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

Fereshteh Fayeqi

About

Age: 27
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Non-Believer
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: February 28, 1983
Location of Killing: Central Prison, Sanandaj, Kordestan Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Age at time of alleged offense: 26

About this Case

Ms. Fayeqi and some of her friends played a key role in improving access to books, especially uncensored ones, in the city of Saqqez. She did this by helping establish a bookstore and providing financial and moral support to keep it running.

The information regarding the execution of Ms. Fereshteh Fayeqi, daughter of Mohammad Fayeqi and Mina Fallahi, was obtained through interviews conducted by the Boroumand Center with an acquaintance of the family (on January 22, 2021, August 28, 2023, and March 11, 2024) and an interview with a former cellmate (on July 8, 2022). Additional information was gathered from ABC's previous research and documents, as well as two related reports on the Nemiran Foundation website (on January 21 and 24, 2021).

Fereshteh Fayeqi was born on November 23, 1956, in Saqqez, a city in Kurdistan Province, the place where she graduated from high school. In 1971, after graduating from a teacher training college, she began working as a teacher in the villages around Saqqez as an employee of the Ministry of Education. After the revolution of 1979, she continued to teach at the Majedi Boys' Primary School in the same city. In 1976, she was accepted into the literature program at the Teacher Training College in Sanandaj to pursue a bachelor's degree. While studying in Sanandaj, she continued to teach in Saqqez (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021; Nemiran Foundation, January 21, 2021). 

During this time, Fereshteh Fayeqi and some friends played a key role in making books, especially uncensored ones, more accessible in the city of Saqqez. They opened a bookstore and supported it both financially and morally by paying the monthly rent, selecting books, and transporting them from cities like Tabriz and Tehran to Kurdistan.  (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021)

Fereshteh Fayeqi had a deep interest in reading books and often read selected pieces of the world and Iranian literature to her mother, who couldn't read Persian. According to a family member, "Many people were surprised at how well Fereshteh's mother knew the names of so many authors and was familiar with the content of some of their books.  (Interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021) Even while in prison, Fereshteh continued to encourage her friends and fellow inmates to read. (ABC interview with a former cellmate, July 8, 2022)

In 1976 and 1977, Fereshteh Fayeqi was teaching in primary schools in villages around Saqqez, particularly in "Parsanian school", a faraway and hard-to-reach village where few teachers were willing to work. She was beloved by students, villagers, and even local religious clerics because of the special bond she formed with the community. Fereshteh had a particularly close relationship with the women, helping them improve their hygiene and health by providing them with necessary supplies. In addition to teaching, she also researched educational methods. "She was inspired by the innovative teaching techniques used by the nomads and encouraged her family members to learn calligraphy using their methods. Despite their limited resources, the nomads, who had no notebooks or pens, learned calligraphy using chalk and blackboards. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023)

Fereshteh Fayeqi began her political activities by volunteering in villages and working with others to distribute books. Around the time of the 1979 revolution, she officially joined Peykar (Organization of the Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class). In 1980, she married Sarem-edin Eftekhari, a leader of the organization in Kurdistan, who was also executed in March 1982. (Interview with a family acquaintance by ABC, January 22, 2021) Fereshteh was the first woman from Saqqez to join the Peykar Organization.  (Nemiran Foundation, January 24, 2021) In 1980, Fereshteh was dismissed from her position at the Ministry of Education due to her political activities. (Nemiran Foundation, January 21, 2021)

According to a family friend, "Fereshteh's sense of human responsibility became a central part of her life from a very young age. Instead of playing typical childhood games, she felt responsible for meeting the expectations and needs of girls her age and neighborhood women, whether it was teaching them to read and write or helping them learn handicrafts. She put a lot of effort into these activities. (Nemiran Foundation, January 21, 2021)

The Peykar Organization

The Peykar Organization for the Liberation of the Working Class was founded by a number of dissident members of the Mojahedin Khalq Organization who had converted to Marxism-Leninism. Peykar was also joined by a number of political organizations, known as Khat-e Se (Third line). The founding tenets of Peykar included the rejection of guerrilla struggle and a strong stand against the pro-Soviet policies of the Iranian Tudeh Party. Peykar viewed the Soviet Union as a “Social imperialist” state, believed that China had deviated from the Marxist-Leninist principles, and radically opposed all factions of the Islamic regime of Iran. The brutal repression of dissidents by the Iranian government and splits within Peykar in 1981 and 1982 effectively dismantled the Organization and scattered its supporters. By the mid-1980s, Peykar was no longer in existence.

