Justice for All

The Motto of the Theology State in Iran

The Motto of the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI), it is better to be feared than to be loved. The IRI is using Iron Fist by utilizing Machiavelli doctrine of Fear, Fraud and Force to rule Iran.

Think Independently, and freely because you are a free person.




Thursday, August 30, 2007

Iran expanding its atom program, UN agency reports

Published: August 30, 2007
VIENNA: Iran is slowly but steadily expanding its nuclear program in defiance of United Nations resolutions, even as it has promised to answer questions about an array of suspicious nuclear activities in the past, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Thursday.

To The People of a Future Free Iran and to the Entire World regarding BBC Propaganda

May 1, 2006
Los Angeles, CA

The April 29th BBC interview with Ibrahim Yazdi, accomplice in mass murder of scores of Iranian patriots during the Islamic Revolution of 1978-79, is yet another instance of British complicity in the overthrow of the legitimate Monarchial government of the Iranian Nation 28 years ago.

http://www.sarafrazan.net/to%20the%20people%20of%20free%20iran.htm

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

U.S. military releases Iranians in Iraq

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- U.S. soldiers released eight members of an Iranian delegation on Wednesday, a day after the group was arrested at a hotel in eastern Baghdad, the U.S. military and an Iraqi government spokesman said.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Ontario urged to fund all faith-based schools

Aug 28, 2007 01:08 PM

Daniel Girard Education Reporter

Getting a jump on the provincial election campaign, a group of religious school proponents today announced they will work to end the “blatantly unfair” education funding system in Ontario.

Taliban kill 5 Western soldiers in Afghanistan


ReutersPublished: Monday, August 27, 2007


KABUL -- Five Western soldiers, including three Americans, were killed in a string of Taliban attacks in eastern and southern Afghanistan, officials said on Monday.

Iran vows to 'fill the gap' in Iraq if U.S. leaves

Sheldon Alberts, CanWest News ServicePublished:
Tuesday, August 28, 2007

WASHINGTON -- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad issued a stark challenge to the Bush administration Tuesday, saying his country is "prepared to fill the gap" if American forces withdraw from Iraq.

Islamic Republic of Fear

THE head of Iran's judiciary is a confident man. Despite foreign attempts at slander, Ayatollah Mahmud Hashemi Shahrudi recently declared, his country has presented a fine image to the world of Islamic law at work

Iranian threat

By : Tom McInerney and Fred Gedrich
Washington TimesAugust 27, 2007
Speaking before the Democratic Leadership Council recently, former President Clinton urged "more diplomacy" as a way to ameliorate America's hostile relationship with countries like Iran. Simply waving a diplomatic wand in front of this enemy won't make the problems it is causing in Iraq and elsewhere disappear. The principal aims of Iran's ruling theocrats are to drive the United States out of Muslim countries; destroy Israel and fragile U.S.-supported democracies in Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon; and create a power base of like-minded regimes stretching across the upper tier of the predominantly Sunni Muslim Arab world.
Beginning with the Carter administration, a series of U.S. presidents, including Mr. Clinton, have failed to devise and implement effective policies to counter the belligerent activities of Iran's Shi'ite regime, which practices a brutal form of Islamic fundamentalism.
Iran's rulers have waged a one-sided war with the U.S. for 28 years. Their minions seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran and kept 52 Americans hostage for 444 days, bombed U.S. embassies in Lebanon and residences in Saudi Arabia and kidnapped and murdered Americans. The regime currently manufactures and supplies lethal roadside bombs to Shi'ite militias in Iraq and the Taliban in Afghanistan which kill and maim American troops.
In response to these aggressive acts, the United States broke diplomatic relations with Iran in 1979, declared it a terrorist state every year since 1984, and imposed economic sanctions and export controls. The United States also worked through the U.N. Security Council in attempting to curb Iran's nuclear development program and recently held meetings where U.S. and Iranian ambassadors to Iraq discussed that country's security situation.
These actions haven't diminished Iran's ambitions and troublemaking capabilities. In the absence of doing business with the United States, Iran's trade with other countries increased to about $110 billion for 2006, with China, Japan, Germany, France and Russia among the leading traders. Two permanent U.N. Security Council members, China and Russia, continue to provide the regime with dangerous weapons technology and arms. And U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker reported an "escalation not de-escalation" of Iranian support for Shi'ite militias after recent discussions with his Iranian counterpart.
This lack of progress illustrates the futility of relying solely on diplomacy, sanctions and the international community as primary weapons against this terrorist juggernaut. The United States could intelligently recalibrate overall Iran strategy by taking the following actions:
One, inform Iran that it must stop: (1) developing its nuclear program immediately and verifiably; (2) providing ordnance and training to Iraqi Shi'ite militias like the Mahdi Army, the Badr organization and others; (3) supporting foreign terror groups like Hezbollah, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad; and (4) providing sanctuary to al Qaeda leaders and operatives. If Iran fails to cease these activities, the consequences will be selective U.S. air strikes on nuclear facilities and anything that supports them; IED factories; and the special navy, air force and ground force units of the Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Two, encourage Iranian opposition and resistance groups and dissidents to combine efforts to peacefully change Iran's government. The time appears ripe. The regime doesn't allow 65 million citizens basic political rights and civil liberties or a free press. And poor governmental policies have created high unemployment and inflation. Additionally, the regime is resorting to a wave of repression against trade unionists, teachers, journalists, students and intellectuals. During the past four months, it reportedly arrested more than 1 million people and hanged and stoned several hundred of them to death.
Three, after congressional consultations, revoke the 1997 Clinton/Albright State Department decision to place the multiethnic Mujahidin-e Khalq Organization (MEK) on the United States terror list. The MEK is the largest, best organized, and most feared of all Iranian resistance groups and more than 50,000 members have been killed by the Islamic regime.
This group helped expose Iran's secret nuclear program and currently provides the United States with critically important intelligence. The Clinton administration blacklisted it, apparently hoping the move would foster better relations with Iran. The MEK's leader, Maryam Rajavi, is a Persian Muslim who advocates creation of a secular, democratic, nuclear-free, and death penalty-free state. The 2006 book "Appeasing the Ayatollahs, Suppressing Democracy" debunks the prime reasons given for the group's blacklisting.
Iran poses a clear and present danger to the United States. And President Bush appears poised to act if its behavior is not modified. During the dark days leading to World War II, many European and American leaders mistakenly thought they could bargain with or isolate their countries from sinister forces threatening mankind. Their failure to recognize right from wrong and good from evil prevented them from promptly acting collectively against that gathering threat. As a result, 60 million died, including 6 million Jews. History shows appeasement is a failed policy. Let's ensure it doesn't repeat itself.
Lt. Gen. Tom McInerney is a Fox News Military analyst and former assistant vice chief of the United States Air Force. Fred Gedrich is a foreign policy and national security analyst and served in the departments of State and Defense.
Dear Friends;
The least we could do is to send a polite but factual reply to
Mr. Tom McInerney and Fred Gedrich at Washington Times.

Who are they kidding by trying to present the terrorist Mojahedin
as Iran's best alternative? Do we forget their terror campaign
in the 60's. Do we ever forget the role they playedin bringing
Khomeini to power? Do we forget them siding with SADDAM during
the 8 year war with Iraq?

Can we all remind them that before Islamic Republic started killing
the Americans in 1979, it was Rajavi and his mindless killers who
since the early 60's started to kill many Americans as well as
Iranians?

Please be polite as it will be more effective. Please include your names,
address and telephone numbers for serious consideration of your
comments. It will help if you include your current or previous position
amongst the Iranian community. (Off course you can delete your details
for the Internet publication).

The Americans and the Brits imposed Khomeini on us in 1979, let them
know that Carter/Callaghan show cannot be repeated again and we do
not want former Khomeini's tool to replace the Mullahs.

Please send and please ask everyone in your list to write to Washington
Times.

Here is their address:

letters@washingtontimes.com

Here is the article:

http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070827/EDITORIAL/108270018/1013

Archaeologists Believe Sasanian Kangelu Fortress was an Anahita Temple Complex

http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2007/August2007/28-08.htm

LONDON, (CAIS) -- A team of Iranian archaeologists working on the Kangelu Fortress in northern Iran’s Mazandaran Province have put forward the idea that the Sasanian fortress was built to be waterproof as a suitable site for holding rituals in honour of Anahita, the Zoroastrian deity of fertility, water and rivers.

