).

Mr. Movahed’s Extrajudicial Killing

According to available information, Mr. Movahed left his house early in the morning of May 24, 1979, and no one ever heard from him again. His wife went to the relevant government offices in order to obtain information about him but was unable to do so. It is believed that Mr. Movahed was kidnapped by an unidentified person. At some point, there was rumor going around that he was at Evin Prison or at Qasr Prison, and that he had been transferred to the city of Qom to be interrogated, and that he would be tried very soon. But no exact or credible trace of him was ever found.

One of his children was born two months after his disappearance.

Officials’ Reaction

After the Revolution, Mr. Movahed had been summoned to the Guards Committee accused of having become a Baha’i, and had undergone very tough questioning. He had last been summoned to the Committee on May 14, 1979. (Tavana).

Mr. Movahed’s family told the Baha’i National Assembly of Iran in their investigations that a warrant for his arrest had been issued by the Revolutionary Prosecutor General on May 12, 1979. The Revolutionary Prosecutor confirmed the issuance of the warrant but strongly and definitively denied that Mr. Movahed had been arrested. (Archives of Baha’i Persecution in Iran website).

Impacts on Family

There is no information regarding the effects of Mr. Movahed’s disappearance. Years later, however, Mr. Movahed’s mother, who was a pious and religious woman stated: “I wish my body had been cut to pieces but I hadn’t lost my dear child. His highest and most admirable personality trait was that he wanted to solve everyone’s problems.” (Tavana).

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* ‘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.
** 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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