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'''Freedom of religion in Iran''' is marked by [[Iranian culture]], [[Islam in Iran|major religion]] and [[Politics of Iran|politics]]. [[Iran]] is officially and in practice an [[Islamic republic]]—the [[Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran|Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran]] mandates that the official religion of Iran is [[Shia Islam]] and the [[Twelvers|Twelver]] [[Ja'fari jurisprudence|Ja'fari school]], and also mandates that other Islamic schools are to be accorded full respect, and their followers are free to act in accordance with their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites. The Constitution of Iran stipulates that [[Zoroastrian|Zoroastrians]], [[Jewish|Jews]], and [[Christians]] are the only recognized religious minorities.<ref name="fdih1">{{cite web|date=2003-08-01 |title=Iran (Islamic Republic of)'s Constitution of 1979 with Amendments through 1989 |author=The Constitute Project |publisher=constituteproject.org |accessdate=2020-01-10 |url=https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Iran_1989.pdf?lang=en}}</ref> The continuous presence of the country's pre-Islamic, non-Muslim communities, such as [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrians]], Jews, and Christians, had accustomed the population to the participation of non-Muslims in society. However, despite official recognition of such minorities by Iran's government, the actions of the government create a "threatening atmosphere for some religious minorities".<ref name=2006Report>{{Include-USGov|url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2006/71421.htm|article=International Religious Freedom Report 2006 - Iran|accessdate=2006-11-08|agency=United States Department of State|date=2005-09-15}}</ref>
In its 2020 annual statement, the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (ICRC) described Iran as a country of particular concern under international law on religious freedom and expressed concern about the state of religious freedom in Iran.<ref>{{cite news |title=2020 Annual Report |url=https://www.uscirf.gov/reports-briefs/annual-report/2020-annual-report |agency=United States Commission on International Religious Freedom |date=28 April 2020}}</ref>


The constitution of [[Iran]] states that the country is an Islamic republic; it specifies [[Twelver]] Ja’afari [[Shia Islam]] as the official state religion.<ref name=US2022>[https://www.state.gov/reports/2022-report-on-international-religious-freedom/Iran US State Dept 2022 report]</ref>
On October 27, 2020, US Secretary of State [[Mike Pompeo]] issued a statement on [[Freedom of religion|World Religious Freedom Day]], declaring that today three of the world's most egregious violators of religious freedom are (the People's [[Republic of China]], [[Iran]] and [[North Korea]]), these countries have resorted to coercive measures to silence and intensified their people.<ref>{{cite web |author1=MICHAEL R. POMPEO |title=International Religious Freedom Day PRESS STATEMENT |url=https://www.state.gov/international-religious-freedom-day-4/ |website=U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE |date=2020-10-27}}</ref>

In 2023, the country was scored zero out of 4 for religious freedom.<ref>[https://freedomhouse.org/country/iran/freedom-world/2022 Freedom House website, retrieved 2023-08-08]</ref>

In the same year, it was ranked as the 8th most difficult place in the world to be a Christian.<ref>[https://www.opendoorsuk.org/persecution/world-watch-list/iran/ Open Doors website, retrieved 2023-08-08]</ref>

==Background==

'''Freedom of religion''' or belief in teaching, practice, worship, and observance in the '''Islamic Republic of Iran''' (IRI) is marked by [[Iranian culture]], [[Islam in Iran|major religion]] and [[Politics of Iran|politics]]. The [[Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran|Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran]] mandates that the official religion of Iran is [[Shia Islam]] and the [[Twelvers|Twelver]] [[Ja'fari jurisprudence|Ja'fari school]], and also mandates that other Islamic schools are to be accorded full respect, and their followers are free to act in accordance with their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites. The Constitution of Iran stipulates that [[Zoroastrian]]s, [[Jewish|Jews]], and [[Christians]] are the only recognized religious minorities.<ref name="fdih1">{{cite web|date=2003-08-01 |title=Iran (Islamic Republic of)'s Constitution of 1979 with Amendments through 1989 |author=The Constitute Project |publisher=constituteproject.org |access-date=2020-01-10 |url=https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Iran_1989.pdf?lang=en}}</ref> The continuous presence of the country's pre-Islamic, non-Muslim communities, such as [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrians]], Jews, and Christians, had accustomed the population to the participation of non-Muslims in society.

However, despite official recognition of such minorities by the IRI government, the actions of the government create a "threatening atmosphere for some religious minorities".<ref name=2006Report>{{Include-USGov|url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2006/71421.htm|article=International Religious Freedom Report 2006 - Iran|accessdate=2006-11-08|agency=United States Department of State|date=2005-09-15}}</ref> Groups reportedly "targeted and prosecuted" by the IRI<ref name="IHRDC-2014"/> include [[Baháʼí]]s, [[Sufi]]s, [[Apostasy in Islam|Muslim-born converts to another religion]] (usually Christianity),<ref name="USCIRF 2019 annual report">{{cite web |title=Iran chapter. USCIRF - Recommended for Countries of Particular Concern (CPC) |url=https://www.uscirf.gov/sites/default/files/Iran_2.pdf |website=USCIRF 2019 annual report |access-date=17 January 2021}}</ref><ref name="LOC-Laws Criminalizing Apostasy-Iran">{{cite web |title=Laws Criminalizing Apostasy; Iran |url=https://www.loc.gov/law/help/apostasy/index.php#_ftnref30 |website=Library of Congress |access-date=17 January 2021 |date=c. 2014}}</ref><ref name="HRW World Report 2020">{{cite book |title=HRW World Report 2020 |date=2020 |publisher=HRW |url=https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2020/country-chapters/iran |access-date=17 January 2021 |chapter=Iran, Events of 2019}}</ref> and Muslims who "challenge the prevailing interpretation of Islam".<ref name="IHRDC-2014">{{cite web |title=Apostasy in the Islamic Republic of Iran |url=https://iranhrdc.org/apostasy-in-the-islamic-republic-of-iran/ |website=Iran Human Rights Documentation Center |access-date=29 December 2020 |date=25 September 2014}}</ref>
In 2020, the [[US Commission on International Religious Freedom]] (ICRC) annual statement described the Islamic Republic as a country of particular concern under international law on religious freedom,<ref>{{cite news |title=2020 Annual Report |url=https://www.uscirf.gov/reports-briefs/annual-report/2020-annual-report |agency=United States Commission on International Religious Freedom |date=28 April 2020}}</ref> and US Secretary of State included the Islamic Republic among the most egregious violators of religious freedom.<ref name="state.gov">{{cite web |author1=MICHAEL R. POMPEO |title=International Religious Freedom Day Press Statement|url=https://www.state.gov/international-religious-freedom-day-4/ |website=U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE |date=2020-10-27}}</ref>


==Religious demography==
==Religious demography==
The country has a total area of approximately 1,636,000&nbsp;km² (632,000&nbsp;mi²), and its population is approximately 69 million. In 2006, the population was approximately 98 percent Muslim, of which an estimated 89% were [[Shi'a Islam|Shi'a]] and 9% [[Sunni Islam|Sunni]] (mostly [[Turkic peoples|Turkomen]], [[Arab]]s, [[Baloch people|Baluchs]], and [[Kurdish people|Kurds]] living in the southwest, southeast, and northwest). Although there are no official statistics of the size of the Sufi Muslim population, some reports estimated between two and five million people practice Sufism compared to approximately 100,000 before 1979.<ref name=2006Report/>


With a population of approximately 87 million, approximately 99.4% of Iran is Muslim (as of 2022).<ref name=US2022 /> Of these an estimated 90-95% were [[Shi'a Islam|Shi'a]] and 5-10% [[Sunni Islam|Sunni]] (mostly [[Turkic peoples|Turkomen]], [[Arab]]s, [[Baloch people|Baluchs]], and [[Kurdish people|Kurds]] living in the southwest, southeast, and northwest); although there are no official statistics of the size of the Sufi Muslim population, some reports estimated several million people, while [[Baháʼí Faith|Baháʼís]], Christians, [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrians]], [[Mandaeanism|Mandaeans]], and Jews combined constitute approximately one percent of the population.
[[Baháʼí Faith|Baháʼís]], Christians, [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrians]], [[Mandaeanism|Mandaeans]], and Jews combined constitute approximately two percent of the population. The largest non-Muslim minority is the Baháʼí community, which has an estimated 300,000 to 350,000 adherents throughout the country. Estimates on the size of the Jewish community vary from 20,000 to 30,000. These figures represent a substantial reduction from the estimated 75,000 to 80,000 Jews who resided in the country prior to the 1979 [[Iranian Revolution]]. According to U.N. figures, there were approximately 300,000 Christians, the majority of whom are ethnic Armenians. Unofficial estimates indicated an Assyrian Christian population of approximately 10,000. There also were Protestant denominations, including evangelical churches. The Mandaean Sabaeans, a community whose religion draws on pre-Christian gnostic beliefs, numbered approximately 5,000 to 10,000 persons, with members residing primarily in Khuzestan in the southwest. As of 2006, there were indications that members of all religious minorities are emigrating at a higher rate than previously.<ref name=2006Report />

