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Thursday, June 13, 2013
Please God, no more blood and broken hearts!
"In a land where there's no freedom, If an election could change
something, they wouldn't hold an election!"
..Mark Twain..
The mood and climate of my friends in Iran is one of hopelessness and despair. On Friday, June 14, Iranians will go to the polls to elect a new president, but most of my friends lament to me that it's waste of time and they won't be participating. They remember all too well the bloody and violent outcome of the 2009 election, when protesters took to the street outraged at what they perceived was a rigged election!
Since January, the Iranian regime has arrested countless journalists and bloggers in order to silence the truth and prevent the mass demonstrations and violence that occurred in the last election. In addition to that, activists and journalists who were imprisoned during the 2009 elections are being systematically rounded up and returned to their captivity behind bars.
One can understand the mood of despair among my Iranian friends. To them, the upcoming election is a joke! It has nothing to do with democracy and fairness, so why vote?
Just recently, I read two emails from Iranians describing their feelings of despair and outrage about the upcoming elections. The first one is from Farhad, writing a brief letter to his friend, Bahman Nassiri. Bahman is the executive producer of the "The Golden Veil," a film exposing the truth behind the 1979 Iranian revolution.
Farhad is an Iranian citizen living in Tehran. He writes:
" As you have often said, a picture is worth a thousand words, but since I can't send you a picture, I send you these words and you can paint a picture with these words of the present day Iran.
Depression, suicides, hunger, unemployment, hyper-inflation, corruption, rising crime, fear, executions, hopelessness.
My young brothers sleep at night with hungry stomachs, hoping they won't wake up in the morning.
THIS IS WHY I WILL NOT BE VOTING FOR THIS ISLAMIC DICTATORSHIP
The second email that I received was from my dear friend Atefe who lives in Tehran. Atefe has an incredible way of words. Her stories and experiences have been the subject of many of my blogs, including the book, "The Rose of Nowruz," that I wrote for my friends in Iran.
Atefe captures the mood of the Iranian climate in a way no one else can. This is her email in her own words:
"As we reach the date, I remember the memories four years ago at the same time..My friends and I were so enthusiastic and energetic about the upcoming election. We used to think that those dark and exhausting days of Ahmadinejad is going to end .We were so happy..We used to think Mousavi (Iranian candidate in 2009) means freedom..means happiness..but as it went by and the result was revealed, everyone was shocked! We couldn't believe our eyes! How could this happen to us?
Now when I think about those damn days..I don't even give a damn to participate in this election. I am sometime afraid of this election..I'm afraid because of my people..they can't bear the power that stands against them..they are so weak! I'm afraid because of the young people who were killed, whose mothers are still mourning every weekend by their graves..I'm afraid that more young people will get killed and harassed I really don't care anymore about the result because I came to the conclusion that being a president here doesn't count and the election is just a democratic show!
Mark Twain says: "In a land where there's no freedom, if an election could change something, they wouldn't hold an election!"
This is really true about Iran. I just want to pass this week quietly and calmly without any more blood and broken hearts. I really wish that God would help us pass this stressful time more easily...."
Wow! Atefe's words, Farhad's words,
leave me speechless and in tears.
They are both crying out for fairness, for justice, for freedom!
After reading this I can feel the mood and the despair they are feeling. My heart aches for all Iranians and my only response is a prayer from Psalms.
Today, I'm crying out to God to give them hope in the midst of despair.
"He will rescue the poor when they cry out to Him. He will help the oppressed who have no one to defend them.
He feels pity for the weak and needy, and He will rescue them.
He will redeem them from oppression and violence, for their lives are precious to Him."
(Psalm 72:12-14)
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
"Sliding down the slippery slope towards a tyranny."
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people
of good conscience to remain silent."
(Thomas Jefferson)
"I feel we won't have a free country. I know that we won't! In this country every single action done by people must be monitored by the government! It is ridiculous! Should we ask the government's permission if we wanna die? I hate, hate, hate this government!"
