Mission

The Belief Rights Law Institute is a California registered 501(c)3 non-profit non-government organization dedicated to advancing the cause of emancipation for members of the Bahá'í Faith around the world.  The Belief Rights Law Institute is a privately created and managed organization, not affiliated in any way with the Administrative Institutions of the Bahá'i Faith.

Through print and online media, BRLI is dedicated to producing, collecting, and distributing information relevant to the struggle for Bahá'í human rights around the world.  

Through news reports, academic publications, video, music, articles, animations, essays, letters and even poems and drawings, BRLI serves as a vehicle for the production and viral distribution of media relevant to the cause of Bahá'í human rights.

BRLI also stands as an ongoing news outlet for updates on the ongoing crises in Iran and around the world concerning the human rights status of affected Bahá'í's.

Additionally, BRLI can assist individuals and organizations wishing to incorporate segments on Bahá'í human rights for external projects and events, by directing them to official Bahá'i Institutions.  BRLI is not associated in any way to the Administrative Institutions of the Bahá'í Faith, and does not speak or act in any such capacity itself.

 

 

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Bahá'í Persecution Updates
Tuesday
Oct042011

'Guilty as Charged' campaign takes off

The ongoing denial of higher education to Iran's Bahá'í community, and raids against the country's pseudo-underground Bahá'í Institute for Higher Education (BIHE), has lead a group of young Bahá'í activists in the United States to launch a creative public awareness initiative called "Conspiracy to Educate: Guilty as Charged."

The campaign features video and photographic mock 'mugshot' montage of Bahá'í's, who had previously or are currently attending institutions of higher education, holding up arrest placards and proudly declaring "If education is a crime, then I am guilty as charged."  Often, participants even dress in graduation caps with orange jumpsuits or classic black and white striped prisoner clothing to further accentuate the imagery. The implication is that had these individuals been in Iran, they would have been violating the Islamic Republic's law by receiving a higher education - thus, "guilty as charged."

Beginning at the Association for Bahá'í Studies conference last August, the campaign has gathered images from hundreds of Bahá'í's from cities throughout the United States.  Created by Justin Byrth and friends, the project is aimed at generating a movement of awareness and action among Bahá'ís and non-Bahá'í's to help resolve the Iranian Bahá'í education crisis.  So far, this initiative has generated thousands of Facebook 'likes and video views.

 

Kevin Mehrabi

 

Below are video and photo examples of some of the campaign's efforts.  Be sure to visit/like the Conspiracy to Educate Facebook page. 

The campaign's first video, produced after the Association for Baha'i Studies conference:

Photos of a few of the participants, in full prisoner clothing and holding arrest placards - bearing their respective names, fields of study, and the institutions of higher education they attended.

Wednesday
Jun082011

"Quenching The Light" - Public Service Announcement

 

"Quenching The Light is a PSA that highlights the persecutions of Baha'is in Iran. It features the paintings of Baha'i martyrs mixed with live video footage of the decedents of the martyrs."

Wednesday
May112011

3rd Anniversary of the Unjust Imprisonment of the Yaran

From: Bahá'í World News Service

 

 — As seven Baha'i leaders in Iran complete their third year in jail, the Baha'i International Community has confirmed that the two women amongst them have been transferred to another prison.

The seven were all members of a national-level ad hoc group that helped attend to the needs of Iran's 300,000-strong Baha'i community.

This Saturday, 14 May, six of them – Fariba Kamalabadi, Jamaloddin Khanjani, Afif Naeimi, Saeid Rezaie, Behrouz Tavakkoli and Vahid Tizfahm – will begin their fourth year behind bars. The seventh member of the group – Mahvash Sabet – was arrested three months earlier than her former colleagues, on 5 March 2008.

After an illegal 30-month detention in Tehran's Evin prison, they were tried on trumped-up charges and sentenced in August 2010 to 20 years in jail. They have been held at Gohardasht prison since that time.

"We now know that Mrs. Kamalabadi and Mrs. Sabet were transported on Tuesday 3 May to Qarchak prison, some 45 kilometres from Tehran," said Bani Dugal, the principal representative of the Baha'i International Community to the United Nations.