An independent survey in 2020 showed that Iranians defined themselves as follows; 32% as Shia, 5% Sunni Muslim and 3% Sufi Muslim, as well as 9% atheists, 8% Zoroastrians, 7% spiritual and 1.5% Christian.<ref>[https://theconversation.com/irans-secular-shift-new-survey-reveals-huge-changes-in-religious-beliefs-145253 The Conversation website, article on GAAMAN survey dated September 10, 2020]</ref>


==Status of religious freedom==
==Status of religious freedom==
Although the Constitution states that "the investigation of individuals' beliefs is forbidden" and that "no one may be molested or taken to task simply for holding a certain belief,"<ref name=IranConstitution>{{cite web|url=http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/ir00000_.html|title=Constitution of Iran|accessdate=2006-11-08|publisher=translation provided by the Iranian embassy in London|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20061004120826/http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/ir00000_.html| archivedate=October 4, 2006}}</ref> the adherents of religions not specifically protected under the Constitution do not enjoy freedom of activity. This situation most directly affects adherents of the [[Baháʼí Faith]]. The Government regards the Baháʼí community, whose faith originally arose from a [[Shaykh Ahmad#Shaykhí teachings|movement within Islam]], as a misguided or wayward "sect."<ref name="int">{{cite web|title=Letter from the Iranian Ministry of the Interior |author=Ministry of the Interior |url=http://www.bahai.org/persecution/iran/19-08-06 |accessdate=2006-11-08 |date=2006-08-19}}</ref>
The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran states that "the investigation of individuals' beliefs is forbidden" and that "no one may be molested or taken to task simply for holding a certain belief."<ref name=IranConstitution>{{cite web|url=http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/ir00000_.html|title=Constitution of Iran|access-date=2006-11-08|publisher=translation provided by the Iranian embassy in London|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061004120826/http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/ir00000_.html| archive-date=October 4, 2006}}</ref> Five seats in the [[Islamic Consultative Assembly|parliament]] are reserved for the minority religions; two seats for Armenian Christians, one for Assyrian and Chaldean Christians together, one for Jews, and one for Zoroastrians.<ref name=US2022 /> Iran’s Penal Code has no provisions criminalizing apostasy, as of January 18, 2012.<ref name="LOC-Laws Criminalizing Apostasy-Iran"/>


However, the adherents of religions not specifically protected under the Constitution do not enjoy freedom of activity, nor do Muslims who convert to another religion. Constitutional protections of freedom of belief are tempered by the fact that the death penalty has been imposed on the basis of vague charges, such as “‘attempts against the security of the state,’ ‘outrage against high-ranking officials,’ and ‘insults against the memory of Imam Khomeini and against the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic,’” and has been imposed on the basis of crimes like "drug smuggling" that religious (and political) dissidents have no plausible connection with.<ref name="LOC-Laws Criminalizing Apostasy-Iran"/>
In 2004, the Expediency Council approved appending a note to Article 297 of the 1991 Islamic Punishments Act, authorizing collection of equal "blood money" (diyeh) for the death of Muslims and non-Muslims. All women and Baháʼí men were excluded from the equalization provisions of the bill. According to law, Baháʼí blood or anyones' who marries or helps a Baháʼí or gets involved with them is considered Mobah, meaning it can be spilled with impunity.<ref name=2006Report/>
While there is no specific law against apostasy, courts can hand down the death penalty for [[Apostasy in Islam|apostasy]] to ex-Muslims, and have done so in previous years, based on their interpretation of Sharia’a law and fatwas (legal opinions or decrees issued by Islamic religious leaders).<ref name="LOC-Laws Criminalizing Apostasy-Iran"/> There are laws against blasphemy and the punishment is death.<ref name="End Blasphemy Laws">{{cite web |title=Iran |url=https://end-blasphemy-laws.org/countries/middle-east-and-north-africa/iran/ |website=End Blasphemy Laws |access-date=18 January 2021}}</ref><ref name="IHRDC-penal-5">{{cite web |title=Islamic Penal Code of the Islamic Republic of Iran - Book Five |url=https://iranhrdc.org/islamic-penal-code-of-the-islamic-republic-of-iran-book-five/ |website=Iran Human Rights Documentation Center |access-date=18 January 2021 |date=July 15, 2013}}</ref>
Sufis have been sentenced to prison terms for among other charges “establishing and membership in a deviant group.”<ref name="unfair-sufi-2013">{{cite web |title=Iran: Sufi Activists Convicted in Unfair Trials |url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/07/24/iran-sufi-activists-convicted-unfair-trials |website=Human Rights Watch |access-date=18 January 2021 |date=24 July 2013}}</ref> Ex-Muslim atheists have been harassed.<ref name="Breggen">{{Cite news |url=https://www.trouw.nl/religie-en-filosofie/alleen-in-stilte-kun-je-ex-moslim-zijn~a507d176/ |title=Alleen in stilte kun je ex-moslim zijn |author=Marinde van der Breggen |work=Trouw |date=5 December 2017 |access-date=8 December 2017 |language=nl |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171208174754/https://www.trouw.nl/religie-en-filosofie/alleen-in-stilte-kun-je-ex-moslim-zijn~a507d176/ |archive-date=8 December 2017 }}</ref> But limits on freedom of religion in the IRI most directly affects adherents of the [[Baháʼí Faith]]. The Government regards the Baháʼí community, whose faith originally arose from a [[Shaykh Ahmad#Shaykhí teachings|movement within Islam]], as a misguided or wayward "sect."<ref name="int">{{cite web|title=Letter from the Iranian Ministry of the Interior |author=Ministry of the Interior |url=http://www.bahai.org/persecution/iran/19-08-06 |access-date=2006-11-08 |date=2006-08-19}}</ref>


In 2004, the Expediency Council approved appending a note to Article 297 of the 1991 Islamic Punishments Act, authorizing collection of equal "blood money" (''diyeh'') for the death of Muslims and non-Muslims. All women and Baháʼí men were excluded from the equalization provisions of the bill. According to law, Baháʼí blood or anyone' who marries or helps a Baháʼí or gets involved with them is considered ''mobah'', meaning it can be spilled with impunity.<ref name=US2022 />
The Government fuels anti-Baháʼí sentiment in the country. Government officials have stated that the Baháʼís are not a religious minority, but a political organization which was associated with the Shah's regime, is against the Iranian Revolution and engages in espionage activities.<ref name="buck">{{cite journal |first=Christopher |last=Buck |title=Islam and Minorities: The Case of the Baháʼís |journal=Studies in Contemporary Islam |volume=5 |issue=1 |pages=83–106 |year=2003}}</ref> However, government officials reportedly nonetheless have stated that, as individuals, all Baháʼís are entitled to their beliefs and are protected under other articles of the Constitution as citizens. The Iranian representative to the [[United Nations]] tried several times, albeit unsuccessfully, between 1982 and 1984 to convince the United Nations diplomatic community that the Baháʼí Faith is a politicized organization with a record of criminal activism against the Iranian government.<ref name="ghanea">{{Cite book|first=Nazila |last=Ghanea |title=Human Rights, the UN & the Baháʼís in Iran |publisher=Kluwer Law International |location=The Hague/London/New York |year=2002}}</ref> The United Nations responded to the Iranian government's accusations by stating that there has been no evidence of Iran's claims and that the Baháʼí community in Iran professes its allegiance to the state. The United Nations pointed to the Baháʼí teaching of obedience to the government of one's country and stated that any involvement in any subversive acts against the government would be antithetical to precepts of the Baháʼí religion.<ref name="ghanea" /> The United Nations also stated that if the Iranian government did acknowledge that the Baháʼí Faith is a religion, it would be an admission that freedom of religion does not apply to all in Iran and that it is not abiding by the [[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]] and International Covenants on Human Rights to which it is a signatory.<ref name="buck" />

The Government fuels anti-Baháʼí sentiment in the country. Government officials have stated that the Baháʼís are not a religious minority, but a political organization which was associated with the Shah's regime, is against the Iranian Revolution and engages in espionage activities.<ref name="buck">{{cite journal |first=Christopher |last=Buck |title=Islam and Minorities: The Case of the Baháʼís |journal=Studies in Contemporary Islam |volume=5 |issue=1 |pages=83–106 |year=2003}}</ref> Nonetheless, government officials have reportedly stated that as individuals, all Baháʼís are entitled to their beliefs and are protected under other articles of the Constitution as citizens. In response to repeated attempts (between 1982 and 1984) by the Iranian representative to the [[United Nations]] to convince the United Nations diplomatic community that the Baháʼí Faith is a politicized organization with a record of criminal activism against the Iranian government,<ref name="ghanea">{{Cite book|first=Nazila |last=Ghanea |title=Human Rights, the UN & the Baháʼís in Iran |publisher=Kluwer Law International |location=The Hague/London/New York |year=2002}}</ref> the United Nations has stated that there has been no evidence of Iran's claims and that the Baháʼí community in Iran professes its allegiance to the state. The United Nations pointed to the Baháʼí teaching of obedience to the government of one's country and stated that any involvement in any subversive acts against the government would be antithetical to precepts of the Baháʼí religion.<ref name="ghanea" /> The United Nations also stated that if the Iranian government did acknowledge that the Baháʼí Faith is a religion, it would be an admission that freedom of religion does not apply to all in Iran and that it is not abiding by the [[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]] and International Covenants on Human Rights to which it is a signatory.<ref name="buck" />


Unlike the Baháʼí Faith, [[Judaism]] is a recognized religion in Iran. Despite Iran's official distrust of the country of [[Israel]], the government does not directly attack Judaism itself.
Unlike the Baháʼí Faith, [[Judaism]] is a recognized religion in Iran. Despite Iran's official distrust of the country of [[Israel]], the government does not directly attack Judaism itself.