Achaemenid Ruins Found in Caucasus

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Archaeologists have discovered ancient ruins dating back to the Achaemenid dynastic era in the town of Shamkir in former Iranian province of Arran, what is today known as the Republic of Azerbaijan.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

20th Birthday of Iranian Writer in Evin Prison

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ubPeS6gQaU

Respond from Persian King To: Omar, Khalifat of Islam Army

letter from Yazdgird 3(632 AD - 651 AD)
The original copy of this letter from Yazdgird III (632 AD - 651 AD) is in Museum of London, We hope one day we can buy it from British who originally took it from us! It is our patriotic duty to poses this valuable asset. The date in which this letter has been written is after the Battle of Ghadesiyeh. As you know, a natural disaster, a massive sand storm blown on Persian troops & practically blinded them & took their battle vision. the sand storm directly blown on their front & caused the loss of this battle. Later on Muslim Khalif mentioned that Allah sent the massive Sand Storm in Persian Faces, so they lost the battle, Allah was the protector of Muslim against Ajams (what Arabs call Persians). Battle of Ghadesiyeh did not just cost us a great loss due to a natural disaster, yet it also cost us the life of our greatest Persian Hero, Commander in Chief of Persian Army, General Arteshbod "Rostam-e Farokhzad." Tazis killed Rostam in this battle. Rostam & his squad fought until the last drop of their blood & at the end even after he lost his sword, he fought Arabs with bare hand & his shield, Rostam & his selected squad killed as many Tazi as they could, yet finally it was destiny for our hero to die for Iran. Tazi savages rushed & attacked him in all directions & killed that great Persian soul, Ahura Bless his soul, Rostam was the symbol of Persian Empire & Iranian Glory

Du’a Khalil Aswad

Du’a Khalil Aswad (c. 1989 or 1990 – c. April 7, 2007) was a 17-year-old Iraqi Kurd of the Yazidi faith who was stoned to death in an honor killing.[1] It is believed that she was killed around April 7, 2007, but the incident did not come to light until video of the stoning, apparently recorded on a mobile phone, appeared on the Internet.[2]

Barbarians kill as West drifts

August 25, 2007
By SALIM MANSUR Toronto Sun
There comes a point at which diminishing returns on most issues begin to go negative. Such a point in denouncing Islamist terrorism and equally the Muslim majority's silence against this menace was reached sometime ago. As Islamist terrorism, however despicable, became mundane occurrence in the daily news cycle, the deafening silence of Muslims -- except for lonely voices of feeble opposition -- has given credence to growing numbers of non-Muslims that Islam is as much a religion of peace as the Klanmen's politics is an expression of multiculturalism. But there is another side to this abject reality. The Muslim majority's silence is greatly compounded by the appeasement mentality in the West of the mainstream liberal-left media, politicians trolling for ethnic votes and bureaucrats running public institutions. An evidence of this comes from Scotland. Theodore Dalrymple, a retired physician and prolific writer, in New York's City Journal reports: "In an effort to ensure that no Muslim doctors ever again try to bomb Glasgow Airport, bureaucrats at Glasgow's public hospitals have decreed that henceforth no staff may eat lunch at their desks or in their offices during the holy month of Ramadan, so that fasting Muslims shall not be offended by the sight or smell of their food. Vending machines will also disappear from the premises during that period." It is as if more diversity training for public officials, more accommodation of demands made by fundamentalist Muslims, greater willingness to self-flagellate for sins long past of western colonialism, more policing of what might be politically incorrect speech and writing about Islamists or Saudi Arabia's official cult (Wahhabism) of bigotry masquerading as a world religion, will somehow mysteriously translate into taming suicide-bombers and their masters to reciprocate kindly to the liberal-left sensibilities of people in the West. Dalrymple observes stories such as the one from Scotland tell us something about how civilizations commit suicide -- they "collapse not because the barbarians are so strong, but because they themselves are so morally enfeebled." What do barbarians do? Kill indiscriminately as in the recent Aug. 14 massacre in northern Iraq reported by the New York Post with the headline "Savages Kill 175 in Iraq Bombings." Four trucks were exploded west of Mosul -- Iraq's third largest city in the Kurdish north -- in an area predominantly inhabited by Yazidis, a people practising pre-Islamic faith. The toll of dead and wounded among this poor dwindling minority living at the edge of the Iraqi society far exceeds the numbers first reported.

This savagery is the work of al-Qaida associates preparing more predictable bombings ahead of the mid-September report in Washington to be given by Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq. BOMBINGS AND OPINION There is now a pattern in al-Qaida bombings arranged to influence American public opinion during key moments in public policy debates and general elections. But the liberal-left media, such as the New York Times, remains fixated with faulting the Bush administration for the savagery of Islamists while providing oxygen to apologists of terror spinning their endless refrain of "root cause" being oil and Israel for violence originating in the Middle East. How morally enfeebled, as Dalrymple opines, is the West? Imagine the uproar denouncing any suggestion that the mainstream liberal-left media, in appearance at least, is treasonously on side with the newest enemies of freedom and democracy. Salim Mansur is Senior Fellow at the Canadian Coalition for Democracies

The Other Side of the Story: King of Kings Mohammad Reza PAHLAVI I

Book review by Caesar Warrington
On the plane from Paris to Tehran the Ayatollah Khomeini was asked how it felt to be returning to Iran after over fourteen years of exile. "Nothing" was his curt reply. Such an example of Khomeini's cold indifference is one of the anecdotes the author of THE OTHER SIDE Of The STORY mentions, emphasizing the alien disposition of the clerical leadership that has been in control of Iran for close to thirty years. Using their own words "Kasvravi" shows the mullah class to be almost devoid of loyalty to the Iranian nation and culture. For him, the title of "sayyed" (a descendent of Muhammad) isn't simply an honorific for these people; it is a title affirming that the blood running in their veins is the same as that of the 7th century Muslim Bedouins who conquered the Sassanid Persian Empire. The author documents the Islamic Republic's efforts, on the one hand, to subvert Iran's unique identity via Islamization, while it attempts to literally wreck the history and legacy of Persia, with the other. For instance, soon after the revolution Sadegh Khalkhali, a Khomeini crony nicknamed "the Hanging Judge," had sent bulldozers to level the ruins of Persepolis. If not for the proud people living nearby who stood in the path of those bulldozers and eventually chased them away, the famed colonnades and halls of the Achaemenid kings would have went the way of Afghanistan's Bamiyan Buddhas (destroyed in 2001 by the Taliban). This semi-literate thug was devoted to Arabic culture and claimed he longed to destroy Ferdowsi's tomb. Like the early Bolsheviks who considered Russia a base from which to spread class warfare and world revolution, the leaders of the Islamic Republic look at Iran merely as the first of many countries destined to fall under the Shi'a caliphate they plan to create. In consideration of the words and deeds of Khomeini and his regime, "Kasvravi" contrasts their disdain for pre-Islamic Iran with the late Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's passionate desire to see the values and prestige of those days reborn. According to this author (and a growing number of others as well), the last Pahlavi shah has been much maligned and misunderstood. For this he especially blames the naïve and misguided Iranian Left, the BBC, and Jimmy Carter. Of the last two mentioned, he exposes the former as a manipulative agent of British economic interests, while the latter he displays (not surprisingly) as foolish and inept. Rather than the media and popular history's exaggerated image of the bloodthirsty despot, "Kasvravi" presents the late Shah as a man who truly cared for his country and its people. He devotes many pages outlining the various plans and projects of the Shah's "White Revolution," detailing the advances made under the monarchy in education, industry, land reform and -Yes!-- even basic civil rights. In closing let me note that it should be obvious to anyone familiar with modern Iranian history that the author here is using a pen name that gives homage to one of 20th century Iran's most prolific writers and thinkers: Ahmad Kasravi Tabrizi; nowadays he writes under the pseudonym "Iran Zamin." If you plan to purchase this book please keep in mind that it is self-published and could use editing. Beyond that, THE OTHER SIDE Of The STORY is a fascinating and enlightening book, written with much love and respect by a man who is a devoted son to what he calls the "divine pure motherland of Iran."

Iranian Aryan National Front

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuXdpPyrxeU

http://IANF.HYPERBOARDS.COM

Report Logs Bleak Outlook for Iran

WASHINGTON -- A draft intelligence report on Iran suggests a change in the Tehran regime appears unlikely any time soon despite growing public anger over the country's economic woes, U.S. officials said Thursday.

And why?

Please read my comments before reading the Intelligence Report: believe it or not I always knew this. With Americans wasting time in Iraq where they should have focused on the head of the snake, Iran. With Europeans who now give two fingers to the Americans by cutting deals with the Mullahs. With the Russians and the Chines who oppose every American move on Iran and off course with the Brits helping their beloved unruly child, the Islamic Republic in every
way they can, nothing better can be expected. I am sure there are many Americans who are very concerned about the situation in Iran but I do not believe that the U.S. administration
is either seriously thinking that way or indeed after wasting good five years has any idea on what to do with the Mullahs.

Another problem is that the Americans listen to much to the Brits and they will not understand that it is foolish to seek help of those who are responsible for creating the mess in the first place. The day President Bush said to his audience in front of Tony Blair in Capitol Hill that: " America does not have a better friend than Britain in the world", I told myself that he is badly mistaken and he will not succeeded in war against terror.
One need to come to London and see the depth of anti-American feelings amongst the Brits before making such untrue statement. The US intelligence agencies should investigate Britain as their hostile enemy. Britain has done everything in her political power to destroy America 's reputation and influence around the world.

The Brits achieve things differently. They do things indirectly as they have mercenaries around the world who take their orders. With the help of their Mullahs, Britain will not rest until they
absolutely destroy the Americans.

We are talking about a country that has created Islamic fundaments in the early 19th century. We are talking about a country that engineered the Khomeini madness in 1979 as a way to drive the Americans out of the Middle East .

We are talking about a country that not only promote Islamists around the world but indeed is harbouring Muslim terrorists from everywhere. The British Government is now making it illegal to criticize Islamists while the Muslims are allowed to burn books, shout death to America and Israel . It is going to be a crime punishable by British law to criticize Islam.

We are talking about a country that regards President Bush as Hitler. In Britain 's white Hall which is the sit of the British Government, the British Parliament and even in Downing Street where their Prime Monster is based, they refer to President Bush as imbecile yet President Bush regards the Brits as America 's best friends.