"We understand that they are incarcerated with up to 400 other prisoners in a large warehouse-type room with minimum facilities," she said.

"It is not clear if this is to be a long term arrangement, but any amount of time held in any prison is too long for these innocent people."

The five men are still being held under close scrutiny in a wing of Gohardasht prison, reserved for political prisoners.

Anniversary observations

Events are taking place around the world over the next few days to mark the third anniversary of the arrest of the seven.

In the U.S.A. on Thursday 12 May, a special reception will be opened in Washington D.C. by U.S. Senator Mark Kirk, who recently introduced bipartisan resolutions in the House of Representatives and Senate calling attention to the continued plight of Iran's Baha'is.

In the Netherlands, members of religious communities and interreligious networks are being invited to offer prayers – on Friday and Saturday in the country's places of worship – for freedom of religion or belief in Iran.

A special "Solidarity Concert" is being planned in India to remember all victims of human rights abuses. The concert will be held at the auditorium of the Baha'i House of Worship in New Delhi on Wednesday 18 May.

Global outcry

The imprisonment of the Baha'i leaders has provoked widespread protests from governments throughout the world. The European Union and the President of the European Parliament have also joined the condemnation, along with numerous human rights organizations and other groups, religious leaders, and countless individuals.

Recently, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, David Cameron, reiterated his deep concern about the "ongoing plight of the seven Baha'i leaders and the continued attacks on the Baha'i Faith in Iran.

"Your dignity and patience is admirable in the face of such severe discrimination and intimidation for simply staying true to your faith," Mr. Cameron wrote last month in a letter to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United Kingdom.

Mr. Cameron expressed his hope that the recent appointment of a UN Special Rapporteur – to monitor Iran's compliance with international human rights standards – and the imposition by the European Union of sanctions would "convey to Iran the strength of international concern over its human rights record and demonstrate that continued rights violations will not go unnoticed."

 

http://news.bahai.org/story/821

Monday
Mar212011

Obama mentions Bahá'í persecution in his Norooz address to Iran

 

In his annual address to the Iranian people on the Iranian (and Bahá'í) new year (Norooz), President Barack Obama mentions, in part, the persecution of the Bahá'í community in Iran.

Sunday
Nov072010

An open letter from Raha Sabet - Bahá'í Prisoner

In 2006 Raha Sabet, a young Bahá'í girl, was one of 54 Bahá'í's arrested for nothing but the peaceful practice of their faith.  While she remains in jail, her health is being severely tested.  While healing, she has managed to write an open letter from prison, which she sent to her relative.  This relative posted the letter on Facebook and has given BRLI consent for publication.  We thank them both for their strength.

 

Alluhuabha

Kindly some dearest friends have already asked me for several times to write them how I spend time in prison. At first, I would like to mention that my imprisonment assigned for 4 years that 3 years of it have been expired so for in isolation cell (individually prison).

in this 3 years, I have been in the house of detention of security office center of Fars province (shiraz), where there is any public prison and all who stay there are of security or politics accuser and live in isolation cell.

The isolation cell is just a small chamber where its ironic door is been closed all the time and there is not any window or trap- door to out side area and a lavatory set has been installed in this small room.

Every prisoner has been let to go out side for fresh air around 30 minutes every day. There is no tree, no grass; what you can see is only concrete floor (as wide as a volleyball field) and large wall which beyond them the beautiful blue sky can be seen.

When the weather is so hot or cold or it is rainy you can not go for open air. One time every week, I can call to my family and talk to them for 5 minutes and also once every week I can meet them behind a thick glass just for 5 minutes.

Every day some dedicated jailers are responsible for bringing breakfast, lunch and dinner and also to lead prisoner to open air. All of them are men and I can not hide this fact that their behavior against me is quite respectful and polite and up to now they have not tormented or hurt me.