The central feature of the country's Islamic republican system is rule by a "religious jurisconsult." The [[Supreme Leader of Iran|Supreme Leader of Islamic Republic]] controls the most important levers of power; he is chosen by a group of 86 religious scholars. All acts of the [[Majlis of Iran|Majles]] (legislative body) must be reviewed for conformity with Islamic law and principles by the Council of Guardians, which is composed of six clerics appointed by the Supreme Leader and six Muslim jurists (legal scholars) nominated by the Head of the Judiciary and elected by parliament.<ref>{{cite book
The central feature of the country's Islamic republican system is rule by a "religious jurisconsult." The [[Supreme Leader of Iran|Supreme Leader of Islamic Republic]] controls the most important levers of power; he is chosen by a group of 86 religious scholars. All acts of the [[Majlis of Iran|Majles]] (legislative body) must be reviewed for conformity with Islamic law and principles by the Council of Guardians, which is composed of six clerics appointed by the Supreme Leader and six Muslim jurists (legal scholars) nominated by the Head of the Judiciary and elected by parliament.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cotran |first1=Eugene |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tuibyffISZAC&q=%22a+council+to+be+known+as+the+council+of+guardians+is+to+be+established%22&pg=PA87 |title=Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law |last2=Mallat |first2=Chibli |publisher=Kluwer Law International |year=1995 |isbn=90-411-0883-1 |volume=1 |location=London, UK |page=87}}</ref>
| last1 = Cotran
| first1 = Eugene
| last2 = Mallat
| first2 = Chibli, eds
| title = Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law
| publisher =Kluwer Law International
| volume = Vol 1
| edition =
| year = 1995
| location = London, UK
| page = 87
| language =
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=tuibyffISZAC&q=%22a+council+to+be+known+as+the+council+of+guardians+is+to+be+established%22&pg=PA87
| isbn = 90-411-0883-1
}}</ref>


Religious activity is monitored closely by the Ministry of Islamic Culture and Guidance and by the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS). Adherents of recognized religious minorities are not required to register individually with the Government; however, their community, religious, and cultural events and organizations, including schools, are monitored closely. Registration of Baháʼís is a police function. [[Evangelical Christian]] groups have been pressured by government authorities to compile and submit membership lists for their congregations, but evangelicals have resisted this demand. Non-Muslim owners of grocery shops are required to indicate their religious affiliation on the fronts of their shops.<ref name=2006Report/>
Religious activity is monitored closely by the Ministry of Islamic Culture and Guidance and by the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS). Adherents of recognized religious minorities are not required to register individually with the Government; however, their community, religious, and cultural events and organizations, including schools, are monitored closely. Registration of Baháʼís is a police function. [[Evangelical Christian]] groups have been pressured by government authorities to compile and submit membership lists for their congregations, but evangelicals have resisted this demand. In the early 2000s, non-Muslim owners of grocery shops were required to indicate their religious affiliation on the fronts of their shops.<ref name=2006Report/>


==Restrictions on religious freedom==
==Restrictions on religious freedom==
=== Politics ===
By law and practice, religious minorities can be elected to a representative body or to hold senior government or military positions, and have 5 of a total 270 seats in the majlis reserved for religious minorities. Three of these seats are reserved for members of the Christian faith, including two seats for the country's Armenian Christians, and one for Assyrians. There is also one seat for a member of the Jewish faith, and one for a member of the Zoroastrian faith. While members of the Sunni Muslim minority do not have reserved seats in the majlis, they are allowed to serve in the body. Sunni members tend to come from the larger Sunni communities. Members of religious minorities are allowed to vote. All of the minority religious groups, including Sunni, are barred from being elected [[President of Iran|president]].<ref name=2006Report/>
By law and practice, religious minorities can be elected to a representative body or to hold senior government or military positions, and have 5 of a total 270 seats in the majlis reserved for religious minorities. Three of these seats are reserved for members of the Christian faith, including two seats for the country's Armenian Christians, and one for Assyrians. There is also one seat for a member of the Jewish faith, and one for a member of the Zoroastrian faith. While members of the Sunni Muslim minority do not have reserved seats in the majlis, they are allowed to serve in the body. Sunni members tend to come from the larger Sunni communities. Members of religious minorities are allowed to vote. All of the minority religious groups, including Sunni, are barred from being elected [[President of Iran|president]].<ref name=US2022 />


=== Employment ===
Members of religious minorities, are supported in their pursuit of serving in the judiciary and security services. All applicants for public sector employment are screened, irrespective of their faith, for their adherence to and knowledge of Islam, and members of religious minorities can serve in lower ranks of government employment. The constitution states that the country's army must be administered by individuals who are committed to the objectives of the Iranian constitution, regardless of faith. No religious minorities are exempt from military service. Members of religious minorities with a college education could serve as an officer during their mandatory military service but could not be a career military officer.<ref name=2006Report/>
Members of religious minorities, are supported in their pursuit of serving in the judiciary and security services. All applicants for public sector employment are screened, irrespective of their faith, for their adherence to and knowledge of Islam, and members of religious minorities can serve in lower ranks of government employment. The constitution states that the country's army must be administered by individuals who are committed to the objectives of the Iranian constitution, regardless of faith. No religious minorities are exempt from military service. Members of religious minorities with a college education could serve as an officer during their mandatory military service but could not be a career military officer.<ref name=US2022 />


=== Education ===
University applicants are required to pass an examination in Islamic theology, which limits the access of most religious minorities to higher education, although all public school students, including non-Muslims, must study Shia Islam. Applicants for public sector employment similarly are screened for their knowledge of Islam.<ref name=2006Report/>
University applicants are required to pass an examination in Islamic theology, which limits the access of most religious minorities to higher education, although all public school students, including non-Muslims, must study Shia Islam. Applicants for public sector employment similarly are screened for their knowledge of Islam.<ref name=US2022 />


The Ministry of Education sets the religious curricula of public schools. All schools must teach a course on Shia Islamic teachings and all pupils must pass this course to progress to the next stage of study. Applicants to university must pass an exam on Islamic, Christian, or Jewish theology, based on their official religious affiliation.<ref name=US2022 />
The Government allows recognized religious minorities to conduct the religious education of their adherents. This includes separate and privately funded Zoroastrian, Jewish, and Christian schools but does not include Baháʼí schools. The Ministry of Education, which imposes certain curriculum requirements, supervises these schools. With few exceptions, the directors of such private schools must be Muslim. Attendance at the schools is not mandatory for recognized religious minorities. All textbooks used in course work, including religious texts, must be approved for use by the Ministry of Education. Religious texts in non-Persian languages require approval by the authorities for use. Recognized religious minorities could provide religious instruction in non-Persian languages, but such texts required approval by the authorities. This approval requirement sometimes imposed significant translation expenses on minority communities.<ref name=2006Report/> The condition imposed began from 1981 and were reiterated in the fall of 1983 - the Ministry of Education and Training ordered that religious education must be done in Persian, a text written by the MET must be taught in all registered religious minority schools, schools must seek special permission for any ceremonies, and in keeping with society-wide restrictions, female teachers and students must observe Islamic dress code including [[Hijab]] when necessary (this last was re-inforced in 1985.)<ref name="Sanas2000">
* {{Cite book| last = Sanasarian | first = Eliz | authorlink = Eliz Sanasarian | title = Religious minorities in Iran | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2000 | location = | pages = [https://archive.org/details/religiousmin_sana_2000_000_6285976/page/n249 228] | url =https://archive.org/details/religiousmin_sana_2000_000_6285976| url-access = registration | doi = | id = | isbn = 978-0-521-77073-6}}
* {{Cite book| last = Sanasarian | first = Eliz | authorlink = Eliz Sanasarian | title = Religious minorities in Iran | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2006 | location = | pages = 252 | doi = | id = | isbn = 978-0-521-02974-2}}</ref><ref name="UNHCR-Armenia">{{Cite web| title = Iran: Information on the Armenian Apostolic Church and on how the church and its members are treated | work = UNHCR | publisher = Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | date = 1 November 1996 | url =http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/topic,463af2212,467bdc8c2,3ae6abdcc,0.html | doi = | accessdate = 13 December 2009 }}</ref> Even most of the time and occasions, all female citizens, including non-Muslims, are required to wear Hijab as Iran is currently an Islamic republic. There have been other requirements of citizens as well. In 1984 the government began to request religious affiliation on questionnaires for passports. Events held for religious groups were broken into and if the meetings were mixed sexed and or women were not wearing headscarves, arrests were made and meetings canceled. It was prohibited that Muslims attend these meetings of minority groups - some groups restricted events so only their own religious members could attend. There were restrictions on music at events. Many of these restrictions moderated in time or were applied to or affected one religion more vs others (see below) and the government has occasionally also taken steps to bring attention to issues important to a religion - in 1982 the Ministry of Post and Telegraphs printed a stamp commemorating the birth of Jesus.<ref name="Sanas2000"/>