The above statement echoes the outrage by many Americans in reaction to the recent scandal of the NSA (National Security Administration) and their unjustified invasion of our privacy,through monitoring, collecting and storing our personal data. Our email, cell phones conversations and daily computer activities, are undergoing a stepped up surveillance by the National data center, a facility located 25 miles outside of Salt lake City used to combat cyber-terrorism and secure our nation against sudden attacks.
Ironically, the above statement is not a quote from an American citizen, but rather from a personal friend of mine. Her name is Nahid. She is a an English teacher living in Tehran, Iran. She knows firsthand the reality of what life is like living under the scrutiny and surveillance of an oppressive government that are masters at fear and intimidation.
The Iranian regime forbids any freedom of speech and arrests every journalist, blogger and lawyer that would dare to speak their mind or voice their opinion in opposition to any government policy.
"Oh come on, Randy, but that's Iran! Everyone knows they are a dictatorship! We have the bill of rights and the Constitution to protect us."
While that is certainly true, you could have fooled me! The present administration in Washington seems to ignore the protection and wisdom afforded by our forefathers who drafted these great documents to protect us from the reality of a tyrannical government.
In the recent weeks we have all been shocked and offended by the arrogance of The IRS targeting conservative groups and denying them a tax exempt status because of their religious and political orientation. It seems like our government is spinning out of control and sliding down a slippery slope towards a tyranny.
Thomas Jefferson, author of the declaration of Independence and third president of the United States, issued a warning that we need to pay close attention to, declaring, "All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent."
Unlike Iran, we have the freedom to disagree publicly, write blogs, make videos, protest out on the streets and let our voice be heard everywhere. To remain silent is to invite a tyranny to slowly and subtley get its tentacles around our cherished liberties and suffocate them out of existence. Thomas Jefferson understood the "tentacles" of a tyranny, the oppressive power of a government out of control. As the primary author of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson served an ultimatum on the government of Great Britain freeing the colonies from an oppressive empire that prevented them from enjoying life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
The NSA would have us believe that this type of surveillance is necessary to protect us from sudden terrorist attacks and in the end, its totally justifiable. But does the
end justify the means?
Benjamin Franklin, another wise political thinker and american statesman, once said,
"Any society that would give up liberty to gain a little security, will deserve neither and lose both."
Have we become so arrogant to ignore the wisdom of our forefathers? They labored day and night writing our precious constitutional documents in order to protect our freedom and insure our liberties. We need to heed the warning of Jefferson and avoid the danger of becoming complacent and silent. We need to stand face to face with The NSA and proclaim our fourth amendment rights that protect us from the unwarranted invasion of our privacy.
If we fail to defend our constitutional rights, we could end up sliding down the slippery slope to a tyranny. History sometimes teaches us bitter lessons that we wish we could forget. Iran learned a bitter lesson in 1979 and it didn't just happen overnight. Gradually, forces opposed to the rule of the Shah, decided they had enough of a secular government that had been too influenced by the west. Suddenly Iran was transformed from a Monarchy to a dictatorship, from the rule of a king to the tyranny of an Ayatollah.
Secular freedoms were soon swallowed up by the oppressive policies of a cruel dictator who ushered in a new law under the guise of the glory of Islam.
My dear friend Nahid is sending a message to you and me. She is desperate for our way of life and for our freedoms. She is trapped under the bondage of the government of Iran. Her cry for freedom is a warning to us.
We must not remain silent. The time is now to stand up and defend our rights while we can!
Monday, May 27, 2013
Remembering Neda: The Angel of Iran
"You are neither dead, nor will you die
You will always remain alive
You have eternal existence
You are the voice of the people of Iran."
.....a poem for Neda Soltan.......
Simin Behbahani
Iran's national poet
On June 20th, 2009, the world witnessed the gruesome death of a young Iranian woman through a cell phone video. The video graphically showed a beautiful young woman lying on her back bleeding in an alleyway in Tehran and surrounded by friends desperately trying to save her life. Despite their heroic efforts, she tragically died after being fatally shot in the chest by a Basiji officer nearby.
Through a two-minute video, the world was introduced to a young Iranian woman named Neda Soltan, who had joined thousands of other protesters in peacefully demonstrating the results of a corrupt presidential election in Iran.
name means, "calling." It was then that I realized that God was using this video as a "calling" for me to be a voice for Iranians.