There are enough reasons for confronting these animals in Iran . There are enough Iranian opposition to support but as Britain 's top hooligan and the world war II criminal, Winston Churchill once said :

"I am confident that the Americans will finally get things right after doing everything wrong".

But this time it will be too late for everyone concerned including the Americans.

Regards and best wishes,
Mohammad- Reza Pardisan, London .

Friday, August 24, 2007

Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC - Pasdaran-e Inqilab)

While the Constitution of Iran entrusts the military with guarding Iran's territorial integrity and political independence, it gives the Revolutionary Guard [Pasdaran] the responsibility of guarding the Revolution itself. Established under a decree issued by Khomeini on May 5, 1979, the Pasdaran was intended to guard the Revolution and to assist the ruling clerics in the day-to-day enforcement of the government's Islamic codes and morality. The Revolution also needed to rely on a force of its own rather than borrowing the previous regime's tainted units.

What sets Zoroastrian Iranis apart

PADMAJA SHASTRITIMES NEWS NETWORK[ SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 2004 02:56:20 AM ]PUNE: "Irani Zoroastrians? Never knew they were a separate community?" said a colleague. He is not the only one. For, most people use the terms ‘Parsi’ and ‘Zoroastrian’ inter-changeably. The fact is that all Parsis are Zoroastrian, but not all Zorastrians are Parsis. Some of them are just Irani Zoroastrians, sometimes simply called Iranis. "Though both are Zoroastrian, the main difference lies in the time the two communities came to India ," explains Sanobar Irani, secretary, Zoroastrian Youth Association (ZYA). Those who left Iran soon after the advent of Islam to escape persecution, reached the shores of Gujarat 1,373 years ago. Their descendants are the Parsis. While the Zoroastrians who migrated to India from Iran relatively recently — 19th century onwards — are called Irani Zoroastrians. The Parsis have, therefore, imbibed Indian culture and traditions much more than the Iranis. Even some of their customs are similar to Hindu customs. The differences are evident in wedding ceremonies.While Parsis mainly speak Gujarati, many Irani Zoroastrians speak Dari, a dialect of Persian. "It is very easy to set apart Irani Zoroastrians physically, as they are heavier-built, fairer and have sharper (Archemenian) features," said Sanobar. Dara Irani, who has been president of the Poona Parsi Panchayat for over a decade, said, "There may be a difference in our looks, the languages we speak, some of our customs and the way we pronounce our prayers. But, ultimately, we are all Zoroastrian and just the same deep inside."In fact, many present-day Iranis do not speak much Dari, or follow Irani customs, he said. Irani Zoroastrians are increasingly marrying Parsis and seem to have integrated well with each other. "When my grandfather wanted to marry a Parsi, there was a lot of opposition. But, today, if our children want to marry Parsis, we will not bat an eye-lid," said an Irani Zoroastrian. Pune has over 2,000 Irani Zoroastrians, who are a very closely-knit, funloving community. Unlike the Parsis, who are more focussed on services, most Iranis are business-oriented. Who has not enjoyed a cuppa at the friendly-neighbourhood Irani restaurants? Or Shrewsbury biscuits and mawa cakes at Kayani Bakery. Iranis are also into other businesses like fabrication, stone quarrying and farming (orchards). "I am proud to be an Irani, as I think we are stronger, dedicated and sincere," said Arnavaz Damania, a wellknown businesswoman and sportsperson. However, the main worry of the community is that most of its young are migrating to countries like Australia , New Zealand and Canada. "A decade down the line, Pune is likely to have few young Iranis or Parsis. Our youngsters do not have enough opportunities here. They are forced to look for greener pastures," said Dara.

http://www.derafsh-kaviyani.com/english/iranizoroastrian.html

CONVERSION IN ZOROASTRIANISM

Difficulties with the Bombay Zoroastrian community and the communities abroad Despite exposure of the feeble canard on non-conversion falsely implicating Jaydev Rana, we notice that this untruth is still being peddled by unscrupulous anti-conversion lobbyists. Bombay indeed does have its particular difficulties with regard to acceptance of outsiders into the Zoroastrian faith, but pleads especial SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC reasons for RELIGIOUS non-compliance! Emphasis is placed on the Parsi socio-religious funds set up with the provisos that they benefit only the Parsis and that strange class of the socalled "born Zoroastrian". The priests have, apparently, left a loophole to conveniently allow the return of some backsliders on the curious pretext that their conversion out was both "illegal and invalid".This is untenable, for were it really so then we should not have had any obstacles denying exogamous Zoroastrian women their INALIENABLE BIRTHRIGHT of fire-temple visits and dakhma exposure: on such occasions we were assured that by outmarrying they had voluntarily and knowingly (!) renounced their Zarathushtrian Mazdayasnian faith! It is distressingly evident that religious adherence is being determined quite arbitrarily from ad hoc misogynistic premisses. No less unpleasant is the sad tendency of our Bombay prelates -- to whom we once used to entrust our religious and spiritual guidance -- to manipulate texts to suit their predilections for a tribal religion despite the clearest injunctions to the contrary. One such piece of misinformation was noticed in a false statement that just one lone Parsi scholar had translated the root VAR-, thrice located in the Gathas, as "convert". That this was palpably untrue was quickly brought to light with references to the sound scholarship of Kavasji KANGA, Khodabax PUNEGAR, and Irach TARAPOREWALA -- all respected Gatha translators. Much is being made of the fact that our Parsi translators had also utilized "to choose", "ward off/turn from (evil)", "to convince", "to cause to believe". Permutations formed about the root VAR- can only convey expressions unambiguously suggestive of the drive for PROSELYTISM. A selective adherence to peripheral meanings, with the careful exclusion of the embarrassing "CONVERT", is exactly like saying of someone that "he strides, paces, strolls, saunters, promenades, causes one foot to move ahead of the other, BUT he is not walking!" What would be the point of Zarathushtra's energetically repeated "convincing", "causing to believe", "turning away from (evil)" of seekers after.Ahura Mazda's Wisdom, if his purpose and intent was not their CONVERSION? We shall not further labour the point, having done so at length precisely for reasons of countering so much manipulation of our religious texts and undermining of the real importance of the conversion issue. We ourselves having no personal or vested interest, and certainly NO HIDDEN AGENDA, we seek only a restitution of the Truth of our religious and commentarial texts. Mr Cyrus P. Mehta of Harlow, Essex, recalls for us that the several learned articles and factual religious statements made in Western India early in the twentieth century by the pious Parsi Zoroastrians Darab SANJANA, Jivanji MODI, Shehryarji BHARUCHA, Khurshedji Rustamji CAMA and Tehmurasp Dinshahji ANKLESARIA, all of whom had opined that IF A PERSON SERIOUSLY WISHES TO BECOME A ZOROASTRIAN, THEN THERE IS NO BAR IN OUR RELIGION. Their conclusions were not based on blind beliefs but ON THE STUDY AND AUTHORITY OF ZOROASTRIAN SCRIPTURES. Few in Bombay now care to remember these judicious pronouncements of our enlightened ancestors. Enlightenment is not some new fad brought about since the Parsi and Irani emigrations world-wide: it has always illumined the Zoroastrian psyche. Western scholars too, pioneer and modern-day, applying common-sense to their disciplined scientific training, have arrived at the same conclusion: that ZOROASTRIANISM ENJOINS CONVERSION. No' sensible Zoroastrian would advocate indiscriminate or mass conversion. However, he does maintain that in cases of intermarriage, non-Zoroastrian spouses and the children from increasing intermarriages be encouraged to embrace Zoroastrianism and integrate within the communities. Family harmony would thrive, apostasy disappear, and community stability benefit naturally from RELIGIOUSLY inculcated social moves towards acceptance.Had the Bombay priests come straight out with the RELIGIOUS TRUTH ABOUT CONVERSION and then explained that owing perhaps to personal distaste or disinclination, or economic and socio-political pressures, now. augmented by alien fundamentalist busybodies and wily opportunists, it was not possible to put our religiously inculcated precepts into practice, and called a moratorium on this vexing issue. The self-respect of the Bombay community and its religious and populist leaders would thereby have remained unassailed throughout the decades of needless obfuscation. However, what is seemingly appropriate for Bombay cannot be rigidly imposed as RELIGIOUS dogma upon the rest of the Zoroastrian world where, evidentially, circumstances and needs are very different. Solutions similarly remain to be boldly tackled over the thorny questions of Calendars, Initiation, Intermarriage, Funerary procedures (especially regarding Burial, Cremation, Secondary Burials, non-Zoroastrian pallbearers, post-mortem Prayers) and all other matters which our communities continue to irresponsibly and hurriedly shelve as "controversial". Such pressing matters of real concern to every Zoroastrian will not resolve themselves through studied indifference. Adding to the difficulties confronting our priesthood and the laity is the infiltration by those Parsis who rejected Zoroastrianism for a moribund THEOSOPHY: an insidious mix of doctrines incorporating ideas alien to Zarathushtra's theology are passed on to a gullible public as a modern extension of the Prophet's teachings. Then there are among the Parsis groups of followers of the latter-day receivers of secretly communicated pseudo-religious teachings, the more revered as they become less comprehensible! Such non-Zoroastrian views are being espoused by small vocal minorities. And though they certainly, under the principle of 'freedom of conscience', have the right to believe and declare the same, they must be seen for what they really are -- PERVERTERS OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE PROPHET ZARATHUSHTRA. Not only do they publish and preach in India; they appear as itinerant preachers in parts of the world where Zoroastrians have recently settled to promote their peculiar theosophies, attempting to gain the support of the uninformed by insinuating a tribal religion based upon blood. The illuminating message of the Prophet is craftily avoided, or even displaced. The life of moral striving and the goal of establishing the Rule of Righteousness is utterly ignored. For whatever unpleasant reasons, our authentically Zoroastrian priesthood seems paralyzed to denounce or counteract such unprincipled infiltrations, preferring to divert attention to imagined threats from phantasms. These difficulties indeed lie with the Bombay priesthood. We do not wish to engage in pointless disputation. Ours is a plea for enlightenment, which is already embedded in the words of the Prophet. We urge our enlightened dasturs to articulate this Wisdom and not fail the Teacher whose teachings they profess. We jointly feel that a cultured, enlightened, educated and teaching priesthood represents our best hope for the propagation of the faith and the continuance of its glory well into the next millennium of our PROPHET ZARATHUSHTRA WHO WAS SENT TO US TO PERFECT THIS WORLD THROUGH OUR OWN PERFECTION.