=== Ministry of Education ===
The textbook the MET wrote on the minority religions was called Talimat-e Maxhadi Vizheh-ye Aqaliathaye Mazhabi - (Kalimi, Zarthoshti, Masihi); Religious Studies Specifically for Religious Minorities: (Jews, Zoroastrians, Christians.)<ref name="Sanas2000"/> The course was taught by Muslim teachers at least 3 hrs/wk. All the religious minorities objected to the text in 1982 claiming the book was a violation of Article 13 guaranteeing freedom in religious teaching, that there were overt and covert passages from the Quran, and lack of any qualifications of the anonymous author(s) rather than members of the religious minorities writing about their own religions. The situation has moderated for the Armenians significantly by 1995/6.<ref name="UNHCR-Armenia"/> There was also compromise of sorts allowed both Hebrew and Persian language use in Jewish schools.<ref name="UNHCR-Jews">{{Cite web| title = Iran: Information on the Jewish community in Tehran between 1990 and 1996, including names of prominent leaders, names of synagogues, important religious events, and information on the arrests between June and September 1993 of four people who were charged with providing fraudulent documents to members of the Jewish community to help them leave the country| work = UNHCR | publisher = Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | date = 1 March 1998 | url = http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/refworld/rwmain?page=search&amp;docid=3ae6ac222c&amp;skip=0 | format = | doi = | accessdate = 13 December 2009 }}</ref>


The condition imposed began from 1981 and were reiterated in the fall of 1983 - the Ministry of Education and Training ordered that religious education must be done in Persian, a text written by the MET must be taught in all registered religious minority schools, schools must seek special permission for any ceremonies, and in keeping with society-wide restrictions, female teachers and students must observe Islamic dress code including [[Hijab]] when necessary (this last was re-inforced in 1985.)<ref name="Sanas2000">
Recognized religious minorities are allowed by the Government to establish community centers and certain cultural, social, sports, or charitable associations that they finance themselves. This does not apply to the Baháʼí community, which since 1983 has been denied the right to assemble officially or to maintain administrative institutions. Because the Baháʼí Faith has no clergy, the denial of the right to form such institutions and elect officers threatens its existence in the country.<ref name=2006Report/>
* {{Cite book| last = Sanasarian | first = Eliz | author-link = Eliz Sanasarian | title = Religious minorities in Iran | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2000 | pages = [https://archive.org/details/religiousmin_sana_2000_000_6285976/page/n249 228] | url =https://archive.org/details/religiousmin_sana_2000_000_6285976| url-access = registration | isbn = 978-0-521-77073-6}}
* {{Cite book| last = Sanasarian | first = Eliz | author-link = Eliz Sanasarian | title = Religious minorities in Iran | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2006 | pages = 252 | isbn = 978-0-521-02974-2}}</ref><ref name="UNHCR-Armenia">{{Cite web| title = Iran: Information on the Armenian Apostolic Church and on how the church and its members are treated | work = UNHCR | publisher = Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | date = 1 November 1996 | url =http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/topic,463af2212,467bdc8c2,3ae6abdcc,0.html | access-date = 13 December 2009 }}</ref> Even most of the time and occasions, all female citizens, including non-Muslims, are required to wear Hijab as Iran is currently an Islamic republic. There have been other requirements of citizens as well. In 1984 the government began to request religious affiliation on questionnaires for passports. Events held for religious groups were broken into and if the meetings were mixed sexed and or women were not wearing headscarves, arrests were made and meetings canceled. It was prohibited that Muslims attend these meetings of minority groups - some groups restricted events so only their own religious members could attend. There were restrictions on music at events. Many of these restrictions moderated in time or were applied to or affected one religion more vs others (see below) and the government has occasionally also taken steps to bring attention to issues important to a religion - in 1982 the Ministry of Post and Telegraphs printed a stamp commemorating the birth of Jesus.<ref name="Sanas2000"/>


The textbook the MET wrote on the minority religions was called Talimat-e Maxhadi Vizheh-ye Aqaliathaye Mazhabi - (Kalimi, Zarthoshti, Masihi); Religious Studies Specifically for Religious Minorities: (Jews, Zoroastrians, Christians.)<ref name="Sanas2000"/> The course was taught by Muslim teachers at least 3 hrs/wk. All the religious minorities objected to the text in 1982 claiming the book was a violation of Article 13 guaranteeing freedom in religious teaching, that there were overt and covert passages from the Quran, and lack of any qualifications of the anonymous author(s) rather than members of the religious minorities writing about their own religions. The situation moderated{{huh|date=July 2023}} for Armenians significantly by 1995-6.<ref name="UNHCR-Armenia"/> There was also compromise of sorts allowed both Hebrew and Persian language use in Jewish schools.<ref name="UNHCR-Jews">{{Cite web| title = Iran: Information on the Jewish community in Tehran between 1990 and 1996, including names of prominent leaders, names of synagogues, important religious events, and information on the arrests between June and September 1993 of four people who were charged with providing fraudulent documents to members of the Jewish community to help them leave the country| work = UNHCR | publisher = Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | date = 1 March 1998 | url = http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/refworld/rwmain?page=search&amp;docid=3ae6ac222c&amp;skip=0 | access-date = 13 December 2009 }}</ref>
Muslim men are free to marry non-Muslim women; a non-Muslim woman automatically becomes Muslim when the marriage takes place. However, marriages between Muslim women and non-Muslim men are not recognized unless the man shows proof that he has converted to Islam. If the child of a non-Muslim family converts to Islam, he or she inherits all the wealth of the family.<ref>{{cite web |title=Muslim women should be able to marry non-Muslim men |publisher=goatmilkblog.com |date=28 August 2010 |url=http://goatmilkblog.com/2010/08/24/muslim-women-should-be-able-to-marry-non-muslim-men-the-goatmilk-debates/ |accessdate=February 13, 2014 |archive-url=https://archive.is/20130822193743/http://goatmilkblog.com/2010/08/24/muslim-women-should-be-able-to-marry-non-muslim-men-the-goatmilk-debates/ |archive-date=22 August 2013 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref>


In the early 2000s, recognized religious minorities were allowed by the Government to establish community centers and certain cultural, social, sports, or charitable associations that they finance themselves; this did not apply to the Baháʼí community, which since 1983 has been denied the right to assemble officially or to maintain administrative institutions.<ref name=2006Report/>
The Government is highly suspicious of any proselytizing of Muslims by non-Muslims and can be harsh in its response, in particular against Baháʼís , Sunni Muslims and evangelical Christians.


=== Marriage ===
The Government does not ensure the right of citizens to change or renounce their religious faith. Apostasy, specifically [[conversion from Islam]], can be [[capital punishment in Iran|punishable by death]].<ref name="fdih1" />
In the early 2000s Muslim men were free to marry non-Muslim women; a non-Muslim woman automatically became Muslim when the marriage took place. However, marriages between Muslim women and non-Muslim men were not recognized unless the man showed proof that he has converted to Islam. If the child of a non-Muslim family converted to Islam, he or she inherited all the wealth of the family.<ref>{{cite web |title=Muslim women should be able to marry non-Muslim men |publisher=goatmilkblog.com |date=28 August 2010 |url=http://goatmilkblog.com/2010/08/24/muslim-women-should-be-able-to-marry-non-muslim-men-the-goatmilk-debates/ |access-date=February 13, 2014 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130822193743/http://goatmilkblog.com/2010/08/24/muslim-women-should-be-able-to-marry-non-muslim-men-the-goatmilk-debates/ |archive-date=22 August 2013 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref>


=== Religious conversion and proselytizing ===
A summary of 2013 incidents of prison sentences, fines and punishments showed "79 religious minorities were sentenced to a total of 3620 months in prison, 200 months probation, 75 lashings and 41,030,000,000 rials in fines. In this area, 49% of the cases involved Baháʼí minorities, 16% Christian and Dervish and 14% Sunni minority. Arrests of religious minorities increased by 36% in relation to last year."<ref>{{cite news|title=Human rights activists in Iran publish disturbing annual report summarizing human rights violations in 2013 |newspaper=Iran Daily Brief |date=23 January 2014 |url=http://www.irandailybrief.com/2014/01/23/human-rights-activists-in-iran-publish-disturbing-annual-report-summarizing-human-rights-violations-in-2013/|accessdate=January 26, 2014}}</ref>

The Government does not ensure the right of citizens to change or renounce their religious faith. Apostasy, specifically [[conversion from Islam]], can be [[capital punishment in Iran|punishable by death]].<ref name="fdih1" /> In 2022, the penal code specified the death penalty for proselytizing and any attempt by non-Muslims to convert Muslims.<ref name=US2022 />

=== Imprisonment ===
A summary of 2013 incidents of prison sentences, fines and punishments showed "79 religious minorities were sentenced to a total of 3620 months in prison, 200 months probation, 75 lashings and 41,030,000,000 rials in fines. In this area, 49% of the cases involved Baháʼí minorities, 16% Christian and Dervish and 14% Sunni minority. Arrests of religious minorities increased by 36% in relation to last year."<ref>{{cite news|title=Human rights activists in Iran publish disturbing annual report summarizing human rights violations in 2013 |newspaper=Iran Daily Brief |date=23 January 2014 |url=http://www.irandailybrief.com/2014/01/23/human-rights-activists-in-iran-publish-disturbing-annual-report-summarizing-human-rights-violations-in-2013/|access-date=January 26, 2014}}</ref>

In 2022, the UN Special Rapporteur expressed concern about the number of executions of members of minority communities, noting that members of the Baluch and Kurdish minorities accounted for 35% of executions in the first half of the year; the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran reported 576 executions in 2022, compared to 317 executions in 2021 and 248 in 2020.<ref name=US2022 /> In the same year, the Human Rights Activists News Agency reported 140 arrests, 51 travel bans, 94 house raids and 11 court cases based on citizens' religious beliefs.