Now four years later, I have authored six books and written several blogs about the plight of Iranians for peace and freedom in their country. One of these books "The Rose of Nowruz: dreams of hope and freedom, " is dedicated to Neda, for her courage and conviction to be a voice for her people. I have been blessed to become a friend of Neda's fiance, Caspian Makan, a human rights spokesman living in Canada and have shared my book with him. Caspian has dedicated his life to keep Neda's dream for a free Iran alive through postings, pictures and articles on his webpage.
"The Rose of Nowruz" is now being read on pdf files by many of friends in Iran and giving them hope that one day, a Free Iran will be more than just a dream.
In my book, Bahareh, a concert violinist, witnesses the Ghaste Ershade beating a woman outside of her apartment window because she wasn't wearing her hijab properly in public.
It was this event in Bahareh's life that motivated her to be a activist and voice for her friends suffering under a corrupt regime.
There is a special song in my book, written by Bahareh, a song dedicated to the day when Iranians can once again walk down the streets of Tehran without fear. As I remember Neda today, I want to share this song with you. They are words of hope, dedicated to a woman, who through her tragic sacrifice, has illuminated the darkness of Iran with an eternal spirit of courage and freedom.
The Rose of Nowruz
There is a rose that was silenced that was crushed, but it will grow again, the sun will shine again.
You gave us hope, gave us freedom, gave us life. You life will never end. The rose will live again.
The sun is gonna shine again. The rose is gonna live again.
Give me wings of freedom so I can fly. I wanna fly high. I wanna soar.
Give me wings of freedom or let me die. I wanna touch the sky. I wanna soar!
(Dedicated to the angel of Iran: Neda Soltan)
"A Legacy of hatred, oppression and fear."
"I will stop Christianity in this country!"
Iranian President Ahmadinejad
In January 1863, amidst the bloody confrontation between the North and the South, President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed an end to slavery by issuing the famous, "emancipation proclamation." The Emancipation Proclamation immediately mandated the freedom of all slaves in the confederate states and issued a call for to the Army to treat as free all those that had been enslaved.
It was Lincoln who later declared on the bloody battlefield of Gettysburg that true government is, "of the people, by the people and for the people."
President Lincoln truly lived up to the calling of his elected office. He served the people with integrity and respect, leaving behind a legacy of freedom for the blacks and putting an end to an era of hatred and racism.
Every government official, every elected leader, is sworn to his or her duty to uphold the Constitution and serve their consitutuents with fairness, honesty, and integrity.
While Lincoln serves as a great example of leaving behind an honorable legacy of truth and freedom, Iranian President Ahmadinejad is the complete opposite.
On June 14, Iran will hold its presidential election. Ahmadinejad will step down after eight years and for millions of Iranians it is welcome relief. Unlike Lincoln, who freed millions of slaves, Ahmadinejad instead leaves behind a legacy of lies, hatred, and death. Lincoln brought freedom, while Ahmadinejad brought bondage and death. Since his presidency there has been more adult and child executions than any other country in the world. More than 500 executions topped the list in 2012 and this year so far 90 executions have been reported. Under Ahmadinejad there have been thousands of house arrests of political activists, journalists, bloggers and lawyers, silenced for speaking their minds and subsequently tortured in prisons all over Iran. The United Nations recently issued a stern warning to Iran for the continued gross violations of human rights, calling on them to conform to the international standards for the treatment of human beings.
Murder, imprisonment, discrimination, hatred, repression, the list goes on and on and one grows weary from reading about the fear and oppression resulting from the policies of Ahmadinejad and the Supreme leader of Iran.
Perhaps the single most "cherished" agenda that Ahmadinejad vowed to carry out was the elimination of Christianity in Iran. A few years after he was elected, Ahmadinejad publicly proclaimed, " I will stop Christianity in Iran." Shortly after that public vow, Christians were rounded up and arrested, many of them on Christmas day and put in solitary confinement in Evin Prison. Ahmadinejad kept his vow. Christians were tortured and beaten for their faith with the purpose of forcing them to recant and return to Islam. Despite the fact that the Iranian Constitution allows for "religious freedom," the present regime ignored their own law and began a crusade to purify Iran from any competing religious minorities.
