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'Mourning Mothers Iran' Stand With Activist Mothers Worldwide

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  • 'Mourning Mothers Iran' Stand With Activist Mothers Worldwide

    'MOURNING MOTHERS IRAN' STAND WITH ACTIVIST MOTHERS WORLDWIDE

    Women News Network
    October 8, 2009

    Weeping woman statue. Image: Luc De Leeuw 2009

    A mother protecting her child isn't anything unique. But in Iran,
    humanitarian activist mothers are now becoming global icons for human
    rights causes worldwide. In silent public protest, the 'Mourning
    Mothers of Iran,' known locally in Tehran as the 'Mothers of Laleh,'
    stand together each week, on Saturday evening vigils in Tehran's
    Laleh Park.

    "I urge all women around the world to show their solidarity with the
    Committee of Iranian Mothers in Mourning by assembling in parks,
    in their respective countries, every Saturday between the hours
    of 7 to 8 p.m., wearing black," said Nobel Peace Prize Laureate,
    Shirin Ebadi, in a plea made to women and activists worldwide at
    a July 25 Iran pro-democracy rally in Amsterdam. Like the infamous
    "Women in Black," and the 'Madres de Plaza de Mayo,' the Committee
    of Iranian Mothers use methods of ethics and non-violence to bring
    attention to the atrocity of their dead children.

    Beginning in Jerusalem, in 1988, a group of almost 40 Israeli-Jewish
    women of conscience formed 'The Women in Black.' To make their
    point clear they wore black clothing and stood still in silent
    public protests. They spoke against Israeli expansion into the West
    Bank and Gaza on the heels of the beginning of the 1987 Palestinian
    intifada. Soon Arab women from the northern region of Israel also
    joined the Women in Black, asking for peace. Opposing war, injustice,
    and militarism, Women in Black groups or their affiliates can now
    be found in Australia, the UK, Serbia, Japan, South Africa, Italy,
    Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Canada, US, India, Nepal, Uruguay,
    Argentina and the Philippines, to name a few.

    Outside of Jerusalem, 1988 was also a very dark period for Iranian
    history. In a few summer months, 21 years ago, an en lming number
    of Iranian political prisoners were massacred. This left countless
    Iranian mothers devastated.

    According to Amnesty International, 4,500-10,000 Iranian political
    prisoners were declared killed or missing inside the country that
    year over a period that lasted barely two months. The families of the
    victims were not allowed to receive the bodies of their dead loved
    ones. They were also not allowed to hold any funerals. Instead, the
    held bodies were dumped in places like Khavaran or what the regime
    referred to as La'nat-Abad, 'The Damned Place,' a cemetery used for
    burying non-Muslims.

    Mass burials at Khavaran were later accidentally discovered by an
    Armenian priest who had become curious as to why stray dogs kept
    digging for bones at, what was later determined the location of the
    mass graves.

    "The deliberate and systematic manner in which these extrajudicial
    executions took place may constitute a crime against humanity under
    international law," said Human Rights Watch in 2005. Perhaps of all
    the crimes against humanity in the last 30 years, the 1988 Iranian
    mass executions continue to be the most revealing show of the regime's
    contempt and fear of political dissidents.

    "In the recent events, the government in Iran has been fabricating
    reports depicting an incorrect image of what has been going on in
    the country," said Ebadi at the July 25 rally. "They do not want the
    people to know the truth."

    We may think this kind of protest is new in Iran, but Iranian mothers
    have always spoken out against violence, disappearance and the
    torture of their sons and daughters. Prior to the 1979 revolution,
    only two mothers' organizations existed in the country. Both were
    affiliated with underground organizations involved in struggles for
    democracy. They worked in opposition to the monarchy of the Shah's
    regime, who's desperate tactics had turned to the jailing and torture
    of intellectuals, feminists, students, and labour union advocates.

    "I need to tell my story. No one can stop me. No Parvin Fahimi, an
    active member of Mothers for Peace and the mother of slain 19 year
    old Iranian protester, Sohrab Arabi, said recently in July. "My son
    had been killed, but they refused to tell me," she continued.

    Mothers of Plaza de Mayo

    Mothers of Plaza de Mayo

    On July 11, 2009, young Sohrab Arabi was identified as 'Picture Number
    12â~@² by his older brother at the Shapour Street Police Station
    in Tehran. He had been missing for 26 days. On the realization,
    his mother is beside herself with grief.

