Writing the tragic story of Reyhaneh Jabbari was an incredible honor for me to scream loudly to the world about the horrific injustice that was done to this beautiful Iranian woman!
“I, Reyhaneh Jabbari, am 26 years
old. With a hanging rope in front of my eyes, that I am not afraid of, I write
to tell the tale that I lived...
I want to tell you everything that
I said in court, which they did not understand, and everything that I cried out
under torture, which was not heard. Everything that I screamed out while I was
brutally kicked by four forceful interrogators, who regarded themselves as
“Almighty.”
“Perhaps someone in this world
would hear my cries and feel my pain…”
Reyhaneh Jabbari
(Prison
letter #1)
In the Persian language, names have specific meanings
that relate to life. The name, “Reyhaneh,”
means, “flower, fragrance.”
Ironically, my name, in the English language, “Randy” means, “defender.”
I don’t believe that it’s
a coincidence that I am writing this blog for Reyhaneh. I am not merely writing
out of sympathy. It is much bigger than that! I believe I have the “God-ordained” task to live up to the
meaning of my name. I want to be a “defender,”
a defender of Reyhaneh’s honor as a woman. Reyhaneh was the helpless victim
of a man’s uncontrollable sexual advances and she did what any honorable woman
would do by defending herself.
In Iran,
the unfortunate reality is that women are the property of men, in a society
that elevates the status of a man because of the Sharia Law. According to the
Quran, Men are superior to women and the
testimony of a woman is only worth half that of a man’s” (Surah 2:282,
Surah 4:34)
Reyhaneh
grew up in this kind of culture and because she defended her honor against a
former intelligence agent, her fate was sealed. The Iranian Regime would do
everything in its power to protect the reputation of a government man, which
meant that Reyhaneh had no hope of surviving, but instead would be sacrificed
on the altar of convenience so that the Sarbandi name would not be tainted.
Right before
her execution, the Regime brought in cameramen and reporters to pressure Reyhaneh
into changing her story.
“Just say he did not try to rape me!”
In the midst of great
pressure to preserve her life, Reyhaneh refused to lie and compromise the
truth, but instead she stood strong and tall as a majestic mountain and looked
in the face of her accusers and responded, “
I will not lie!”
The reason I chose the
name, “a beautiful fragrance” as the
subtitle of my book is because Reyhaneh exemplified and lived up to the meaning
behind her name. She was a beautiful fragrance of honor, kindness, mercy, and
courage. She forgave her interrogators shortly before her execution and showed
kindness and compassion to the many women political prisoners who came from
destitute and filthy walks of life.
This blog is about a remarkable, extraordinary and inspiring woman who suffered greatly
at the hands of an evil dictatorship and illuminated a dirty prison with the
beautiful fragrances of her wonderful character.
It is my honor and pleasure to be a voice for her honor!
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