The streets of Iran were filled with violence and death after the 2009 election. Iranians were outraged at what they perceived as an unfair and corrupt election. Many of the protesters to this day are still under house arrest with no hope of freedom, their voices silenced by a corrupt and intolerant regime. Many of my Iranian friends have told me during our chats online that they have no hope and refuse to vote in the upcoming election.
Lincoln left behind a legacy of hope and freedom to our nation. His famous phrase of true government being "of the people, by the people and for the people," is dream that my Iranian friends hunger and thirst for. They are tired of the violence and death that surrounds them. They have lost all hope for a freedom that you and I take for granted every single day.
As Ahmadinejad finally steps down, what can my friends expect from the next leader?
What kind of legacy will he leave?
Please join me in speaking out and praying for my friends in Iran. They need a true leader who will one day leave behind a legacy of
hope and freedom.
It's never too late to begin speaking out and praying.
"Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves:
ensure justice for those being crushed."
(Proverbs 31:8)
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Reaching out to Muslims with a circle of love
"There is no greater love than
to lay down one's life for one's friends."
Jesus/ John 15:13
I'm very excited about my new book, "Tears in a bottle: seeing through their eyes." I have spent over two years wrestling and laboring with the themes of this book in order to present a perspective that I believe has been sadly ignored. As a Christian I am interested in dialoging
and communicating respectfully with those of "different faiths." In particular, I spend a lot of time on the internet interacting with Muslims in Iran, Malaysia and different parts of the world. My goal in all of this is to first find our common ground and then discuss the theological differences in our worldviews.
"Tears in a bottle," is an open and honest book that attempts to help you and I "see through the eyes" of the average Muslim as they encounter hatred and discrimination in their everyday lives. I felt the best way to introduce my new book is to reproduce the introduction word for word and let you get a glimpse of the motives in my heart for writing this new book.
Introduction
(A Circle of Love)
When we love and lay down our lives for our friends, we are pleasing to God in the ultimate way. This is exactly what Jesus did for us. He loved us so much that He was willing to give away his life for his friends.
Recently, there was a beautiful example of this sacrificial love demonstrated in the streets of Cairo, Egypt. As protesters and angry crowds collided with each other in outrage over the dictatorship of Mubarak, a group of Egyptian Coptic Christians peacefully displayed a beautiful circle of love. They joined hands with each other and formed a circle of protection around Muslims so that they could perform their Friday prayers. This was one of the most beautiful events I have ever seen. Amidst the violence, anger and outrage, a group pf Christians were willing to lay down their lives so that their Muslims friends would be protected.
Living in a post 9/11 mindset, we have become fearful and judgmental toward all Muslims. Instead of displaying a circle of love and tolerance, we have instead erected a circle/barrier of hatred and labeled every Muslim with a terrorist mentality Instead of personal conversations and interactions between each other, we have allowed the ratings- driven media to shape and decide who we really are. We don't talk to each other and listen. Instead, we allow the media to paint a distorted picture of our identities and because of that the scars go deeper.
My new book, "Tears in a bottle," is an attempt to bring healing to the scars. The scars of fear, the scars of racism and discrimination and the scars of not listening from the heart.
There are no scars too deep and there is no hatred too strong that the Grace of God cannot heal.
What I witnessed in Egypt is possible right here where we live in America. We have a beautiful freedom and opportunity to form a circle of love around each other and begin to listen and pray for one another. While everyone else is in the crowd shouting, arguing and accusing, why don't you dare to be different? Take a moment to walk in a Muslim's shoes. Take the time to see, feel, and hear what they hear. When you and I begin to "see through their eyes," we will then have the courage to confront our own hypocrisies and then the world will be a much better place because of it.
Why not begin forming that circle of love today?
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Silencing the truth: No other viewpoint allowed!
On June 10, 1844, Joseph Smith jr, prophet and founder of the Mormon church, along with the city council, voted unanimously to have the printing press of the Nauvoo Expositor destroyed. The newspaper was declared to be a "public nuisance" and later that evening the town marshall carried out the order.