=== Dress code ===
November 2022 saw the [[death of Mahsa Amini]] at the hands of morality police, after she was detained for allegedly wearing her hijab in an incorrect way. By the end of the month, protests throughout the country had led to the deaths of at least 448 people<ref name="IHR448">{{cite news |title=Iran Protests: at Least 448 People Killed |agency=Iran Human Rights |url=https://iranhr.net/en/articles/5608/ |date= 29 November 2022}}</ref> and an estimated 18,170 arrests.<ref>{{cite news |title=Iran lawmakers demand severe punishment for 'rioters' as protests rage |url=https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/iran-lawmakers-demand-severe-punishment-rioters-protests-rage-2022-11-06/ |access-date=7 November 2022 |work=Reuters |date=6 November 2022}}</ref>


===Baháʼís===
===Baháʼís===
[[File:Yaran images at Rio Rally.jpg|thumb|Images of the faces of the [[Baháʼí 7|Yaran]], a group of 7 Bahá'í leaders imprisoned in Iran, at a rally in [[Rio de Janeiro]], [[Brazil]].]]
The [[Baháʼí Faith]] originated in Iran during the 1860s. The Baháʼís believe their prophet to be the Messiah for this era. Initially it attracted a wide following among Shi'a clergy. The political and religious authorities of that time joined to suppress the movement, and since then the hostility of the Shi'a clergy to the Baháʼí Faith has remained strong. Baháʼís are considered apostates by the Shi'a clergy because of their claim to a valid religious revelation subsequent to that of Mohammed. The Baháʼí Faith is defined by the Government as a political "sect," historically linked to the [[Pahlavi dynasty|Pahlavi regime]] and, hence, counterrevolutionary, even though one of the tenets of the Baháʼí Faith is non-involvement in partisan politics.<ref name="affolter">{{cite journal|first=Friedrich W. |last=Affolter |title=The Specter of Ideological Genocide: The Baháʼís of Iran |journal=War Crimes, Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=59–89 |year=2005 |url=http://www.aa.psu.edu/journals/war-crimes/v1n1a3.pdf |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20061108054332/http://www.aa.psu.edu/journals/war-crimes/v1n1a3.pdf |archivedate=November 8, 2006 }}</ref>
The [[Baháʼí Faith]] originated in Iran during the 1860s. The Baháʼís believe their prophet to be the Messiah for this era. Initially it attracted a wide following among Shi'a clergy. The political and religious authorities of that time joined to suppress the movement, and since then the hostility of the Shi'a clergy to the Baháʼí Faith has remained strong. Baháʼís are considered apostates by the Shi'a clergy because of their claim to a valid religious revelation subsequent to that of Mohammed. The Baháʼí Faith is defined by the Government as a political "sect," historically linked to the [[Pahlavi dynasty|Pahlavi regime]] and, hence, counterrevolutionary, even though one of the tenets of the Baháʼí Faith is non-involvement in partisan politics.<ref name="affolter">{{cite journal|first=Friedrich W. |last=Affolter |title=The Specter of Ideological Genocide: The Baháʼís of Iran |journal=War Crimes, Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=59–89 |year=2005 |url=http://www.aa.psu.edu/journals/war-crimes/v1n1a3.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061108054332/http://www.aa.psu.edu/journals/war-crimes/v1n1a3.pdf |archive-date=November 8, 2006 }}</ref>


Baháʼís may not teach or practice their faith or maintain links with coreligionists abroad. The fact that the [[Baháʼí World Centre|Baháʼí world headquarters]] (established by the [[Bahá'u'lláh|founder of the Baháʼí Faith]] in the 19th century, in what was then [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]]-controlled [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]]) is situated in what is now the state of Israel, allows the Iranian government to charge the Baháʼís with "espionage on behalf of Zionism," in particular when caught communicating with or sending monetary contributions to the Baháʼí headquarters.<ref name="buck" />
Baháʼís may not teach or practice their faith or maintain links with coreligionists abroad. The fact that the [[Baháʼí World Centre|Baháʼí world headquarters]] (established by the [[Bahá'u'lláh|founder of the Baháʼí Faith]] in the 19th century, in what was then [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]]-controlled [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]]) is situated in what is now the state of Israel, allows the Iranian government to charge the Baháʼís with "espionage on behalf of Zionism," in particular when caught communicating with or sending monetary contributions to the Baháʼí headquarters.<ref name="buck" />
Line 67: Line 83:
Broad restrictions on Baháʼís appear to be aimed at destroying them as a community. Baháʼís repeatedly have been offered relief from mistreatment in exchange for recanting their faith. Baháʼí cemeteries, holy places, historical sites, administrative centers, and other assets were seized shortly after the 1979 revolution. None of the properties have been returned, and many have been destroyed.<ref name="fdih1" /><ref name="affolter" />
Broad restrictions on Baháʼís appear to be aimed at destroying them as a community. Baháʼís repeatedly have been offered relief from mistreatment in exchange for recanting their faith. Baháʼí cemeteries, holy places, historical sites, administrative centers, and other assets were seized shortly after the 1979 revolution. None of the properties have been returned, and many have been destroyed.<ref name="fdih1" /><ref name="affolter" />


Baháʼís are not allowed to bury and honor their dead in keeping with their religious tradition. They are permitted access only to areas of wasteland that the Government designates for their use, and are not allowed to mark the graves. Many historic Baháʼí gravesites have been desecrated or destroyed.<ref name="affolter" /> In 2000 in the city of Abadeh, a Revolutionary Guard officer bulldozed a Baháʼí cemetery with 22 graves.<ref>US State Department's Reports on Human Rights, 2001. Iran: Country Reports on Human Rights Practices (HRP 2001).</ref>
Baháʼís are not allowed to bury and honor their dead in keeping with their religious tradition. They are permitted access only to areas of wasteland that the Government designates for their use, and are not allowed to mark the graves. Many historic Baháʼí gravesites have been desecrated or destroyed.<ref name="affolter" /><ref name=US2022 />


In what appeared to be a hopeful development, in 2002 the Government offered the [[Tehran]] community a piece of land for use as a cemetery. However, the land was in the desert, with no access to water, making it impossible to perform Baháʼí mourning rituals. In addition the Government stipulated that no markers be put on individual graves and that no mortuary facilities be built on the site, making it impossible to perform a proper burial.<ref name="fdih1" />
In what appeared to be a hopeful development, in 2002 the Government offered the [[Tehran]] community a piece of land for use as a cemetery. However, the land was in the desert, with no access to water, making it impossible to perform Baháʼí mourning rituals. In addition the Government stipulated that no markers be put on individual graves and that no mortuary facilities be built on the site, making it impossible to perform a proper burial.<ref name="fdih1" />


Baháʼí group meetings and religious education, which often take place in private homes and offices, are curtailed severely. Public and private universities continue to deny admittance to Baháʼí students, a particularly demoralizing blow to a community that traditionally has placed a high value on education. Denial of access to higher education appears aimed at the eventual impoverishment of the Baháʼí community.<ref name="buck" /><ref name="affolter" />
Baháʼí group meetings and religious education, which often take place in private homes and offices, are curtailed severely. Public and private universities continue to deny admittance to Baháʼí students, a particularly demoralizing blow to a community that traditionally has placed a high value on education. Denial of access to higher education appears aimed at the eventual impoverishment of the Baháʼí community.<ref name="buck" /><ref name="affolter" /> The [[Baháʼí Institute for Higher Education]] was founded in 1987 and continues to operate despite government persecution.


