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A new Iran is born amid cries of “We want freedom”

By Guest Post • Jul 3rd, 2009 at 16:38 • Category: Analysis, Human Rights, Israel, Newswire, Opinions and Letters, Palestine, Religion, Resistance, War

WRITTEN BY Mozhgan Savabieasfahani
 
In a wounded and burning Middle East, aching under U.S. and Israeli military boots, with constantly expanding invasions by Israel (Lebanon 2006; Gaza 2009), with close to 2 million dead Iraqis just next door, with millions more Iraqis wounded, made homeless, and poisoned by uranium (some of whom end up in Iran for medical treatment), still many more dying in unknown blasts everyday, with daily Israeli threats of nuclear bombing of Iran and Iranians; in an Iran where U.S. sanctions constantly tighten its grip on all aspects of life, making it impossible to get necessities to treat and maintain close to 80 million people (i.e. anything from medical and dental supplies/instruments, to airplane parts etc…), in a place where to bypass U.S. imposed sanctions, universities would pay several times more the price of a scientific instrument for medical and educational use, in an Iran where food prices are on a par with the U.S. while the average income of an Iranian family is a small fraction of that of an American family; at a time when unemployment and drug abuse are at unimaginable heights; at a time when prostitution is destroying the fabric of an ancient society; Iranians are demanding dignity and freedom, and a new Iran is being born.

A new Iran shines in the faces of those marching peaceably with their little daughters on their shoulders, and with their grandparents marching with wheelchairs (see amateur footage on BBC Persian).  To attribute this monumental nonviolent popular movement to western instigation is to dishonor those millions who showed up on the streets for 2 weeks– despite the threat of government-backed "Basiji" hooligans beating them mercilessly, despite the threat of being expelled from their jobs and universities, despite having their homes attacked at night by the Basiji, despite their family members being kidnapped by the various security personnel.  

The 2009 coup d'état, against over 40 million Iranian voters, was an inside job.  

The day after the election results were announced I talked to a friend in Iran who told me “if they [Ahmadinezhad camp] won fair and square, why aren’t they celebrating on the streets?”  The streets of Isfahan (and all other big cities in Iran) were desolate after the announcement. 

People were dumbfounded.

The very next day, people organized and took to the streets again, carrying their children on their shoulders and pushing wheelchairs for the elderly.  

Iranians know what a foreign coup d'état looks like, and feels like.  

One of the most humiliating instances in our history was the 1953 CIA coup d'état that removed the democratically elected government of Dr. Mosadegh from office and installed the Shah. For the next 25 years, the Shah, with his Israeli-trained "SAVAK" torturers, murdered and tortured the nation into silence.  Iranians still remember “the hired help”, the U.S. and Israeli collaborators who got paid only pennies to roam the streets of Tehran (and other large cities); the vigilantes who swung metal chains in the air; metal chains that had bashed many young skulls and ripped through soft tissue of people’s stomach.   No, Iranians have not forgotten the Shah's "Shaboon-Bi-Mokh" (brainless Shaboon) and his other brutal gangs.  

That was a revolution ago, many political fights back, and long before many large and small civil victories. 

Iranians of 2009 expect more from life and demand more of their government.  After all, the most significant popular revolution of this century succeeded in Iran.  We survived a brutal U.S.-instigated, U.S.-fueled war, between Iran and Iraq, for 8 years.  Over a million died, throughout the 1980's.  Every Iranian knows that, were it not for the 8 year long U.S. imposed and fueled war with Iraq, a million Iranian and Iraqi youth would have been spared.  Every Iranian knows that, were it not for the 8-year U.S. imposed and fueled war with Iraq, democratic forces in Iran would have survived.  Every Iranian knows that the new bullies, of the new regime, were strengthened by that war (this is admitted by current leaders of the regime itself). 

Every Iranian knows that democracy was the real casualty of war inflicted on them by the U.S. And Iranians know, in their bones, that what has already happened to Iraq and Afghanistan could easily have happened to them. 

Real democracy (the people's ability to install social mechanisms to protect freedom of speech, freedom of writing, freedom of gathering, etc.) is now the only path that Iranians will accept, if we are to protect ourselves against further U.S. and Israeli wars.  Knowing this in our bones, Iranians poured onto the streets in the millions, to cry for freedom.

May all people of the Middle East hear our call and answer with similar nonviolent rallies.  Resistance to occupation, resistance to invasion; resistance to undemocratic regimes, is our only hope for a safe Middle East where our children can grow to become painters and poets and mathematicians.

Remember your Iranian sisters and brothers who overcame their fear of bullets and tanks by chanting “don’t be afraid, don’t be afraid, we are all together”; and remember the revolution's 1979 chants, which also echoed in Iran after the 2009 elections– “Bullets, tanks, and machine-guns will not work any more”.

Nothing but solidarity, between Iran and its neighbors, will protect us from U.S. and Israeli drones, and from uranium bombs. May all the people of the region hear Iran’s call and answer with comparable nonviolent rallies, especially in the occupied nations.  

Iran is calling you: “don’t be afraid, don’t be afraid, we are all together”. 

Dr. Savabieasfahani, a native of Iran, is an environmental toxicologist based in Ann Arbor MI.  Her new book is “Pollution and reproductive damage: pollution induced cell-death and reproductive damage in fish and mammals” published by DVM publishers (Germany).  She has published on effects of plasticizers and pesticides on female reproductive cycle.  Pollution caused by wars and invasions in the Middle East has turned her attention to the effects of war pollutants on public health, in areas now experiencing environmental crisis.

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2 Responses »

  1. I agree with all this article speaks but then, like a christian track pamphlet, it starts to diverge from the truth, a twisted line that becomes false. The fact is that the people were celebrating, but the organized mob threatened the peace and many who would be out celebrating or protesting, instead, hide in their homes and are afraid.

    Almadjenadaine (?) won. He did. He may have not won a "landslide," but he did win. But we do know Mossad and ShinBet and CIA had their Jordanian, and Egyptian-trained moles fully trained for chaos, win or lose. And why not. How many millions did the CIA spend on this effort this time, surely the $9 million of 1954 was increased due to inflation. One may not love Almadjenadaine (?) but that is ok. At least he tells the truth about homosexuals in the U.S. and the atrocities of the Nazis-Zionists of WWII we now call "The Holocaust."
    Come on people. I don't like nationalism, but in the face of the two biggest perpetrators of atrocities in the world at this moment, breathing down your country's neck , have a little loyalty, why don't you.

  2. Were there any anti-imperialist or anti-Zionist slogans carried in any of the demonstrations against the "election fraud"? I haven't heard of any.

    The writer seems to be reading his own politics into those demonstrations without any evidence whatsoever.

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