William Law, former member of the first presidency and chief editor of the newspaper, had accused Smith of secretly engaging in the practice of polygamy and openly teaching erroneous doctrines contrary to the Mormon Faith. He had also accused the prophet of becoming obsessed with wanting too much power and desiring to create a theocracy. In carrying out the order of destruction, Joseph Smith jr and the Nauvoo council had clearly violated the Illinois Constitution that granted freedom-of-the press to its citizens and had also trampled upon their first amendment rights.
False religion is notorious for silencing the truth and prohibiting opposing viewpoints. Fear and intimidation are common tactics employed by a "power hungry" dictatorship. Like Joseph Smith jr, Supreme leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei, has chosen the same methods and tactics to shutdown and silence those who oppose the policies of the government. With a little over a month until the next presidential election, the Iranian regime is busily arresting bloggers and journalists, to send a message to its citizens saying, "We will control what you see and hear!"
In January, on a day now known as "Black Sunday," security forces arrested 16 journalists and bloggers and quickly put them in Evin Prison. Since then, the government has stepped up their control over the internet by blocking access to vpn, a device Iranians need to open up filtered websites and get online. The goal of the regime is to disconnect the internet and deprive Iranians of access to any source of news and information during the course of the election. Iran is desperately trying to avoid the violence and bloodshed that occurred during the disputed 2009 presidential election by shutting down outside communications with any other media outlet.
In an ironic twist of events, on April 30, 2013, Iranian President Ahmadinejad was arrested and held for seven hours. He was interrogated by the head of intelligence in reference to some remarks he made about possessing "secret tapes" from the 2009 election. Ahmadinejad reportedly warned associates that if his hand picked successor, Esfandiar Mashaei, was rejected as a candidate, then he would reveal tapes that demonstrated that the 2009 election was a fraud. After a lengthy interrogation, Ahmadinejad was warned to back down from his ultimatum and then released.
Fraud, deceit and cover-ups are the norm for the Iranian regime. They will stop at nothing to deceive and control Iranians in order to conceal what happens behind closed doors.
Silencing the truth is the method Iran employs to shutdown any opposing viewpoint. In
October 2012, Sattar Beheshti, a Facebook blogger, was arrested and put in Evin Prison for writing an article that was critical of the government. Less than three weeks later his family was notified of his death. Although the regime claims it was due to natural causes, there was evidence of beatings and torture after a autopsy was performed.
Things have not changed much since the printing press of the Nauvoo Expositor was destroyed. Power hungry governments are still in the business of suppressing the truth and killing those who have an opposing viewpoint. My friends in Iran that I chat with daily online, told me that they are refusing to vote during the upcoming election. They feel it is hopeless and a waste of time.
For those of us who still enjoy first amendment rights and a government that is "of the people, by the people and for the people," we have a responsibility to be a voice for the voiceless. My heart is grieved that my Iranian friends don't have the same freedom that I have. Proverbs 31:8 gives us a royal command to stand up fro the voiceless.
"Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves: ensure justice for those being crushed."
I believe that as we collectively speak out and pray for Iranians, that God will honor our efforts and one day very soon give them true freedom.
There is a day coming when the truth will no longer be silenced.
Monday, April 29, 2013
The Evil of Silence
"Silence in the face of evil is itself evil
God will not hold us guiltless.
Not to speak is to speak
Not to act is to act."
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
On April 9, 1945 Lutheran pastor and theologian, Dietrich Bonhoeffer was executed by hanging in The Flossenburg concentration camp just three weeks before the U.S. liberation. He had been arrested and convicted in a conspiracy assassination plot against Hitler. Eberhard Bethge, one of Bonhoeffer's students, writes of a man who witnessed the execution, quoting him as saying, "I saw Pastor Bonhoeffer, kneeling on the floor praying fervently to God. At the place of execution, he again said a short prayer, and then climbed the steps to the gallows, brave and composed. His death ensured after a few seconds. In the almost 50 years that I worked as a doctor, I have hardly ever seen a man die so completely submissive to the will of God."