http://www.derafsh-kaviyani.com/english/conversion2.html

A Zoroastrian resurgence

Forty years in the lifetime of a publication is not a great number in itself. But when those 40 years represent tumultuous changes both in the country in general and the community in particular, they acquire a different hue.These have been exciting years with many new, far-reaching developments. Just when the sun appears to be setting on the community, there is a resurgence of energy.Three more fire-temples have been added in the last 10 years. Publication of books, exhibitions, seminars, world congresses, youth meets, television programs, the formation of the World Zarathushti Chamber of Commerce, the blueprint for a Zoroastrian world body, the revitalization of the Indian economy and strengthening of democratic institutions have all taken place in the last decade. When in November 1994 Parsiana listed the major community developments in the 30 years since the magazine began publication, it was hard to imagine such a frenzy of activity would occur in the next 10 years. Perhaps one such indication is the keen contest for trusteeship in the Bombay Parsi Punchayet (BPP) elections and the increasing demand for universal adult franchise (UAF). Candidates are finding it difficult to justify denying a direct vote to the community. UAF, if it were to come about (and there appears little chance of that) would galvanize the Bombay community. A people denied the vote are apathetic to the electoral system. Give them a say, empower them and they respond. But like the world body, UAF too has eluded the local Parsis even though it is prevalent in nearly every Zoroastrian center throughout the world. Scanning through the past issues of the magazine founded by Dr Pestonji Warden in November 1964, one can view the highlights of the community over the past decade. The most notable community achievements on the global scale would be the hosting of the World Zoroastrian Congresses in Tehran, Iran and Houston, Texas, USA, and the formation of the World Zarathushti Chamber of Commerce.The next item would be the dar-e-mehers constructed, renovated or relocated both in the New World and in India. In Bombay itself three new fire-temples, two of them dadgahs and one agiary, have been consecrated. The consecration of the Shapoorji Fakirji Jokhi Agiary, amongst the largest in the world, at Godrej Baug, was undoubtedly the major religious event of the decade. Thousands of Parsis lined the road from the Vachaghandhy Agiary at Hughes Road to the agiary site at Nepean Sea Road, a distance of around two kilometers. Many faithfuls accompanied the fire from Navsari in Gujarat to Bombay, a journey that took two nights and a day.For a community that's dwindling in numbers, the spiritual flame appears to burn brighter than before. And the Jokhi family's ties with India were also evident in their largesse to the B.D. Petit Parsee General Hospital in Bombay. They donated and continue to give generously. The Jokhis are not the only Hongkong connection. Even the Incorporated Trustees of the Zoroastrian Charity Funds of Hongkong, Canton and Macau, the richest Zoroastrian association in the world, have donated millions to community causes in India and elsewhere.The Zartoshty brothers Mehraban and Faridoon, as Arbab Rustam Guiv before them, have proved to be amongst the largest benefactors of the community both in the New World and India.The Jokhis, Guivs and Zartoshtys are the modern avatars of the Jejeebhoys, Cowasji Jehangirs, Wadias and Petits, the community saviors of old.Of course Indian philanthropy abounds. People like Jamshed Guzder and NarYman Dubash have supported countless causes and individuals and given unstintingly of their wealth. So have many other individuals. Organizations such as the BPP and the World Zoroastrian Organisation assist the needy, the sick, the homeless and those in search of a better quality of life. The Venture Capital Fund launched by the Federation of Parsi Zoroastrian Anjumans of India under the auspices of the BPP may not have met with much success but the effort is symbolic of the community's desire to help their brethren.Less well-endowed charitable trusts and individuals have tried to develop their resources to generate funds for community causes. The Salsette Parsis Association along with the site property developer Hosang Mistry built probably the largest Parsi housing complex in the world: 750 flats at Andheri, a Bombay suburb. And in Poona, the Grant family set up one of the city's most prestigious hospitals, Ruby Hall Clinic.A Zoroastrian Tapestry: Art, Religion and Culture tome was a mammoth intellectual accomplishment, as was the exhibition of Parsi portraits at the National Gallery of Modern Art a tribute to artistry. The PARZOR Foundation, assisted by UNESCO and established in Delhi with its minuscule Parsi population, has undertaken major programs in various parts of the country including Bombay, its crowning achievement being the launch of the five-rupee coin honoring the Grand Old Man of India, Dadabhai Naoroji. In collaboration with the BPP (whose chief executive Behram Dastur mooted the idea) the coin was released by the finance minister of India this October on Mahatma Gandhi's birthday.In terms of recognition of the Parsi contribution to India, this was one of the highest honors the country could bestow.Zoroastrians achieved other accolades as well. Justice Sam Bharucha was appointed Chief Justice of India and Justice Sam Variava was elevated to the Supreme Court. Soli Sorabjee was once again appointed attorney general of India and Tehmtan Andhyarujina held the post of solicitor general. Abroad, President's counsel Kairshasp Choksy was named finance minister of Sri Lanka and in South Africa Dr Frene Ginwala continues as speaker of the South African National Assembly.The Royal family paid its first visit to London's Zoroastrian Centre and Zoroastrians are present for Royal and Commonwealth state occasions in the UK.Jamsheed Marker of Pakistan was named the United Nations Secretary General's Special Envoy to the troubled island of East Timor; Karan Bilimoria of Cobra Beer was named by the London Chamber of Commerce as its Entrepreneur of the Year; Bapsi Sidhwa's novel The Ice- Candy-Man was made into a movie, 1947 Earth, and her play Sock'em with honey was performed at London's Cockpit Theatre, the first play written by a Zoroastrian to be staged there. Novelist Rohinton Mistry was twice nominated for the prestigious Booker award; Kaizad Irani's design for the Heroes Park at the new World Trade Center to be constructed in Manhattan was selected from over 400 entries.India's first indigenous made automobile, the Indica, rolled out of the Tata stable and its Bombay landmark, The Taj Mahal Palace Hotel observed its 100th year. The House of Godrej also completed 100 years of existence and set up amongst other things the Confederation of Indian Industry Naoroji Godrej Centre of Excellence in Vikhroli. The Zoroastrian Co-operative Bank became a scheduled bank and has extended its services to 10 locations. Dr Firuza Parikh's pioneering work in stem cell research established her as an authority on reproductive assistance.In community news the installation of the solar concentrators at Bombay's Doongerwadi demonstrated the community's ability and willingness to come up with a practical solution to a highly sensitive issue. The greening of Doongerwadi, with the assistance of the House of Godrej, demonstrated the community's commitment to the environment. The establishment of a college at the Byramjee Jeejeebhoy Parsee Charitable Institution marked one of the community's few forays into post school academic education in Bombay. Parsi schools are aplenty (though sadly not Parsi students) but colleges unfortunately were not given priority.The High Priests' resolution ostracizing interfaith marriages and their progeny and the subsequent retraction by three of the priests was a religious watershed. For the first time an edict by the clergy was treated with both scorn and outright contempt. The retraction underscored the realization that priests cannot expect people to comply with religious dictats issued without first ascertaining ground realities.Our community now extends to the resurgent Zoroastrians of Tajikistan, Ukraine and Russia and the neo Zoroastrians in South America and elsewhere. This is their decade. The 3000th anniversary of Zoroastrian culture celebrated under the aegis of UNESCO was mooted by the Tajiks. And so our tribe increases.At Parsiana, NarYman Dubash's largesse made it possible to substantially extend editorial coverage on the community's young in this issue. Normally, on account of restricted financial resources, the number of editorial pages is determined by the amount of advertisements published. By having a sponsor, Parsiana was able to more than double editorial coverage. Though this meant a considerable workload for our small but highly dedicated staff, the returns outweighed the difficulties encountered. If the coverage appears uneven it is because we have undertaken this type of venture for the first time. If we obtain sponsorship for future issues this experience will stand us in good stead.In our list of accomplishments over the past decade we must have left out many deserving events and individuals, both in India and abroad. To them we offer our apologies. It is only because we are hard pressed for time and pressured that the omissions have occurred. Readers are welcome to write to us to share their views on the past 10 years' achievements.Parsiana is exceedingly grateful to all its well-wishers, readers, subscribers, advertisers, donors and sponsors for the generous assistance they have rendered us over the past four decades. We survive because of you.And so on to the next decade. What will it bring? We can't be certain. Everything is so unpredictable. Maybe we'll get a world body. Maybe interaction between Zoroastrians, old and new, will increase. Technology will drive communication and communication will drive change. For a long time India lost the lead in matters Zoroastrian to North America. But now there seems to be a resurgence in India. As this sleeping giant India awakens, so does the community. We are no longer a third world country to be scoffed at. There is a sense of pride in our accomplishments, perhaps more than ever after the first euphoria of Independence.Even if the Zoroastrian community continues to shrink in numbers here, one thing is certain: we won't go quietly!

