• Erika3sis [she/her, xe/xem]@hexbear.net
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    3 months ago

    It’s maybe worth noting that Bahá’u’lláh was imprisoned in Acre well over a decade before the beginning of the First Aliyah, so the time when Palestine became home to Bahá’í holy sites was when the region was still Ottoman, and the reasons why the Bahá’í Faith seated itself in Palestine were wholly disconnected from Zionism. It’s maybe also worth noting that Iran is not a socialist state just because it’s anti-Western: Iran is genuinely capable of religious prejudice, and against Bahá’ís this would merely be a continuation of the persecution of Bábis and Bahá’ís since literally as long as these movements have existed. It is in fact due to Bahá’ís history of persecution that they adopt various survival strategies in whichever countries might accept them such that they may incur continued favor. This in practice makes Bahá’í Faith a pretty lib religion overall, because Bahá’ís are just deathly afraid of rocking the boat, and have justified this fear through spirituality.

    So that’s basically my take, that just because persecution can be used as propaganda, does not mean that it is not real. We can accept that Russia treats its gays like shit and we can see Russia’s labeling of “LGBT propaganda” as some sort of Western conspiracy for what it is, so we should be able to accept that Iran does the same shit to Bahá’ís, without treating that mistreatment as some sort of Western conspiracy — religion is the opium of the masses, and opium dealers simply do not want new competitors on their turf.

    • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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      3 months ago

      This in practice makes Bahá’í Faith a pretty lib religion overall, because Bahá’ís are just deathly afraid of rocking the boat, and have justified this fear through spirituality.

      This is my impression as well. Bahá’ís tend to eschew politics and they retreat to very sweet but incredibly naive positions about just wanting everyone to get along. I guess that is hard-coded into their faith though.

      I think it would be silly to deny the fact that Bahá’ís face a ton of repression from the Iranian government because it’s really no secret and it’s not like we’re talking Falun Gong “They kidnap us and harvest our organs but nobody has ever been able to prove this, we don’t have pictures as evidence of recent surgery or even just scarring, but all the proof we need is to wave our hand at some statistics that may or may not be falsified” kind of nonsense here either.

      As a rule of thumb with this stuff, the more morally outrageous the claims of government persecution are the more skeptical I become. That’s not to say that therefore those morally outrageous atrocities don’t occur, such as with Abu Ghraib Prison, but if you look at how Pissrael treats Palestinians - it’s not like they are forcing them to get married to pigs or denying them all fuel sources but providing an overabundance of Qur’ans so that Palestinians are forced to burn the Qur’an to survive. It’s the basic shit - denying them healthcare, education, food, clean water, economic opportunities, participation, freedom of movement etc. That alone is outrageous enough that you don’t need to pull on liberal heartstrings with some fanciful narrative to make them feel bad and you don’t need some western dork who just graduated from university studying anthropology to start tweeting about how Chinese public health campaigns teaching Uyghur children good dental hygiene practices is evidence of cultural genocide.

      (Shit, do Uyghurs even use miswak? Is the Chinese government suppressing the use of miswak? How integral is the use of miswak to the islamic faith anyway? At this point you might as well be arguing that having plumbing at a mosque for adherents to make wudu with is cultural genocide because it replaces more traditional ways of supplying water to people who are going to pray…)

      I’d say that most of the repression and persecution of Bahá’ís in Iran is very “mundane” - in the sense that it would be exclusion from jobs and economic participation, getting harassed by the cops, lengthier sentencing in courts and a lower standard of evidence for convictions, beatings, torture, forced disappearances, desecration of sacred sites, ostracism etc. If this sounds familiar then you know the playbook because it’s almost certainly happening in your own country right now, except probably to a lesser degree.

      But of course the US government is using the repression of Bahá’ís as a wedge to drive their geopolitical agenda.