Baháʼís regularly are denied compensation for injury or criminal victimization. Government authorities claim that only Muslim plaintiffs are eligible for compensation in these circumstances.<ref name="fdih1" />
Baháʼís regularly are denied compensation for injury or criminal victimization. Government authorities claim that only Muslim plaintiffs are eligible for compensation in these circumstances.<ref name="fdih1" />
Line 81: Line 97:
While in recent years the Government has eased some restrictions, thereby enabling Baháʼís to obtain food-ration booklets and send their children to public elementary and secondary schools, the prohibition against the admission of Baháʼís to universities remains. Thousands of Baháʼís dismissed from government jobs in the early 1980s receive no unemployment benefits and have been required to repay the Government for salaries or pensions received from the first day of employment. Those unable to do so face prison sentences.<ref name="affolter" />
While in recent years the Government has eased some restrictions, thereby enabling Baháʼís to obtain food-ration booklets and send their children to public elementary and secondary schools, the prohibition against the admission of Baháʼís to universities remains. Thousands of Baháʼís dismissed from government jobs in the early 1980s receive no unemployment benefits and have been required to repay the Government for salaries or pensions received from the first day of employment. Those unable to do so face prison sentences.<ref name="affolter" />


Iran has taken some positive steps in recognizing the rights of Baháʼís, as well as other religious minorities. In November 1999, [[Mohammad Khatami|President Khatami]] publicly stated that no one in the country should be persecuted because of his or her religious beliefs. He added that he would defend the civil rights of all citizens, regardless of their beliefs or religion. Subsequently, the Expediency Council approved the "Right of Citizenship" bill, affirming the social and political rights of all citizens and their equality before the law. In February 2000, following approval of the bill, the head of the judiciary issued a circular letter to all registry offices throughout the country that provided for any couple to be registered as husband and wife without being required to state their religious affiliation. The measure effectively permits the registration of Baháʼí marriages in the country. Previously Baháʼí marriages were not recognized by the Government, leaving Baháʼí women open to charges of prostitution. Thus children of Baháʼí marriages were not recognized as legitimate and therefore denied inheritance rights.<ref name="buck" />
Iran has taken some positive steps in recognizing the rights of Baháʼís, as well as other religious minorities. In November 1999, [[Mohammad Khatami|President Khatami]] publicly stated that no one in the country should be persecuted because of their religious beliefs. He added that he would defend the civil rights of all citizens, regardless of their beliefs or religion. Subsequently, the Expediency Council approved the "Right of Citizenship" bill, affirming the social and political rights of all citizens and their equality before the law. In February 2000, following approval of the bill, the head of the judiciary issued a circular letter to all registry offices throughout the country that provided for any couple to be registered as husband and wife without being required to state their religious affiliation. The measure effectively permits the registration of Baháʼí marriages in the country. Previously Baháʼí marriages were not recognized by the Government, leaving Baháʼí women open to charges of prostitution. Thus children of Baháʼí marriages were not recognized as legitimate and therefore denied inheritance rights.<ref name="buck" />


According to a U.S. panel, attacks on Baháʼís in Iran have increased since [[Mahmoud Ahmadinejad]] became president as well as Sunni Muslims.<ref name="cnn2008-05">{{cite news |title=Iran's arrest of Baha'is condemned |publisher=CNN |date=2008-05-16 |accessdate=2008-05-17 |author=CNN |url=http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/05/16/iran.bahais/}}</ref> On May 14, 2008, members of an informal body known as the Friends that oversaw the needs of the Baháʼí community in Iran were arrested and taken to [[Evin prison]].<ref name="cnn2008-05" /><ref>{{cite news |title=IRAN: Bahais rounded up |work=Los Angeles times |date=2008-05-15|first=Borzou |last=Daragahi |url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2008/05/iran-bahais-rou.html |accessdate=2008-05-17}}</ref> Officers from the Ministry of Intelligence in Tehran searched and raided the homes of the six people in the early hours of May 14.<ref name="ihrdc2008">{{Cite web |url=http://www.iranhrdc.org/httpdocs/English/pdfs/PressReleases/2008/Press-05-15-08.pdf |title=IHRDC Condemns the Arrest of Leading Baháʼís |publisher=Iran Human Rights Documentation Center |author=Iran Human Rights Documentation Center |date=2008-05-14 |accessdate=2008-05-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100902191009/http://www.iranhrdc.org/httpdocs/English/pdfs/PressReleases/2008/Press-05-15-08.pdf |archive-date=2010-09-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The arrest of the six follow the detention of another Baháʼí leader in March,<ref name="cnn2008-05" /> who was originally taken to answer questions relating to the burial of a Baháʼí in the Baháʼí cemetery in [[Mashad]].<ref name="ihrdc2008" /> They have not been charged, and are prisoners of conscience.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde13/068/2008/en/ |title=Iran: Arbitrary arrests / Prisoners of conscience |accessdate=2008-05-18 |date=2008-05-15 |author=Amnesty International |publisher=Amnesty International}}</ref> The Iran Human Rights Documentation Center has stated that they are concerned for the safety of the Baháʼís, and that the recent events are similar to the disappearance of 25 Baháʼí leaders in the early 1980s.<ref name="ihrdc2008" /> The [[United States Commission on International Religious Freedom]] has stated that it fears that the "development signals a return to the darkest days of repression in Iran in the 1980s when Baha'is were routinely arrested, imprisoned, and executed."<ref name="cnn2008-05" />
According to a U.S. panel, attacks on Baháʼís in Iran have increased since [[Mahmoud Ahmadinejad]] became president as well as Sunni Muslims.<ref name="cnn2008-05">{{cite news |author= |date=2008-05-16 |title=Iran's arrest of Baha'is condemned |url=http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/05/16/iran.bahais/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080519182606/http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/05/16/iran.bahais/ |archive-date=May 19, 2008 |access-date=2008-05-17 |publisher=CNN}}</ref> On May 14, 2008, members of an informal body known as the Friends that oversaw the needs of the Baháʼí community in Iran were arrested and taken to [[Evin prison]].<ref name="cnn2008-05" /><ref>{{cite news |title=IRAN: Bahais rounded up |work=Los Angeles times |date=2008-05-15|first=Borzou |last=Daragahi |url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2008/05/iran-bahais-rou.html |access-date=2008-05-17}}</ref> Officers from the Ministry of Intelligence in Tehran searched and raided the homes of the six people in the early hours of May 14.<ref name="ihrdc2008">{{Cite web |url=http://www.iranhrdc.org/httpdocs/English/pdfs/PressReleases/2008/Press-05-15-08.pdf |title=IHRDC Condemns the Arrest of Leading Baháʼís |publisher=Iran Human Rights Documentation Center |author=Iran Human Rights Documentation Center |date=2008-05-14 |access-date=2008-05-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100902191009/http://www.iranhrdc.org/httpdocs/English/pdfs/PressReleases/2008/Press-05-15-08.pdf |archive-date=2010-09-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The arrest of the six follow the detention of another Baháʼí leader in March,<ref name="cnn2008-05" /> who was originally taken to answer questions relating to the burial of a Baháʼí in the Baháʼí cemetery in [[Mashad]].<ref name="ihrdc2008" /> They have not been charged, and are prisoners of conscience.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde13/068/2008/en/ |title=Iran: Arbitrary arrests / Prisoners of conscience |access-date=2008-05-18 |date=2008-05-15 |author=Amnesty International |publisher=Amnesty International}}</ref> The Iran Human Rights Documentation Center has stated that they are concerned for the safety of the Baháʼís, and that the recent events are similar to the disappearance of 25 Baháʼí leaders in the early 1980s.<ref name="ihrdc2008" /> The [[United States Commission on International Religious Freedom]] has stated that it fears that the "development signals a return to the darkest days of repression in Iran in the 1980s when Baha'is were routinely arrested, imprisoned, and executed."<ref name="cnn2008-05" />


[[Geneva]], June 10, 2020, The Baháʼí International Community (BIC) issued a statement on the situation of Baháʼís in [[Iran]], expressing concern over the "unprecedented number of new prison sentences, re-incarceration and a media campaign of hatred, are raising concerns of the long-persecuted religious minority in the country.," "re-incarceration," and "media disgusting campaign" against Baháʼís in Iran. According to the statement, the Iranian authorities have ramped up their persecution of the Baháʼís, targeting at least 71 individuals across the country in recent weeks. Reports of new threats to “uproot” the community in [[Shiraz]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Persecution of Iran's Baháʼís ramped up: threats to "uproot", prison sentences and psychological pressures |url=https://www.bic.org/news/persecution-irans-bahais-ramped-threats-uproot-prison-sentences-and-psychological-pressures |agency=Baháʼí International Community |date=2020-06-08}}</ref>
[[Geneva]], June 10, 2020, The Baháʼí International Community (BIC) issued a statement on the situation of Baháʼís in [[Iran]], expressing concern over the "unprecedented number of new prison sentences, re-incarceration and a media campaign of hatred, are raising concerns of the long-persecuted religious minority in the country.," "re-incarceration," and "media disgusting campaign" against Baháʼís in Iran. According to the statement, the Iranian authorities have ramped up their persecution of the Baháʼís, targeting at least 71 individuals across the country in recent weeks. Reports of new threats to “uproot” the community in [[Shiraz]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Persecution of Iran's Baháʼís ramped up: threats to "uproot", prison sentences and psychological pressures |url=https://www.bic.org/news/persecution-irans-bahais-ramped-threats-uproot-prison-sentences-and-psychological-pressures |agency=Baháʼí International Community |date=2020-06-08}}</ref>
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===Jews===
===Jews===
[[File:The trace of the Zionists in the Incident of Nine-eleven to demonize Muslims.jpg|thumb|A poster on the website of [[Ali Khamenei]] blaming Jews for the [[September 11 attacks|9/11 attacks]].]]
While Jews are a recognized religious minority, allegations of official discrimination are frequent. The Government's [[Anti-Zionism|anti-Israel]] policies, along with a perception among radical Muslim elements that all Jewish citizens support [[Zionism]] and the [[State of Israel]], create a threatening atmosphere for the small Jewish community. Jewish leaders reportedly are reluctant to draw attention to official mistreatment of their community due to fear of government reprisal.<ref name=2002Report/>
While [[Jews]] are a recognized religious minority, allegations of official discrimination are frequent. The Government's [[Anti-Zionism|anti-Israel]] policies, along with a perception among radical Muslim elements that all Jewish citizens support [[Zionism]] and the [[State of Israel]], create a threatening atmosphere for the small Jewish community. In the past, Jewish leaders reportedly were reluctant to draw attention to official mistreatment of their community due to fear of government reprisal.<ref name=2002Report/>