Bonhoeffer loved God. He was not afraid to speak out. His life and ministry was dedicated to the Lordship of Christ. He sacrificed his reputation on the altar of submission at a time when the world was plunged into a bloody conflict with Germany and loudly proclaimed God's truth at the risk of his life. In his classic book, "The cost of discipleship, " Bonhoeffer issued a clarion call, a summons, to awaken the Christian Church out of slumber and back to obedience in following Jesus. He lived what he preached and at the end of his life, He set an example of what true submission and obedience to Christ looked like.
We live in a politically correct culture that is ashamed and afraid to speak the truth because it might offend others. On November 5, 2009, Nidal Hasan, a 39-year old Army psychiatrist, and practicing Muslim, opened fire on his fellow comrades, murdering 13 and injuring 30. Prior to opening fire, he was heard screaming, the phrase, "Allah Akbar!"
After the shooting, a full investigation was conducted and the final verdict from the department of defense and the federal government was that the incident was the result of "workplace violence."
President Obama refused to label the tragedy as a result of terrorism but instead opted for the convenient, unoffensive phrase as, "workplace violence."
Our nation has plunged itself into a deadly mire of political correctness that sacrifices both the truth and our God-given gift of free speech, in order to satisfy the demands of living in a multi-cultural society. Our reputation has become our "god" and every day we sacrifice our rights and freedoms to this "demanding deity" to make sure that its not offended.
However, Bonhoeffer, surrounded by the pressures of war and death, would have nothing to do with this "politically correct deity." He proclaimed, "Silence in the face of evil is itself evil. God will not hold us guiltless. Not to speak is to speak. Not to act is to act."
For over 200 days, Saeed Abedini, American citizen and Calvary Church pastor, has suffered brutal beatings and torture in Evin Prison in Tehran, Iran for his Christian Faith. His condition continues to deteriorate as he suffers with internal bleeding and now kidney failure. Doctors refuse to treat him because they consider him "unclean," labeling him as an apostate for converting from Islam to Christianity 13 years ago. Saeed's human rights have severely violated. The ACLJ, The United Nations, His wife Naghmeh, and thousands of loyal followers on Facebook are working tirelessly, day and night, urging people to sign a petition for his release and to write Saeed encouraging letters.
Yet in all of this furious sacrificial activity, there is an ominous silence from the office of the most important leader of the free world, The President of the United States!
Why? Why has President Obama been so silent? Why has he seemingly refused to be a voice for Saeed, calling on Iran and demanding them to release an American citizen being held illegally in a brutal and dangerous prison?
Four years ago, President Obama called on Iran to release American journalist Roxana Saberi, who was charged with being a spy and held in Evin prison. Next he publicly spoke out for the release of three American hitchhikers, Sarah Shroud, Shane Bauer, and Joshua Fattal, who also were being held in Evin Prison.
Yet in the case of Saeed, there is total silence.
A dedicated father, husband, and pastor is fighting for his life in the most brutal prison in the world. His condition continues to deteriorate. A simple public declaration from President Obama demanding Iran release an American citizen and return him to his precious wife and two children could mean the difference between life and death.
Bonhoeffer declared, "silence in the face of evil is itself evil."
Our nation desperately needs leaders with courage and conviction who have not been poisoned by the venom of political correctness and who are unafraid to stand in the face of evil with a pointed finger saying, "Listen to me!"
The writer of proverbs, admonishes us to raise our voices against injustice and to not be afraid of speaking out against evil,
"Speak out for those who cannot speak for themselves,
ensure justice for those being crushed."
(Proverbs 31:8)
Bonhoeffer was right. We have a solemn duty to be a voice against evil and to not keep silent. Our words and proclamations carry within them the very power of life and death.
Over 25 years ago, President Raegan, stood at the Berlin Wall and courageously called on then Russian President Gorbachev to, "Tear down this wall!"
Gorbachev listened and the rest is history.
We need to follow the example of Reagan. With one united voice let us cry out to Obama, "Mr. President, Call on Iran to release Saeed!"
I pray to God that he hears our voices!
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