      Did the CIA act out of concern for Tibetans when they armed and trained the population, including monks, to act as an insurgent force to resist China’s annexation of Tibet? Fuck no, it was just a cynical (and half-arsed) attempt to frustrate China and to destabilise the region by fomenting unrest and nothing more. The CIA dropped those Tibetans like a hot potato just as soon as they realised that it wasn’t going to pan out well for them and they got distracted with meddling elsewhere in the world. They didn’t give a fuck if they lived or died. They were just pawns for them to use and discard at whim, as is the case with Bahá’ís and Iran and as it is with so many other causes.

      If we were to take a fairly jaded assessment of the situation for Bahá’ís in Iran and the geopolitics of West Asia, I don’t see a situation where Iran becomes the next Libya or Syria as being anywhere near preferable to what they’re currently facing - you don’t have to be Yazidi to realise what would happen to Bahá’ís if Iran was wracked by civil war.

      Does that justify or excuse what Iran is doing? Nope, not at all.

      But ultimately it makes me exceedingly skeptical about the performative concern for the plight of Bahá’ís in Iran when what the US would love is to see most is Iran destabilised, which would very likely be disastrous for the Bahá’ís that they profess to care about.

  • Neptium@lemmygrad.ml
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    3 months ago

    Is this a Uyghurs attempt by isntrael amerikkka?

    Yes.

    Iran has been facing crippling sanctions from the USA that is equivalent to that of Cuba.

    We should be especially careful with narratives from Western media (Human Rights Watch) and Western-allied media (Al-Jazeera).

    I did a quick read of the HRW report, which cites numerous Iranian Human Rights NGOs based in the USA, with one of them, on their wikipedia page even saying it was funded by the US Department Of State.

    So much benefit of doubt is given to these Western aligned NGOs but not a single shred is given to an imperialized nation that is perhaps the only Islamic country on Earth to successfully and completely defeat Imperialism from it’s borders (except perhaps Algeria)?

    Looking at the actual HRW report:

    Immediately revoke all policies and repeal laws that legalize violations of the rights of Baha’is, including but not limited to:

    • Article 12 of the Iranian Constitution

    Oh Article 12 which states:

    The official religion of Iran is Islam and the Twelver Ja’fari school [in usual al-Din and fiqh], and this principle will remain eternally immutable. Other Islamic schools, including the Hanafi, Shafi’i, Maliki, Hanbali, and Zaydi, are to be accorded full respect, and their followers are free to act in accordance with their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites. These schools enjoy official status in matters pertaining to religious education, affairs of personal status (marriage, divorce, inheritance, and wills) and related litigation in courts of law. In regions of the country where Muslims following any one of these schools [fiqh] constitute the majority, local regulations, within the bounds of the jurisdiction of local councils, are to be in accordance with the respective school [fiqh], without infringing upon the rights of the followers of other schools.

    So they basically want to reverse the popular revolution of the masses that overwhelmingly supported the Islamic revolution of 1979? Perhaps now we know what the geopolitical aims that this false narrative of persecutions and oppression is hoping to entail?

    By the way here’s Article 13 and 14 of the constitution:

    Article 13: Zoroastrian, Jewish, and Christian Iranians are the only recognized religious minorities, who, within the limits of the law, are free to perform their religious rites and ceremonies, and to act according to their own canon in matters of personal affairs and religious education.

    Article 14: In accordance with the sacred verse; (“God does not forbid you to deal kindly and justly with those who have not fought against you because of your religion and who have not expelled you from your homes” [60:8]), the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran and all Muslims are duty-bound to treat non-Muslims in conformity with ethical norms and the principles of Islamic justice and equity, and to respect their human rights. This principle applies to all who refrain from engaging in conspiracy or activity against Islam and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

    • Erika3sis [she/her, xe/xem]@hexbear.net
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      3 months ago

      This principle applies to all who refrain from engaging in conspiracy or activity against Islam and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

      Alright, I’m gonna be honest, this part seems like it might be a really important detail when we’re talking about a comparatively modern religion which splintered off from Shia Islam.

  • AssortedBiscuits [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    3 months ago

    The IOF razed Al-Shifa Hospital to the ground with hundred of bodies desecrated by tanks running over them, so let’s focus on alleged religious persecution in a country that’s helping the Resistance.