MAKE YOUR CHOICE ARE YOU IRANIAN OR SLAVE OF EVIL MULLAS?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_3Y_WXWeW0

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Why is Iran Shelling Iraq?

By the grisly standards of war-torn Iraq, fighting yesterday in the mountains in the northern part of the country was a mild affair. Iranian artillery shelled villages in the Qandil mountains that are home to various Kurdish militant groups, one of which — the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PEJAK) — is waging a guerilla insurgency against the Iranian government. Though hundreds of villagers fled their homes and two women were wounded, such cross-border violence is becoming a regular feature of life in the north. But yesterday's attack could also be a prelude to a larger struggle.

Iraq leader can’t govern effectively, Bush’s experts say

President Bush’s Iraq strategy was dealt another significant blow yesterday when his intelligence agencies delivered a devastating assessment of Nouri al-Maliki, the Prime Minister.

Report reveals CIA errors ahead of 9/11 attacks

Last Updated: Wednesday, August 22, 2007 2:30 PM ET
CBC News

A newly released report details the Central Intelligence Agency's blunders in the years leading up to the Sept. 11 attacks, criticizing "systemic problems" and a failure to develop a strategy to counter al-Qaeda threats.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Haleh Esfandiari

http://sarbazevatan.multiply.com/video/item/104

Rise, and Defend Pure Divine Motherland of Iran and Other Iranian, Rise

http://activistchat.com/FarakhanProject1Edaam.doc

Stay the Hands of the Murdering Mullahs

http://www.petitiononline.com/achat49/petition.html
The life that God gives, no man should extinguish. The blood-thirsty mullahs presently ruling Iran blatantly violate this sacred covenant by executing large numbers of people ranging from petty criminals to political opponents. The mullahs and their mercenaries are wasting precious human life to maintain themselves in power through terrorizing the population. Mass public hangings, as well as secret executions in prisons, are routine in the tyrannical Islamic Republic of Iran. Recently Majid Kavousifar, 28, and his nephew, Hossein Kavousifar, 24, were hanged for the alleged murder of a hard-line judge, Hassan Moghaddas, a mullah-judge notorious for jailing and condemning to death political dissidents. The victims were hanged from cranes and hoisted high above one of Tehran’s busiest thoroughfares. This “judge” had repeatedly bragged publicly that he often issued a death verdict without even examining the charges against the individual. The Islamic Republic of Iran has the dubious distinction of executing more children, those under the age of 18, than any other country in the world. Such is the plight of the Iranian people.

28 Parthian and Sasanian Sites Identified in Golestan

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Archaeologists from the Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Department of Golestan province have succeeded in identifying 28 historical sites belonging to Parthian (248 BCE- 224 CE) and Sasanian (224-651 CE) dynastic eras which must have a relation with Gorgan’s Great Wall.

Discovery of a Parthian Canal by Gorgan's Great Wall

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Following the recent discovery of a fortress at Gorgan's Great Wall during the third season of archaeological research, archaeologists have also managed to discover a canal belonging to the Parthian dynastic era.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

When Iran was a secular country

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkCFqzEw7n0

Embracing Death with Joy and Glory,

Majid Hossein Kavousifar Prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9M_-4SHuY0g

The Pahlavi Dynasty

BRIEF HISTORY

Although some genealogies for the Pahlavi family have been produced, which go back to the seventeenth century, these are difficult to verify or credit. The earliest verifiable ancestor was Captain Morad Ali Khan. His grandson, Reza Khan was brought to power in a coup d'etat in 1921. The Qajar dynasty was ousted and Reza Khan proclaimed as Shahanshah by the Persian Majlis in 1925. The name of the country was altered to Iran (Land of the Aryans) in 1935. His son and successor, Muhammad Reza Shah, was forced into self-imposed exile by the Islamic revolution in 1979, Iran was proclaimed an Islamic Republic and the monarchy was abolished.Copyright© Christopher BuyersSTYLES & TITLES:The Sovereign: Ala Hazrat Shahanshah-i-Iran, Aryamehr, i.e. King of Kings of Iran, Light of the Aryans, with the style of His Imperial Majesty.The Consort of the Sovereign: Shahbanu, i.e. Empress, with the style of Her Imperial Majesty*.The Heir Apparent: Vala Hazrat Vali Adh, i.e. Crown Prince, with the style of His Imperial Highness.Other legitimate male descendants of the sovereign, in the male line: Vala Hazrat Shahpur (personal name) Pahlavi, i.e. Prince, with the style of His Imperial Highness.Female descendants of the sovereign, in the male line: Vala Hazrat Shahdokht (personal name), i.e. Princess, with the style of Her Imperial Highness.Grandsons of a sovereign, in the female line, being the sons of daughters and Iranian nationals: Vala Gohar (personal name) (father's surname), i.e. Prince, with the style of His Highness.Grand-daughters of a sovereign, in the female line, being the daughters of daughters and Iranian nationals: Vala Gohari (personal name) (father's surname), i.e. Princess, with the style of Her Highness.* the title of Shahbanu was devised especially for Empress Farah at the Coronation of 1967. A similar Imperial style being devised at that time for the Shah's mother. Prior to that date the wives of the Shah were styled Malika (Queen), with the style of Her Majesty.Copyright© Christopher BuyersRULES OF SUCCESSION:The Shah must profess the Islamic (Shi'ite) faith, and his mother must be an Iranian citizen, a Muslim and not descended from the previous Qajar dynasty.Copyright© Christopher BuyersORDERS & DECORATIONS:See separate page on ORDERS & DECORATIONS - link below.GLOSSARY:Ala Hazrat: His Majesty.Aryamehr: Light of the Aryans, a title adopted by the Shahanshah in 1967.Hazrat Vala: His Royal Highness.Iran: Land of the Aryans.Malika: Queen consort.Midal: medal.Nishan (or Nichan): order of chivalry, or decoration of honour.CPahlavi: family name adopted by Reza Shah, the word designated the official language and writing during the Sasanid Empire.Shahdokht: 'King's daughter', the title of a Princess of the Pahlavi dynasty.Shahpur: 'King's son', the title of a Prince of the Pahlavi dynasty.Shahanshah: 'King of Kings', i.e. Emperor.Shahbanu: 'Lady of the Shah', i.e. Empress.Vala Gohar: the style borne by the sons of a Princess of the Pahlavi dynasty, translated as Prince with the style of His Highness.Vala Gohari: the style borne by the daughters of a Princess of the Pahlavi dynasty, translated as Princess with the style of Her Highness.Vala Hazrat: His Imperial Highness.Vali Adh: Heir Apparent, the title of the Crown Prince of the Pahlavi dynasty.Copyright© Christopher BuyersSOURCES:Burke's Royal Families of the World, Volumne II: Africa & The Middle East. Burke's Peerage Ltd., London 1980.Cyrus ghani, Iran and the Rise of Reza Shah: From Qajar Collapse to Pahlavi Rule. I B Tauris & Co Ltd., 1998.Iran Almanach and Book of Facts, Tehran, 1967.Iran Lovers' Home Page, 1997-2000: http://www.irani.org/main.shtmlRobert L. Jarman (ed), Iran Political Diaries 1881-1965. 14 volumes. Archive Editions, Archive International Group, Melksham, Oxon., 1997.Adel Sabit and Dr Maged Farag. 1939, The Imperial Wedding (Royal Albums of Egypt). Max Group, AMS, Cairo, 1993.Who's Who, and Leading Personalities in Persia, 1929-1932, 1944, 1946 and 1947. Political (External) Dept. Collection, India Office Records, British Library.Report on Personalities in Persia, 1938 [E 2799/670/34]. Political (External) Dept. Collection, India Office Records, British Library.Donald N. Wilber, Reza Pahlavi: The Resurrection and Reconstruction of Iran. Exposition Press, Hicksville, New York, 1975.SPECIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:Kevin Chaffee.Hassan Kamel-Kelisli-Morali.Lily Mottahedan.H.H. Princess Naz Pahlavi.H.E. Mehrdad Pahlbod.Steve Ruelberg.Simin Vali.Marc Van Dorst.David Williamson.

Iran: A People Interrupted by Hamid Dabashi and constructive criticism by Caesar M. Warrington's

...from all the numerous hatreds and paranoid ideas pounding in his head and pouring out onto the pages of his articles and books. Hamid Dabashi (Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University) purports his recent IRAN: A PEOPLE INTERRUPTED to be a history of modern Iran, from the late-18th century Qajar period to the present. Once you start reading his insufferable rant, however, you'll find it is less about Iranian history (something which Dabashi considers to be only a "myth" anyway) as it is about Dabashi's self-indulgent "ax to grind." Dabashi is a stereotypical "lefty loon" (as an Iranian friend describes him) academician of the sort that Fox News loves to present on one of their talking head programs for public shock and amusement. He goes round and round in this book alternating his paeans to Che Guevara, French cinema, and his wife (obscure poet Golbarg Bashi), with childish and paranoid invective for almost all of his colleagues and predecessors who've written on Iranian history and culture; most of whom, according to the esteemed professor, are either "pestiferous orientalists" or "useless Lipstick Jihadists" (a snide reference to Azadeh Moaveni) --and all in service of America's "neo-cons." Dabashi definitely holds a special (and quite obsessive) contempt for Azar Nafisi. He dubs the author a "native informer and colonial agent," claiming her book READING LOLITA IN TEHRAN was a Pentagon psy-ops project intended to ease the American public into support for an invasion and occupation of Iran! (Are you getting the idea on this Dabashi fella by now?) If you subscribe to Dabashi's post-colonialist/post-Marxist blah-blah worldview, then you will truly have a good old time reading this book. But if you are quite sane and desire to learn more about Iran's modern history, take my sincere advice and avoid this book.