    "Please hear my painful story as a resident of Tehran. I lost my
    son on Monday 25 of Khordad (15 June) during a peaceful rally that
    was taking place to protest the election results. With the crowds
    estimated at a minimum of 3 million, many people were lost and I too
    lost my son. The mobiles were cut off and I couldn't reach him -
    I searched everywhere for him and went back home and found he was
    not there either so I went back to Azadi Square to keep searching
    for him. The atmosphere was terrible, so much tear gas everywhere,
    it felt more like a battle ground and I have been sick ever since
    with chest problems. I couldn't find my child and I returned home
    and together with the sons of my relatives. As we searched every
    hospital and police station we didn't get a response. My son did not
    have his ID card with him; he just had a bit of money on him to go
    and buy test papers at Enghelab Sqaure to prepare for the university
    entrance exams coming up...

    That night I still did not hear of my son. The next morning when I
    called 110 (the emergency police call number) they told me to refer to
    my local police station. I went to the local police station and filed
    a missing persons report and they started the search process. No one
    had the guts to tell me than that maybe my son was killed; some people
    said he was probably arrested and some said he may be injured. I
    found out that 7 people were killed that day (at the protests)
    of those, 5 had been identified and 2 had not. The 2 that had not
    been identified were apparently older. The sons of my family members
    went to see the 5 that were identified and they confirmed that none
    of them was Sohrab. I was relieved to hear that and thought that my
    son was therefore arrested. I knew that he wasn't injured because I
    searched every single hospital. I am aware that some hospitals would
    not give me a clear answer, but others did.

    So I headed out for the Revolutionary Court (Evin Prison) to follow up
    on his arrest. They told me to return home and I told them I couldn't -
    I am a Mother - I couldn't even eat. To this date I have a hard time
    eating. My throat just closes up. I have kept myself going through
    liquids only in the past few weeks. I can't tell you how much time
    I spent at the Revolutionary Court... if I were to write the story
    it'd make a very thick book. . .

    How can a 19 year old that has yet to sit at the University entrance
    exams, and has yet to fulfill any one of his dreams, be killed? By
    whom; and on whose orders; and for what? I ask the City Council, what
    did my son ask of you? What did he ever ask of the government? What
    did he ask of his country? ...We wanted nothing but peace, tranquility
    and a freedom of thought - that's what's important to us, is that my
    son thought about whom he voted for and where his vote goes. He didn't
    ask for anything else. Just because he was a supporter of Mr. Mousavi,
    he must be killed? For what crime? On the basis of what guilt? My son
    was year old, who never fulfilled his dreams. As a mother, I ask God
    day and night to put an end to this injustice."

    - Parvin Fahimi, mother of slain protester, Sohrab Arabi (Partial
    testimony given during a Tehran City Council meeting July 23, 2009)

    The exact circumstance surrounding the death of Sohrab Arabi continues
    to be unexplained. According to the International Campaign for Human
    Rights Iran, when the family received Arabi's body, his death appeared
    to be from the result of a gunshot wound to the chest, but no one
    knows when this injury occurred. An official, but inconclusive,
    report was made by the Coroner on June 19.

    The lives of the mothers of global activists, who are often called
    'prisoners of conscience,' are often filled with endurance and
    courage in spite of the grief they carry. From the mothers of slain
    reporters working in Iraqi Kurdistan or the Ukraine, to the mothers
    of missing activist children in Iran or Argentina, the mothers of
    those who have who have 'gone missing' or have shown up dead create
    a common experience. Global mothers have the same fear, grief, anger
    and frustration seeking answers about their dead or missing children.

    "I begged the gunmen to kill me instead, and they pushed me away
    and told me that they wanted her not me," said Kurdish mother of
    slain Iraqi journalist Sara Abdul-Wahab in May 2008 during a May
    2008 Associated Press interview. In spite of her mother's attempt
    to save her life, Sarwa was fatally shot twice in the head by
    kidnappers. Tragically, her mother felt she could do nothing save
    her daughter. Sarwa was the only breadwinner for her widowed mother,
    her sister and brother. She was a strong defender of human rights,
    a Kurdish lawyer and activist in Iraq, who continued to work in spite
    of threats against her life.