Persecution and discrimination has increased among the government and society since the Revolution in 1979. On the eve of [[Passover]] 1998, 13 Iranian Jewish men were arrested on charges of espionage. The United States and Israel both demanded their release. Iran accused the men of spying for "world arrogance" (being the U.S.) and the "Zionist regime" (being Israel). The conviction is highly doubted by the rest of the world.<ref>
Persecution and discrimination has increased among the government and society since the Revolution in 1979. On the eve of [[Passover]] 1998, 13 Iranian Jewish men were arrested on charges of espionage. The United States and Israel both demanded their release. Iran accused the men of spying for "world arrogance" (being the U.S.) and the "Zionist regime" (being Israel). The conviction is highly doubted by the rest of the world.<ref>
Line 95: Line 112:
|url = http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/iranjew.html
|url = http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/iranjew.html
|title = Jews Arrested In Iran As Spies
|title = Jews Arrested In Iran As Spies
|accessdate = 2006-11-08
|access-date = 2006-11-08
|publisher = Jewish Virtual library
|publisher = Jewish Virtual library
}}</ref>
}}</ref>


Institute for Monitoring Peace and Cultural Tolerance in School Education (IMPACT-se) reviewed school textbooks in 2022 and noted that Jewish history in Iran is avoided and the Holocaust is ignored; there is also much antisemitic rhetoric, anti-Israeli propaganda, and anecdotes which present the Jews as partners to Sunni Muslims, without any counterbalancing material.<ref name=US2022 />
The head of the Anti-Defamation Union says that the tomb of "Esther and Mordecai", the burial place of Xerxes' Jewish wife, which is considered a Jewish religious site, has been set on fire in Hamedan.<ref>{{cite news |title=رییس «اتحادیه ضد افترا» از آتش کشیده‌شدن مقبره «استر و مردخای» مکان مقدس یهودیان در همدان خبر داد |url=https://ir.voanews.com/persiannewsiran/iran-83 |agency=VOA |date=2020-05-16}}</ref>

The head of the Anti-Defamation Union says that the tomb of "Esther and Mordecai", the burial place of Xerxes' Jewish wife, which is considered a Jewish religious site, has been set on fire in Hamedan.<ref>{{cite news |title=رییس "اتحادیه ضد افترا" از آتش کشیده‌شدن مقبره "استر و مردخای" مکان مقدس یهودیان در همدان خبر داد |url=https://ir.voanews.com/persiannewsiran/iran-83 |agency=VOA |date=2020-05-16}}</ref>


===Mandaeans===
===Mandaeans===
According to the [[United Nations Commission on Human Rights|U.N. High Commission]] for Refugees Background Paper on Iran, the Mandaeans are regarded as Christians, and are included among the country's three recognized religious minorities. However, Mandaeans regard themselves not as Christians, but as adherents of a religion that predates Christianity in both belief and practice. Mandaeans enjoyed official support as a distinct religion prior to the revolution, but their legal status as a [[religion]] since then has been the subject of debate in the Majles and never has been clarified.<ref name=2002Report/>
According to the [[United Nations Commission on Human Rights|U.N. High Commission]] for Refugees Background Paper on Iran, the Mandaeans are regarded as Christians, and are included among the country's three recognized religious minorities. However, Mandaeans regard themselves not as Christians, but as adherents of a religion that predates Christianity in both belief and practice. Mandaeans enjoyed official support as a distinct religion prior to the revolution, but their legal status as a [[religion]] has been the subject of debate in the Majles and by 2002 it was not yet clarified.<ref name=2002Report/> It is almost impossible for declared Mandaeans to work or study at university and many have left the country since 2000.<ref>[https://iranwire.com/en/features/67646/#:~:text=The%20Mandaeans%20are%20one%20of%20the%20least-known%20ethnoreligious,university%20if%20they%20openly%20state%20they%20are%20Mandaean. Iran Wire website, article dated September 23, 2020]</ref>


==Abuses of religious freedom==
==Abuses of religious freedom==

It was noted in 2014 that individuals who have been "targeted and prosecuted" by the Iranian state" for religious crimes of apostasy and blasphemy/"Swearing at the Prophet", were "diverse" and included "Muslim-born converts to Christianity, Bahá'ís, Muslims who challenge the prevailing interpretation of Islam, and others who espouse unconventional religious beliefs"; some cases had "clear political overtones", while others "seem to be primarily of a religious nature".<ref name="IHRDC-2014"/>

On October 27, 2020, US Secretary of State [[Mike Pompeo]] issued a statement on [[Freedom of religion|World Religious Freedom Day]], including Iran as one of the three of the world's most egregious violators of religious freedom—the People's Republic of [[China]], [[Iran]] and [[North Korea]]—and that these countries "have tightened their coercive measures to silence their own people".<ref name="state.gov"/>


===Baháʼís===
===Baháʼís===
{{Further|Persecution of Baháʼís}}
{{Further|Persecution of Baháʼís}}
Information in 2022 suggests that there were 300,000 Baháʼís in Iran.<ref name=US2022/>
According to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States, since 1979 more than 200 Baháʼís have been killed and 15 have disappeared and are presumed dead. The Government continued to imprison and detain Baháʼís based on their religious beliefs.<ref name="affolter" />


According to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States, between 1979 and 2005, more than 200 Baháʼís were killed and 15 disappeared and are presumed dead.<ref name="affolter" />
The Government appears to adhere to a practice of keeping a small number of Baháʼís in arbitrary detention, some at risk of execution, at any given time. There were four Baháʼís reported to be in prison for practicing their faith at the end of the period covered by this report, two facing life sentences and two facing sentences of 15 years. In addition the Government appears to engage in harassment of the Baháʼí community by arresting Baháʼís arbitrarily, charging them, and then releasing them, often without dropping the charges against them. Those with charges still pending against them fear arrest at any time.<ref name="fdih1" />


Manuchehr Khulusi was arrested in June 1999 while visiting fellow Baháʼís in the town of [[Birjand]], and was imprisoned until his release in May 2000. During his imprisonment, Khulusi was interrogated, beaten, held in solitary confinement, and denied access to his lawyer. The charges brought against him remain unknown, but they were believed to be related to his faith. The [[Islamic Revolutionary Court]] in Mashhad held a 2-day trial in September 1999 and sentenced Khulusi to death in February 2000. He was released the following year.<ref>[https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200001/cmselect/cmfaff/80/80ap03.htm UK government Select Committee minutes dated February 12, 2001]</ref>
Two Baháʼís, Sirus Zabihi-Moghaddam and Hadayat Kashefi-Najafabadi, were tried in 1998 and later sentenced to death by an [[Islamic Revolutionary Court]] in Mashad for practicing their faith. In 2000 the sentences were reduced to 7 and 5 years respectively. Kashefi-Najafabadi was released in October 2001, after serving 4 years of his sentence. Zabihi-Moghaddam, who originally was arrested in November 1997, was released in June 2002.<ref name=2002Report/>


The Government appears to engage in harassment of the Baháʼí community by arresting Baháʼís arbitrarily, charging them, and then releasing them, often without dropping the charges against them. Those with charges still pending against them fear arrest at any time.<ref name="fdih1" /> In 2022, Baháʼís in the USA stated that there were over 1,000 Baháʼís in Iranian prisons.<ref name=US2022/>
The Government continued to imprison and detain Baháʼís based on their religious beliefs. Manuchehr Khulusi was arrested in June 1999 while visiting fellow Baháʼís in the town of [[Birjand]], and was imprisoned until his release in May 2000. During his imprisonment, Khulusi was interrogated, beaten, held in solitary confinement, and denied access to his lawyer. The charges brought against him remain unknown, but they were believed to be related to his faith. The [[Islamic Revolutionary Court]] in Mashhad held a 2-day trial in September 1999 and sentenced Khulusi to death in February 2000. Despite Khulusi's release, it is unclear if the conviction and death sentence against him still stand.<ref name=2002Report/>