Shadows in the Desert: Ancient Persia at War by Dr. Kaveh Farrokh

Editorial Reviews

Book Description
The ruins of Persepolis evoke the best-known events of ancient Persia's history: Alexander the Great's defeat of Darius III, his conquest of the Achaemenid empire, and the burning of the great palace complex at Persepolis. However, most of the history of ancient Persia remains as mysterious today as it was to contemporary Western scholars. Compared to the world-famous Alexander, the many wars won by the Achaemenid, Parthian, and Sassanian empires, and their revolutionary military technology, have been almost forgotten in the sands of the East. In its day, Persia was a superpower to rival Greece and Rome, and conflict between them spanned over a millennium. Through these wars, and trade, these foes learnt from each other, not only adopting elements of military technology, but influences in the arts, architecture, religion, technology and learning. In this beautifully illustrated book, Dr Kaveh Farrokh narrates the history of Persia from before the first empires, through their wars with East and West to the fall of the Sassanians. He also delves into the forgotten cultural heritage of the Persians, spread across the world through war and conquest, which, even after the fall of the Sassanians, continued to impact upon the Western world.
About the Author
Dr Kaveh Farrokh has been researching the military history and technology of Persia for two decades. He obtained his PhD in 2001 from the University of British Columbia, where he specialized on the acquisition of Persian languages. He has given lectures and seminars in the University of British Columbia and has written articles for various journals. He is the author of Elite 110: Sassanian Elite Cavalry AD 224-642. He is currently acting as historical advisor on a film project titled Cyrus the Great, and will be appearing in a History Channel documentary on the Persian Empire in October 2006. The author lives in Vancouver, Canada.
Neutrality

Original Greco-Roman, Arabo-Islamic, Armenian, and Chinese, along with others, sources are consulted in conjunction with Iranian ones to provide the reader with a non-partisan and apolitical view into Iran’s pre-Islamic past. Despite his Iranian background, the author is able to provide a neutral view of Persia’s history, one that includes the weaknesses of Persia before the arrival of Islam. Mention is made for example, of the inequitable distribution of wealth seen between the nobility and the Magi on the one hand versus the peasant and ordinary populations on the other – and the historical consequences of these social dynamics. This, according to Benedict Brogan of the Daily Mail, is one of the strengths of the book.[2]

Frederick KASRAVI

Victoria, British ColumbiaGrant of Arms, Flag and BadgeAugust 9, 2000Vol. IV, p. 42
KASRAVI, Frederic "Fereydoun"Canada Loses A True Humanitarian Frederic (Fereydoun) KASRAVI was born in Iran and moved to Canada over forty years ago. Fred fell in love with Canada, as he treasured the Canadian values of multiculturalism, freedom, peace, and the equality of all people. Frederic was a dedicated humanitarian, working tirelessly for charities assisting in international health, aiding impoverished children and striving for global peace. A supporter of the arts, Fred KASRAVI sat on boards that served Canadian opera, symphonies, theatre and dance. He was instrumental in saving the historic Canadian ship, The Haida, and most recently served as chairman of the Canadian Museum of Nature. In recognition for his extensive voluntary service on an international scale, Fred garnered many prestigious awards including medals from Britain, France and Portugal, and recently received an Honorary Doctorate from Royal Roads University in Victoria. Whether it was helping strangers in need, or fundraising for charities, Frederic KASRAVI never tired in serving his fellow human beings. Passionate about all aspects of nature, he fought for the preservation of the environment. Fred's success in business brought him in touch with heads of state, but his love for humanity included people from all walks of life; he saw the best in everyone he met and truly believed with hard work and determination every person was capable of reaching their full potential. On July 2, 2004 at 9:20 p.m., at the age of 67, Fred peacefully passed away in Toronto, surrounded by family and Friends. Frederic KASRAVI was a man who was larger than life; he soared through this existence like a meteorite, leaving an imprint and a legacy that few could achieve in five lifetimes. His magnanimous spirit will live on in the hearts and minds of all who were blessed to know him. A public memorial will take place at: The Westin Prince Hotel, 900 York Mills Road, Toronto, Ontario, M3B 3H2, on Wednesday, July 21, 2004, from 2:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to: In Memory of Fred KASRAVI, the Prostate Centre, Suite 100 - 1900 Richmond Avenue, Victoria, British Columbia, V8R 4R2.

Sixteenth Fort Discovered at Gorgan's Ancient Great Wall

LONDON, (CAIS) -- A team of Iranian and British archaeologists have recently discovered a sixteenth fort at the Gorgan Great Wall during a series of geophysical studies, the Persian service of CHN reported on Monday.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Is Iran Aiding Iraq's Militias?

It's just before 3 a.m. in the southern Iraqi town of Seddah, and the Americans are rushing down a darkened street that smells of eucalyptus and gasoline. A moment later the sound of a door crashing in splits the nighttime hush. U.S. troops barrel into a gritty little house in search of militants thought to be responsible for a series of roadside bombings using armor-piercing explosively formed projectiles, or EFPs, which U.S. military officials say come directly from Iran. The soldiers immediately corral the women and children into one room and force three men in the house to lay face down at gunpoint on the floor of another in front of a television glowing blue-green on mute. As other troops begin tossing the place to find any hidden weapons and propaganda, a scene from a late-night newscast flickers. There's Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, in Tehran that day, smiling and shaking hands with the Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the flashbulbs from cameras silently pop.

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1653385,00.html?xid=rss-topstories

Shah of Iran

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQgZ3oLp_WY&mode=related&search

Akhoond comments about girls

Dear readers:

The below clip was selected because the Mullah is saying how Iranian people dislike Mullahs in Iran as such that cabbies do not give ride to them and in one case a cabby took one Mullah from shade of tree and dropped him off by hot sunny area. He also give direction were to dump dead body, lol

http://fr.youtube.com/watch?v=-eYAnT-CW3A

When will the west learn?

By: JOSEPH CRISP

The root behind British (and the rest of Europe and often America as well) activities toward Iran and other criminal regimes stem from money and the tyranny of liberal "political correctness".

They have also been cowed by the thunderings of Islamic radicals in their own countries. Money is a big part of it (in my opinion the urgency is driven by the spread of socialism which simply doesn't work) and that is why so many liberal, democratic countries are friendly with bloody dictatorships. Everyone trades with Red China, many trade with Iran and many trade with Communist Cuba, though the USA does not, this is only because politicians fear the wrath of Cuban voters in Florida.

It seems there is no limit to the amount of oppression the "Free World" is willing to overlook if they can make a buck in the process.

For President Carter to sell out the Shah is not surprising (stupid but not surprising) as he was (and is) a dimwit who is way too friendly with terrorist regimes. He was one of the worst presidents America has had. The British attitude is a little more perplexing because of their general foreign policy habits in modern times. All over the western world there is a liberal timidity to take pride in our countries, culture and way of life. In the United States at least that has not extended to political ideals. All American politicians believe that democratic republics are best, they don't mind saying so and don't mind trying to spread republicanism around the world. The monarchies of Europe have every right to have this same attitude about their own governments yet they strangely do not and have not for quite a long time. Republics naturally push for more republics yet where are the constitutional monarchies of the world standing up to say that their system is best and others would do well to adopt it? There are some of course, but none seem to make it to positions of any influence.

Fortunately, I have heard more American commentators lately saying that not doing more to support the Shah was a mistake, however as with revolutionary France, Soviet Russia and China this seems to be a realization that always comes after the fact and which is soon forgotten.

When will the west learn?
Joseph Crisp Wednesday, July 18, 2007.

Guilty as Charged

FrontPageMagazine.com
8/17/2007

“We will probably never know if [José] Padilla was a would-be terrorist,” declared the New York Times in a March editorial. Five months on, the Times might consider issuing a retraction. In a ruling that powerfully bolsters the Bush administration’s prosecution of the war on terror, Padilla was yesterday convicted on terrorism-conspiracy charges in a Miami criminal trial.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Girl Shot By the Iranian Police

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAnnNafY5zE

Lecture 33 : Major Concepts in Sociology of Culture, Moral and Religion

Average rating: (1 rating)Description: Major Concepts in Sociology of Culture, Persian 6 - Cohesion This is the 33rd program of a series called "In the Realm of Culture" (Dar Pishgaah e Farhang) in Persian language. Here, in the sixth part of his talks about the concept of specialized languages for professionals in cultural studies, Dr. Esmail Nooriala talks to Ms. Shokooh Mirzadegi about the concepts moral and religion.