Arrest and detention

The circumstances of Ms. Fereshteh Fayeqi’s arrest and detention are not known.

In the winter of 1982, Fereshteh Fayeqi and her husband, Sarem-edin Eftekhari, were arrested after security forces raided their safe house in Sanandaj. For some time, Fereshteh's family was kept in the dark about her arrest. Several months later, a young man delivered a letter to her family in Saqqez. Fereshteh had sent the letter through the young man's aunt, a nurse at a hospital in Sanandaj, who was from the same hometown as Fereshteh. The nurse recognized her immediately and helped her deliver the letter outside the prison. In the letter, Fereshteh informed her family that she had been arrested and given the name "Fereshteh Ahmadi" when detained. She also stated that the authorities had identified her husband, Sarem-edin Eftekhari, but they were unaware of her own activities. Fereshteh made it clear in the letter that the hidden documents, buried in an oil drum in the yard of their house, needed to be destroyed. However, her family was unable to enter the house. Neighbors confirmed that the house had been under surveillance for some time and that the authorities had already taken everything, including the items from the yard. (Interview with a family acquaintance by ABC, August 28, 2023)

The details of Fereshteh Fayeqi's arrest remain unclear, including which authority was responsible and on what charges.

While she was detained under the alias "Fereshteh Ahmadi," security forces in Saqqez were simultaneously searching for her under her real name, "Fereshteh Fayeqi. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023)

Her mother, Mina Fallahi, visited several security and judicial centers in Sanandaj in search of her daughter's whereabouts. Finally, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) took responsibility for her arrest. (ABC interviews with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023 and March 11, 2024)

Ms. Fallahi and Mr. Eftekhari's mother went to Sanandaj prison and demanded to see their children. The prison authorities refused their requests. While Mr. Eftekhari's mother gave up, Ms. Fallahi refused to leave and waited outside the prison for hours, insisting that she would not leave until she received a letter from her daughter. After several hours, a guard finally arranged for a letter from Fereshteh Fayeqi to be sent outside the prison. At the end of the letter, Fereshteh had drawn a rose, a symbol her family recognized from her love of roses, to subtly confirm the letter's authenticity. This was the first direct communication the family had received from Fereshteh after the earlier letter, which had been delivered through an intermediary. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023)

During this time, Fereshteh Fayeqi found ways to report on prison conditions and her personal situation, including hiding letters in the sleeves of clothes she knitted in prison. During the meetings, she also warned her family about the possible arrest of a comrade known by the alias "Donya" and asked them to alert her to the danger. Despite the difficulties, the Fayeqi family managed to locate Donya and inform her that security forces were looking for her. Donya was able to evade arrest at that time, but she was later arrested. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023)

According to Ms. Fayeqi's family, after Donya's arrest and subsequent confessions, Fereshteh Fayeqi's true identity was revealed. While imprisoned under the name "Fereshteh Ahmadi," the prison authorities treated her as a regular inmate and allowed her biweekly family visits. However, once it was discovered that she was in fact Fereshteh Fayeqi, she was classified as a political prisoner and her family could only visit her irregularly and behind glass partitions. In one of the few letters that managed to reach the outside of prison, Fereshteh mentioned the restricted visits and told her family not to "bother too much" and to visit her only "every few weeks. Fereshteh's father, who had a particularly close emotional bond with her, preferred not to visit her in prison. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023; copy of Fereshteh Fayeqi's letter in ABC archives)

In later visits, Fereshteh Fayeqi told her family that not only had "Donya" confessed against her, but that she had begun to participate as an interrogator in the interrogation sessions. Fereshteh told her sisters that they should only worry about her execution if they saw "Donya" on television, but until then she was in no danger. Eventually, Donya appeared on television and confessed against herself and her former comrades. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021)