In my cell there are a heater, a cooler, a TV set and also there are 3 blankets that one of them is used as a carpet and 2 of them for sleeping. Another facilities that I have on my cell are consistsRaha Sabet, Imprisoned for her faith. of: a soap, a shampoo, a tooth brush , a tooth paste , a box of handkerchief, a nail trimmer, a box of detergent, a towel , a comb and one added clothes and nothing else. I should mention that once every 2 or 3 weeks, the jailers ask a list of shopping from each prisoner for buying him/her the necessary hygienic facilities or some fruits. So as there is any refrigerator in our cells, the prisoners can buy only 1 or 2 kind of fruit like apple or orange.

Some of you may think that living with some simple facilities is very difficult, but the important fact is that every body, after passing some times, can learn how to live with such facilities without any problem; it means no problem if you do not have a mirror, and so even if you do not have comfort bed or furniture or refrigerator.

There is very important that how you train your spirit and thought for thinking about the values of humanity and spirituality freedom of all belonging just for divine goals. In this way you are glad and thankful and enjoy the opportunity.

It took one week for me that learnt how should I managed myself and my time for praying, reading the books, exercising, walking in the cell and watching TV without falling in the routine life.

Little by little, I learned while I am reading books, I took notes and starting to write searching articles. Also for the time of praying I make a schedule. For example, I memorized prayers and also began to practicing and learning an art that is called “illumination”. It is an Iranian noble art.

A bulk of my time is spent for reading and writing them. By helping BIHE (Bahai Institute for Higher Education), I started to study the political sciences (politics). Another field of my study is Islamic Gnosticism, Iranian social history, sociology and literature. (I've been given permission to have a book for each week.) In addition to study, some of my time is spending for writing articles and remembrance of prison and stories for children and youth. (Up to now, I succeed to write 60 stories that they are the profits of my practical experiences with children and youths and my studies.)

So, my daily schedule consists: at 6:30 am the jailer brings me breakfast, at 8 am I walk around my cell for 30 minutes and at the same time I chant “is there remover...”after breakfast, I start to study, at 10 am, the jailer take me to open air for 30 minutes and contemporaneous, I chant by myself “is there remover..”. When I got back to my cell, again I study or write something, at 12, the jailer brings lunch and up to 2:30 pm I watch TV and then rest fore a while. After that, again I study or write something, at 5 pm, I exercise for 30 minutes and after that I walk around my cell for 2 hour and at the same time again chant “is there remover...” (I chant more than 1000 times this verse every day).

After prayer I take a bath then listen to news and have dinner the jailer brought me before, after that I practice illumination for 2 hours, about 10:30 pm, I watch a film and finally sleep at 11 or 12 pm.

Every 3 months I have been allowed to have a vacation for one or two weeks. This is a nice opportunity for meeting my family and friends and going to a short trip and also can go to library and get some books in trust (about 12 books for 3 months next). Most of all, I can meet my illumination professor and he corrects my practices and teaches me new lessons.

When I am out, I have a golden opportunity to type my writings and articles by helping my friends. Also I can call all Bahai prisoners' families in other cities and seeking after them and their prisoners. Some times, I meet some of the authorities of the state or some of high ranking lawyers in the country and consult them about the human rights of the Bahai community in Iran.

Maybe you think that being in the prison is so hard but if you believe that patience and perseverance in misfortunes is the cause of spiritual progress and elevation of individual and community, it gives you pleasure. In spite of the fact that some days being in prison was hard for me, but whenever I think about the 3 years that have been passed so far, it gives me the feeling of spiritual joys. The days of prison has given me many important lessons and it has made me ready for giving more services to the human world.

For ever, I am very thankful for this grace and talent that is given to me without worthy of it by Bahaullah, and I pray from bottom of my heart for my dearest and more devoted father and mother that have given me the present of the opportunity of living and asking mercy, forgiveness and success for them in the sight of God.

I have written of all my experiences and memoires during my imprisonment. Maybe I changed it to a book when I will be released. But I pay respect for those who asking me to do this job  until then this brief comment may be suffice, and I hope for the day  that can steps with all of you for sending the message of peace and unity of Bahaullah to all mankind especially my dear Iranian fellow countryman until disappearing all of prejudices  and ignorance from the world s face.

Your honor and happiness is all my wish.

                   Assuring you of my highest esteem

                                                              Raha Sabet

(This letter is written on 8th Oct. 2010 in prison)