    When Ukrainian Prosecutor General Mykhaylo Potebenko issued a
    statement saying that DNA tests were delayed due to the illness of
    Lesya Gongadze, mother of the missing and presumed dead human rights
    reporter Georgy Gong a complete lie and deception," she told Ukrainska
    Pravda, the Web newspaper that her son founded. "I wasn't that sick,
    not so much as to be unable to give my blood for analysis. I was even
    insisting on it because I wanted to know the truth," she added.

    The nine year Gongadze case has been rife with confusing facts and
    government shuffle. Georgy Gogandze's mother, Lesya Gongadze has
    been struggling to expose the facts from the moment her son went
    missing. Faced with great frustration and the dilemma of not trusting
    DNA tests made by the Ukrainian authorities for an unidentifiable
    body that was found in 2000, Lesya continues to ask questions and
    demand clarity on the true circumstances surrounding the murder of her
    son. To date, she has not been satisfied with the answers given her.

    Continue reading.....

    Prostest poster from International Womens Day - Paris, 7 March,
    2009 Image: Hugo de C

    Prostest poster from International Women's Day - Paris, 7 March,
    2009. Image: Hugo de C

    In Argentina, mothers of missing activists ask the same questions,
    questions in a cry that has lasted almost 33 years. In 1977, they
    came together in Buenos Aries calling themselves the 'Madres de Plaze
    de Mayo (Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo).' Ignoring a law prohibiting
    more than 3 people from gathering in one place, they began walking the
    plaza two by two as heroes do under the threat of arrest. They began
    as 14 mothers who publically protested the disappearance of their
    children. Their protests began during what has been called the 'Dirty
    War' of Argentina, a war beginning with the military dictatorship of
    General Jorge Rafael Videla.

    "By the end of the year (1977), thousands would be illegally detained,
    tortured, assassinated or disappeared," says a now declassified
    document at the US National Security Archive.

    In panic under the sudden disappearances of Argentine labour advocates,
    students and social activists, the mothers began to speak out to
    demand answers. A military coup had taken over Argentina with a ven
    years with what has been counted today as up to 30,000 missing or dead.

    In 1978, "A recent dramatic occurrence was the abduction, in December,
    of five 'mothers of the disappeared' and two French nuns, whose bodies
    were reportedly discovered washed ashore," continues the declassified
    US National Security Archive report.

    "One of the things that I simply will not do now is shut up. The
    women of my generation in Latin America have been taught that the
    man is always in charge and the woman is silent even in the face of
    injustice... Now I know that we have to speak out about the injustices
    publicly. If not, we are accomplices. I am going to denounce them
    publicly without fear. This is what I learned," says Mother of Plaza
    de Mayo, María del Rosario de Cerruti.

    Since 1977, the bereaved mothers have gathered to walk around the
    Plaza de Mayo in central Buenos Aires for 30 minutes every Thursday
    afternoon. Wearing white headscarves as a symbol of peace, the simple
    action of the mothers walking in a circle for peace caught the world's
    attention. Their movement has inspired families of the disappeared
    and victims of human rights violations in many parts around the world
    to engage in similar peaceful protests in public places.

    On June 27, the Mothers of Lelah made a formal statement to the world
    that echoed the grief of all mothers worldwide.

    "What crime have they committed to deserve death? Why do we Iranian
    mothers have to bear this enormous grief? What is our crime? We
    will never let this crime against us and our children pass by
    unnoticed. From now until the release of all detained demonstrators,
    the cessation of violence and until our children's killers receive
    their punishment, we will every week gather in silent mourning near
    the place where our beloved martyr Neda died at Park Laleh. We urge
    all parents who are concerned about their daughters and sons, the
    future capital of our country to join us."

    - The Committee of Mothers Iran (Mourning Mothers of Laleh) 2009

    To date, the Argenti ajor international awards for their work with
    human rights; the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, the United
    Nations Prize for Peace Education and the United Nations Prize in the
    Field of Human Rights. It is expected that the Committee of Mothers
    Iran (The Mourning Mothers of Laleh) will follow the legacy of Madres
    de Plaza de Mayo with special award and recognition.

    "Holding on to memory is the way to fight the remains of the past
    regimes who want the whole story of the disappeared to vanish,"
    said Morea, one of the Plaza de Mayo mothers.

    "If you want justice and freedom, you have to put everything else
    on hold," said Iranian mother Parvin Fahimi, recently in a Sept
    2009 interview.
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