After Donya's televised confession, Fereshteh Fayeqi's mother and, for the first time, her father visited her in Sanandaj. Despite the circumstances, Fereshteh seemed cheerful and full of energy during the visit. According to one of her cellmates, "Even in prison, Fereshteh took care of herself. It was important to her not to look pale and always seem happy. She would say, 'I love life and I will never seek death. Donya wants to see me broken because of Sarem's execution, but I never let her see a frown on my face. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021)

In the early months of her imprisonment, Fereshteh learned that her husband, Sarem-edin Eftekhari, had been executed. According to a source, "The news was cruelly delivered to her. One day they asked her what she wanted. She said, 'I want to see Sarem. They blindfolded her and put her in a chair. Fereshteh thought that when they removed the blindfold, Sarem would be sitting in front of her. But when they uncovered her eyes, they threw a ring in front of her and said, 'You can get married in the next world.'" (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021)

Trial

No information is available on Ms. Fereshteh Fayeqi’s trial.

Fereshteh Fayeqi "never had a lawyer and was never formally tried."(ABC interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021)

Charges

The charges or allegations brought against Ms. Fereshteh Fayeqi are not known.

One of her fellow inmates mentioned that even in prison, Fereshteh took care of her appearance. It was very important to her not to look pale and to always appear cheerful. She once said, "I love life and I will never seek death.

Evidence of guilt

The report of this execution does not contain information regarding the evidence provided against the defendant. However, according to a family friend, "It seems that Donya's confession regarding Fereshteh Fayeqi's political activities with the Peykar organization was used as the basis for the verdict. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023)

Defense

No information is available on Ms. Fereshteh Fayeqi’s defense.

Judgment

There is no information on the verdict leading to this execution.

Fereshteh Fayeqi's date of death on her tombstone (number 11, row two, in Behesht-e Ferdows Cemetery in Kermanshah) is inscribed as "February 1983". However, according to the burial records provided by officials at Behesht-e Ferdows Cemetery, it is believed that she was actually buried on February 28, 1984. (Interview with a family acquaintance by ABC, August 28, 2023)

Fereshteh Fayeqi's siblings expected her execution based on Donya's confessions. However, her parents, considering their daughter's condition and motivation during their last visit (which was two weeks before the family learned of her execution), still hoped for her release. On a day when her mother went to Sanandaj prison for her usual visit, she was told that her daughter was no longer being held there. After an extensive search, a security officer informed her, "We have sent your daughter to Qom. In tears, her mother asked why her daughter had been sent to a city so far from her hometown. The security officer tossed her a piece of paper and said, "Here is Fereshteh's grave number in Kermanshah. It's close to you." According to the family friend, Fereshteh Fayeqi's mother did not speak Persian well and at first thought she had misunderstood. She picked up the paper and, still holding it, began tearing her clothes and screaming as she ran into the street. (ABC interview with a family friend, January 22, 2021)

In April 1983, shortly after Fereshteh Fayeqi's execution, her mother went to the Behesht-e Ferdows cemetery in Kermanshah. With the help of cemetery officials, she located the grave where her daughter was buried (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023).

Impacts on Family

Fereshteh Fayeqi's execution has had a significant impact on the mental state and education of her family members. According to a family acquaintance, "Not only was the fact that Fereshteh's grave is in Kermanshah - a long distance from the family's home in Saqqez - a form of torture for them, but her siblings also faced restrictions and deprivations in pursuing higher education and employment. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, January 22, 2021)

During the years of imprisonment and after the execution, the Fayeqi family had hidden childhood and adolescent photographs, as well as copies of Fereshteh's letters, in the concrete courtyard of their home for security purposes. However, as metal detectors became commonplace during house searches, they became concerned about the possible discovery of buried albums, some of which had metal hinges. They eventually removed the albums and burned them. As a result, only a few photos and letters of Fereshteh Fayeqi remained. One of the photos was retrieved from her academic file by a former teacher and given to the family. (ABC interview with a family acquaintance, August 28, 2023)

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