This lecture by Iranian Scholar Professor Esmail Nooriala and Ms. Shokooh Mirzadegi Iranian Writer and Poet is considered as educational material and highly recommended by ActivistChat.com . This is lecture 33rd, part of weekly lecture series from site http://www.puyeshgaraan.com/Esmail.htm . If you wish to invite Professor Esmail Nooriala for lecture in English or Persian regarding different Iranian cultural or Political subjects please directly contact Professor Nooriala by Fax: 509-352-9630 esmail@nooriala.com or http://www.puyeshgaraan.com/ES.Contacts.htm
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6000-Year-Old Prehistoric Site Totally Bulldozed in Qom

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Bulldozers working for the Yasser construction project in Qom have entirely demolished the 6000-year-old Shad Qoli archaeological site in central Iran, the Persian service of CHN reported on Tuesday.
http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2007/August2007/15-08.htm

Claims and facts

By Fatema Soudavar Farmanfarmaian
October 2, 2002
The Iranian Does Azarbaijan have a north and a south or are they two different entities? A long
over due issue has been raised and discussed by Aynalu Jurabchi and Reza Ordubadian. The fact is that so-called 'northern Azarbaijan' has only borne that name since 1918, and that was in a bid to dissociate itself from Russia and bring itself closer to its cultural roots. Of course, when the Soviets took over, ...

http://www.middleeastinfo.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=5699

US turns heat up on Iran

If the United States designates the Iranian Revolutionary Guards a "terrorist" organisation, the question will be whether it is an extension of its current efforts to isolate Iran economically or a step towards military action.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6947616.stm

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

In Iran Muslims are becoming Christians

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiPHDWuPBVw

looting in Iran

دانلود فيلم غارت اموال فروشگاه شهروند

Hamid Dabashi,


"Indoctrinate U" Outtake on Columbia Exposes Hamid Dabashi's BigotryBy Cinnamon StillwellCampus Watch Web LogAugust 10, 2007
http://www.campus-watch.org/weblog/id/88
Hamid Dabashi, Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature and Chairman of the Middle East Languages and Cultures department at ColumbiaUniversity, figures prominently in the work of those of us trying to bring accountability and balance back to the field of Middle East studies. His anti-Western, pro-Islamist, and, at times, anti-Semitic commentary have been noted by Campus Watch on many occasions.
Indeed, he holds the current "Quote of the Month" spot for his review of the film "300," in which he likens the Persian Empire to modern-day America and the Spartans to the "Iraqi resistance, the Palestinians, [and] Hizbullah," while attempting to justify suicide bombings by comparing them to the Spartans' last stand at Thermopylae. This is what many have come to expect from Dabashi, whose apologetics seem to know no bounds.
Dabashi makes another appearance of sorts in an outtake from the upcoming documentary, "Indoctrinate U." The film, which will feature interviews with Middle East Forum director Daniel Pipes and Middle East scholar Martin Kramer, focuses on bias and the "institutional intolerance" that's rampant in higher education. Filmmaker Evan Coyne Maloney has been making deleted scenes available at the "Indoctrinate U" website and the first of these involves Columbia University (watch it here).
In a "Columbia Quiz" given randomly to students and other passersby on campus, Maloney uses a Dabashi quote to make a point about what passes for acceptable in academia today. Titled, "A Professor's Lesson in Tolerance and Civility," the clip features Maloney asking quiz takers to guess whether the following quote originated with "a) Adolph Hitler b) Osama bin Laden or c) a Columbia professor":
Who said of "Israeli Jews...the way they talk, walk, the way they greet each other, there is a vulgarity of character that is bone deep and structural to the skeletal vertebrae of its culture"?
The results are humorous, and yet also rather frightening. None of the quiz takers know off the bat that the quote belongs to Dabashi and one even tells Maloney that she suspects "this whole thing is designed to make me say a Columbia professor." A few correctly guess that a "Columbia professor" is the answer, while others, after appearing visibly shocked by the bigotry of the quote, assume that it originated with either Hitler or bin Laden.
When Maloney informs them that the quote is, in fact, attributed to "Hamid Dabashi, the Chair of the Middle East Languages and Cultures department," the reaction is mixed. Some just shake their heads in consternation, one cheers that she got the answer right, and others simply look uncomfortable.
One student remarks, "I remember reading about this. It was insane," and then goes on to ask if it happened "while he was teaching here." "He's still here now," answers Maloney. Then he concludes: "That's the kind of education you get up here at the Middle East Languages and Culture department at Columbia , I guess."
Indeed.



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KAVOUSSIFAR Update 8: Why US State Dept. has not informed public and News Media accrording FOIA?

Why US State Dept. has not informed public and News Media regarding Mr. Majid Kavousifar case and his arrest in past 2 years accrording "The Freedom of Information Act"?
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Potkin Azarmehr wrote:
US Embassy Ignorance http://azarmehr.blogspot.com/ Majid Kavousifar, seen in these pictures before being hanged, left Iran for Abu Dhabi two days after the assassination of one of the corruptest and most repressive judges in the Islamic Republic. Judge Moghaddas who was assassinated by Kavousifar and his nephew, was responsible for handing out long sentences to many political activists. Moghaddas sometimes even boasted that he sentenced the accused without even reading their files! Kavoussifar had introduced himself as the killer of Moghaddas to the American Embassy in Abu Dhabi, where he had applied for asylum. The embassy guards handed him over to the Interpol, which informed Islamic Republic's authorities of the incident. I thought it was just the Homeland Security at the US airports who were the thickest officials in the world! Here, Majid Kavousifar is seen smiling and saying his last goodbye. Why are so many victims smiling in these latest round of public executions? Perhaps if there is any after life, it will be better than living under the mullahs.
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On Tuesday, August 02, 2005 Motorcycle gunman assassinated Islamist Taazi Judge Hassan Moghaddas in Tehran who was involved in several high-profile political cases: http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/08/motorcycle-gunman-kills-prominent.php and according to Mr. Potkin Azarmehr post above Mr. Majid Kavousifar left Iran for Abu Dhabi two days after the assassination of one of the corruptest and most repressive judges in the Islamic Republic. then on Friday, August 05, 2005 or August 06, 2005 Mr. Majid Kavousifar was detained by US Embassy in Abu Dhabi. and according to this information Mr. Majid Kavousifar was in Iran prison for past 2 years and under Torture. 1- If the above dates correct then why US State Dept. has not informed public and News Media regarding Mr. Majid Kavousifar case and his arrest in past 2 years? 2- Has US State Dept. violated “ The Freedom of Information Act or other USA Open Government Laws” regarding Mr. Majid Kavousifar case ? 3- What was the Secretary Rice's logic for her actions regarding Majid Kavousifar who was detained at the US Embassy, turned over to UAE Police who in turn handed him over to Mullah's agents for Torture and Execution? 4- What is Condi Rice answer to the mother of one of the victim men (Mr. Hussein Kavoussi-Far) cried out: "God, please give me back my son."? __________________________________
The Freedom of Information Act wrote:
The Freedom of Information Act For more information on Current Legislation, click here http://www.sunshineingovernment.org/foia.html (Sep. 21, 2006) The House of Representatives passed FOIA reform legislation (H.R. 1309) earlier in 2007. The Senate Judiciary committee approved a similar bill, but the legislation (S. 849) is stalled before a full Senate vote. This act is the most comprehensive legislation to reform the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in a decade. Check our mainpage for updates and here for more information about the legislation. Brief history of the Freedom of Information Act The Freedom of Information Act of 1966 formally established the public's inherent right to access government information. Since that time, the following significant amendments have been made to FOIA: The Privacy Act of 1974 - Before this time, if only one word within a document was considered too sensitive for release, the entire record would be withheld. The Privacy Act required a FOIA officer to black out sensitive words or pages and release the rest. Freedom of Information Reform Act of 1986 - This amendment dealt with questions of fees to be charged to requesters and protections afforded to law enforcement records. Electronic Freedom of Information Act (EFOIA) of 1996 - Among other things, this act brought electronic information under the jurisdiction of FOIA. It also aimed at speeding up access to records through multi-track processing and expedited access provisions. Traditionally, debate surrounding FOIA has concerned how much information the public has the right to know, and how much must be withheld because of reasons of national security and privacy. Since its inception, the FOIA has been responsible for the public release of vital information. More importantly, once information is made public, people have the power to put a stop to undesirable government activity.
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sunshineingovernment.org wrote:
http://www.sunshineingovernment.org/who_we_are.html Our Mission The Sunshine in Government Initiative is a coalition of media groups committed to promoting policies that ensure the government is accessible, accountable and open. Public oversight is the ultimate safeguard of democracy. This is not an issue just for the media. It is the inalienable right of citizens to examine and judge their government; and that right is served when news media act on behalf of the public to gain access to information. Sunshine in Government Initiative Principles An informed public is the cornerstone of our democracy. Open government instills public trust. Policies preserving access to information are essential to our national well-being. Americans depend on news media to inform them about governmental activities and to exercise the right of access to appropriate government information on the public's behalf. In a democracy, government must function under a presumption of openness, balancing this as necessary with legitimate national security needs and the confidentiality concerns of individual privacy. The Freedom of Information Act should be preserved and strengthened. Over-classification, unconstrained nondisclosure agreements, and indiscriminate use of "sensitive" designations to withhold information ill serve our nation's security interests and thwart the public's right to know.
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ActivistChat wrote:
ActivistChat 2007 Guideline Framework And Vision Of Future http://activistchat.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=8384 13. We are Free Iran Activists and Watch Group monitoring high government officials, Journalists , writers and scholars words and their actions based on the following direction from James Madison: "If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men! over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself. A dependence on the people is, no doubt, the primary control on the government; but experience has taught mankind the necessity of auxiliary precautions. " The Federalist No. 51 (James Madison). We thank all compatriots and organizations who contributed for defining part of above Guideline Framework for Human Rights, Regime Change in Iran, Free Iran, Free Society and Secular Democracy .

Monday, August 13, 2007

Iran has just carried out the largest wave of executions since 1984.

BY AMIR TAHERIMonday, August 6, 2007 12:01 a.m.It is early dawn as seven young men are led to the gallows amid shouts of "Allah Akbar" (Allah is the greatest) from a crowd of bearded men as a handful of women, all in hijab, ululate to a high pitch. A few minutes later, the seven are hanged as a mullah shouts: "Alhamd li-Allah" (Praise be to Allah). The scene was Wednesday in Mashad, Iran's second most populous city, where a crackdown against "anti-Islam hooligans" has been under way for weeks.
The Mashad hangings, broadcast live on local television, are among a series of public executions ordered by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last month as part of a campaign to terrorize an increasingly restive population. Over the past six weeks, at least 118 people have been executed, including four who were stoned to death. According to Saeed Mortazavi, the chief Islamic prosecutor, at least 150 more people, including five women, are scheduled to be hanged or stoned to death in the coming weeks.
The latest wave of executions is the biggest Iran has suffered in the same time span since 1984, when thousands of opposition prisoners were shot on orders from Ayatollah Khomeini.
Not all executions take place in public. In the provinces of Kurdistan and Khuzestan, where ethnic Kurdish and Arab minorities are demanding greater rights, several activists have been put to death in secret, their families informed only days after the event.

The campaign of terror also includes targeted "disappearances" designed to neutralize trade union leaders, student activists, journalists and even mullahs opposed to the regime. According to the latest tally, more than 30 people have "disappeared" since the start of the new Iranian year on March 21. To intimidate the population, the authorities also have carried out mass arrests on spurious grounds. According to Gen. Ismail Muqaddam, commander of the Islamic Police, a total of 430,000 men and women have been arrested on charges related to drug use since April. A further 4,209 men and women, mostly aged between 15 and 30, have been arrested for "hooliganism" in Tehran alone. The largest number of arrests, totaling almost a million men and women according to Mr. Muqaddam, were related to the enforcement of the new Islamic Dress Code, passed by the Islamic Majlis (parliament) in May 2006.
Most of those arrested, he says, spent a few hours, or at most a few days, in custody as "a warning." By last week, 40,000 were still in prison. Of these, 20,363 men and women are held on charges related to violating the Islamic Dress Code. According to the Deputy Chief of Police Gen. Hussein Zulfiqari, an additional 6,204 men and women are in prison on charges of "sexual proximity" without being married.
The wave of arrests has increased pressure on the nation's inadequate prison facilities. At a recent press conference in Tehran, the head of the National Prisons Service, Ali-Akbar Yassaqi, appealed for a moratorium on arrests. He said Iran's official prisons could not house more than 50,000 prisoners simultaneously while the actual number of prisoners at any given time was above 150,000. Mr. Yassaqi also revealed that each year on average some 600,000 Iranians spend some time in one of the 130 official prisons.
Since Mr. Ahmadinejad ordered the crackdown, work on converting 41 official buildings to prisons has started, with contracts for 33 other prisons already signed. Nevertheless, Mr. Yassaqi believes that, with the annual prison population likely to top the million mark this year, even the new capacities created might prove insufficient.
There are, however, an unknown number of unofficial prisons as well, often controlled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps or militias working for various powerful mullahs. Last week, human rights activists in Iran published details of a new prison in Souleh, northwest of Tehran, staffed by militants from the Lebanese branch of Hezbollah. According to the revelations, the Souleh prison is under the control of the "Supreme Guide" Ali Khamenehi, and used for holding the regime's most "dangerous" political foes.
The regime especially fears the growing free trade union movement. In the past four months, free trade unionists have organized 12 major strikes and 47 demonstrations in various parts of the country. They showed their muscle on International Labor Day on May 1 when tens of thousands of workers marched in Tehran and 18 provincial capitals. The regime retaliated by arresting scores of trade unionists and expelling many others.
According to Rajab-Ali Shahsavari, leader of the Union of Contractual Workers, 25,795 unionists have been fired since April. He estimates that now over 1,000 workers are losing their jobs each day, as the regime intensifies its crackdown.
Worse still, the number of suspicious deaths among workers has risen to an all-time high. According to Deputy Labor Minister Ibrahim Nazari-Jalali, 1,047 workers have died in "work-related accidents" since April. Labor sources, however, point out that none of the accidents have been investigated and, in at least 13 cases, the workers who died may have been killed by goons hired by the regime.
The biggest purge of universities since Khomeini launched his "Islamic Cultural Revolution" in 1980 is also under way. Scores of student leaders have been arrested and more than 3,000 others expelled. Labeling the crackdown the "corrective movement," Mr. Ahmadinejad wants university textbooks rewritten to "cleanse them of Infidel trash," and to include "a rebuttal of Zionist-Crusader claims" about the Holocaust. Dozens of lecturers and faculty deans have been fired.
The nationwide crackdown is accompanied with efforts to cut Iranians off from sources of information outside the Islamic Republic. More than 4,000 Internet sites have been blocked, and more are added each day. The Ministry of Islamic Orientation has established a new blacklist of authors and book titles twice longer than what it was a year ago. Since April, some 30 newspapers and magazines have been shut and their offices raided. At least 17 journalists are in prison, two already sentenced to death by hanging.

The regime is trying to mobilize its shrinking base by claiming that the Islamic Republic is under threat from internal and external foes. It was in that context that the four Iranian-American hostages held in Tehran were forced to make televised "confessions" last month about alleged plots to foment a "velvet revolution." Over 40 people have been arrested on charges of espionage since April, 20 in the southern city of Shiraz. Khomeinist paranoia reached a new peak last week when the authorities announced, through the Islamic Republic News Agency, the capture of four squirrels in the Western city of Kermanshah and claimed that the furry creatures had been fitted with "espionage devices" by the Americans in Iraq and smuggled into the Islamic Republic.
Mr. Ahmadinejad likes to pretend that he has no worries except "Infidel plots" related to the Islamic Republic's nuclear ambitions. The truth is that, faced with growing popular discontent, the Khomeinist clique is vulnerable and worried, extremely worried. The outside world would do well to carefully monitor and, whenever possible, support the Iranian people's fight against the fascist regime in Tehran.
Iran today is not only about atomic bombs and Iranian-American hostages. It is also about a growing popular movement that may help bring the nation out of the dangerous impasse created by the mullahs. Mr. Taheri is author of "L'Irak: Le Dessous Des Cartes" (Editions Complexe, 2002).
Copyright © 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Lord Treisman of Tottenham
The British Parliamentary Under-Secretary
for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office:
"Britain will oppose regime change in Iran
and will continue it's policy of engagement".
In an interview with the BBC Radio 4
London - April the 8th, 2007.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

More To Come

Saeed Mortazavi is the Islamic republic's notorious executioner. He was responsible for the arrest, rape, torture and murder of the Iranian/Canadian photo journalist in July 11, 2003. Judge Mortazavi as he is referred to in Iran has passed on death sentences to countless defenseless Iranians. His favourite method of killing is stoning to death or public hanging. After the recent mass executions in a recent press conference he disclosed that about 200 more executions are on the way.

FEAR IS KEY TO REGIME
IRAN'S critics believe the overall intention of the Iranian regime in using such harsh punishment is to instil fear in the population at a time when Tehran is under growing international pressure over its nuclear programme. The repression is seen as a message from the hardliners that they are firmly in charge, despite American efforts to isolate Iran and inflict damage on its economy.
"Iran's current crop of hardliners are religious ideologues with a Machiavellian world view. They would rather rule over a population that fears them than a population that likes them," Karim Sadjadpour, a Washington-based analyst for the International Crisis Group, told The Scotsman. ( from The Scotsman 3/8/2007)

Zahra Kazemi, Tortured, raped and murdered
by Khatami and Mortazavi In April 2001.
Zahra Kazemi Was a dedicated journalist. She was passionate about human rights. She was murdered by the direct orders of the so-called reformist president Mohammad Khatami while in custody of Thug Mortazavi. Shahram Azam, a former military staff physician who left Iran and sought asylum in Canada in 2004, has stated that he examined Kazemi's body and observed evidence of rape and torture, including a skull fracture, broken nose, crushed toe, broken fingers, and severe abdominal bruising.

AND NOW SOME THOUGHTS FROM THOSE VERY THOUGHTFUL BRITISH CHAPS:

Lord Treisman of Tottenham
The British Parliamentary Under-Secretary
for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office:
"Britain will oppose regime change in Iran
and will continue it's policy of engagement".
In an interview with the BBC Radio 4
London - April the 8th, 2007.

AND LET US NOT LEAVE OUT THE REST OF THE GANG...

Our congratulations to all human rights organisations,
Mr. Jimmy Carter, the western press and media.
The EU, the Russians and specially the Brits who used
to kick so much dust about the arrest & imprisonment
of some known terrorists by the previous regime, yet
now they are too happy to let the Mullahs to continue
to commit mass genocide against us Iranians because
they prefer not to see evil and not to hear evil.