The property rights of Baháʼís generally are disregarded. In the early 2000s, it was noted that the Government's seizure of Baháʼí personal property, as well as its denial of Baháʼí access to education and employment, are eroding the economic base of the Baháʼí community.<ref name="fdih1" /><ref name="affolter" /> In 2020, a court ruled that Baháʼí was “a perverse ideology” and therefore they had no “legitimacy in their ownership” of any property; Baháʼís argued that their property rights are enshrined in a 1984 fatwa issued by then Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini.<ref name=US2022 />
The property rights of Baháʼís generally are disregarded. Since 1979 large numbers of private and business properties belonging to Baháʼís have been confiscated. During the period covered by this report, 14 Baháʼí homes were seized and handed over to an agency of [[Ali Khamenei|Supreme Leader Khamenei]]. Authorities reportedly confiscated Baháʼí properties in Kata and forced several families to leave their homes and farmlands. Authorities also imprisoned some farmers, and did not permit others to harvest their crops. In 2000 authorities in Tehran, [[Isfahan (city)|Isfahan]], and [[Shiraz, Iran|Shiraz]] reportedly also confiscated eight buildings belonging to Baháʼís. In one instance, a woman from Isfahan who legally traveled abroad found that her home had been confiscated when she returned home. During the period covered by the report, the Government also seized private homes in which Baháʼí youth classes were held despite the owners having proper ownership documents. In 1999 three Baháʼí homes in Yazd and one in Arbakan were confiscated because their owners were Baháʼís. The Government's seizure of Baháʼí personal property, as well as its denial of Baháʼí access to education and employment, are eroding the economic base of the Baháʼí community.<ref name="fdih1" /><ref name="affolter" />


In 1998, after a nationwide raid of more than 500 Baháʼí homes and offices, as well as numerous arrests, the authorities closed the Baháʼí Institute of Higher Learning. Also known as the "Open University," the Institute was established by the Baháʼí community shortly after the revolution to offer higher educational opportunities to Baháʼí students who had been denied access to the country's high schools and universities. The Institute remains closed.<ref name="buck" /><ref name="affolter" />
In 1998, after a nationwide raid of more than 500 Baháʼí homes and offices, as well as numerous arrests, the authorities closed the Baháʼí Institute of Higher Learning. Also known as the "Open University," the Institute was established by the Baháʼí community shortly after the revolution to offer higher educational opportunities to Baháʼí students who had been denied access to the country's high schools and universities. This was one of several closures between 1987 and 2005,<ref name="affolter_bihe">{{cite journal | first = Friedrich W. | last = Affolter | title = Resisting Educational Exclusion: The Bahai Institute of Higher Education in Iran | journal= International Journal of Diaspora, Indigenous and Minority Education | issue = 1 | volume = 1 | pages = 65–77 | year = 2007| url = http://eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/search/detailmini.jsp?_nfpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=EJ814786&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=no&accno=EJ814786 | issn = 1559-5692}}</ref><ref name="buck" /><ref name="affolter" /> with more arrests in 2011 and 2014.<ref name="guardian">{{cite web |work= The Guardian |title=Stand up for Iranian Baháʼís' right to a higher education|year= 2011 |accessdate=2017-01-03| url =https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jun/11/iran-bahai-right-higher-education }}</ref>


A confidential letter sent on October 29, 2005 by the Chairman of the Command Headquarters of the Armed Forced in Iran stated that the Supreme Leader of Iran, [[Ali Khamenei|Ayatollah Khamenei]] instructed the Command Headquarters to identify people who adhered to the Baháʼí Faith and monitor their activities; <ref name=UNPR-1>
It has become somewhat easier for Baháʼís to obtain passports in order to travel abroad. In addition some Iranian embassies abroad do not require applicants to state a religious affiliation. In such cases, it is easier for Baháʼís to renew passports. Nevertheless, in February 2001, the Government denied visas to foreigners in the Baháʼí delegation to the Asia-Pacific Regional Preparatory Conference for the World Conference on Racism, held in Tehran. The delegation was composed of American, Japanese, South Korean, and Indian nationals.<ref name=2002Report/>

More recently, in the later months of 2005, an intensive anti-Baháʼí campaign was conducted by Iranian newspapers and radio stations. The state-run and influential [[Kayhan]]<ref>{{Cite web|title=Iran Means What It Says |first=Michael |last=Rubin |publisher=AEI Online |date=2006-01-25 |accessdate=2006-11-08 |url=http://www.meforum.org/article/892}}</ref> <!-- states that Kayhan is state-run--> newspaper, whose managing editor is appointed by Iran's supreme leader, [[Ali Khamenei|Ayatollah Khamenei]],<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4308203.stm |title=The press in Iran |author=BBC News |publisher=news.bbc.co.uk |accessdate=2006-11-08 |date=2005-08-16}}</ref><!-- states that editor is appointed by Iran's supreme leader --> ran nearly three dozen articles defaming the Baháʼí Faith The articles, which make use of fake historical documents, engage in a distortion of history to falsely describe Baháʼí moral principles in a manner that would be offensive to Muslims, thus inducing feelings of suspicion, distrust and hatred to members of the Baháʼí community in Iran.<ref>{{Cite web
|url = http://www.bahai.org/iranthreat/mediaattack
|title = The Growing Threat to Iran's Baháʼís
|accessdate = 2006-11-08
|date = 2006-11-02
|publisher = The Baháʼís
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070312055535/http://www.bahai.org/iranthreat/mediaattack
|archive-date = 2007-03-12
|url-status = dead
}}</ref>

Furthermore, a confidential letter sent on October 29, 2005 by the Chairman of the Command Headquarters of the Armed Forced in Iran states that the Supreme Leader of Iran, [[Ali Khamenei|Ayatollah Khamenei]] has instructed the Command Headquarters to identify people who adhere to the Baháʼí Faith and to monitor their activities and gather any and all information about the members of the Baháʼí Faith. The letter was brought to the attention of the international community by Asma Jahangir, the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights on freedom of religion or belief, in a March 20, 2006 press release.<ref name=UNPR-1>
{{Cite web
{{Cite web
|url = http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/view01/5E72D6B7B624AABBC125713700572D09?opendocument
|url = http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/view01/5E72D6B7B624AABBC125713700572D09?opendocument
|title = Press release
|title = Press release
|accessdate = 2006-11-08
|access-date = 2006-11-08
|date = 2006-03-20
|date = 2006-03-20
|publisher = U.N. Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights
|publisher = U.N. Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights
}}</ref> In a press release, the UN Special Rapporteur states that she "is highly concerned by information she has received concerning the treatment of members of the Baháʼí community in Iran." She further states that "The Special Rapporteur is concerned that this latest development indicates that the situation with regard to religious minorities in Iran is, in fact, deteriorating."
}}</ref>

In the press release the Special Rapporteur states that she "is highly concerned by information she has received concerning the treatment of members of the Baháʼí community in Iran." She further states that "The Special Rapporteur is concerned that this latest development indicates that the situation with regard to religious minorities in Iran is, in fact, deteriorating."<ref name=UNPR-1/>


Shahnaz Sabet, a Baháʼí citizen living in [[Shiraz]], was arrested on Monday, October 12, 2020, and transferred to Adelabad Prison in Shiraz to serve his sentence.<ref>{{cite news |title=شهناز ثابت، شهروند بهایی جهت تحمل حبس به زندان عادل آباد شیراز منتقل شد |url=https://www.hra-news.org/2020/hranews/a-27002/ |agency=HERANA |date=2020-10-12}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=شهناز ثابت، شهروند بهایی، در زندان شیراز محبوس شد |url=https://www.rfi.fr/fa/%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86/20201012-%D8%B4%D9%87%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B2-%D8%AB%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%AA-%D8%B4%D9%87%D8%B1%D9%88%D9%86%D8%AF-%D8%A8%D9%87%D8%A7%DB%8C%DB%8C-%D8%AF%D8%B1-%D8%B2%D9%86%D8%AF%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%B4%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%B2-%D9%85%D8%AD%D8%A8%D9%88%D8%B3-%D8%B4%D8%AF |agency=rfi |date=2020-10-12}}</ref>
Shahnaz Sabet, a Baháʼí citizen living in [[Shiraz]], was arrested on Monday, October 12, 2020, and transferred to Adelabad Prison in Shiraz to serve his sentence.<ref>{{cite news |title=شهناز ثابت، شهروند بهایی جهت تحمل حبس به زندان عادل آباد شیراز منتقل شد |url=https://www.hra-news.org/2020/hranews/a-27002/ |agency=HERANA |date=2020-10-12}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=شهناز ثابت، شهروند بهایی، در زندان شیراز محبوس شد |url=https://www.rfi.fr/fa/%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86/20201012-%D8%B4%D9%87%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B2-%D8%AB%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%AA-%D8%B4%D9%87%D8%B1%D9%88%D9%86%D8%AF-%D8%A8%D9%87%D8%A7%DB%8C%DB%8C-%D8%AF%D8%B1-%D8%B2%D9%86%D8%AF%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%B4%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%B2-%D9%85%D8%AD%D8%A8%D9%88%D8%B3-%D8%B4%D8%AF |agency=rfi |date=2020-10-12}}</ref>
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{{Further|Persecution of Christians}}
{{Further|Persecution of Christians}}
[[File:Saint Mary Park in Tehran 2011.jpg|thumb|[[Saint Mary]] Park in [[Tehran]] (2011)]]
[[File:Saint Mary Park in Tehran 2011.jpg|thumb|[[Saint Mary]] Park in [[Tehran]] (2011)]]
[[File:Protestant church in Tehran.jpg|thumb|[[Protestant]] church in [[Tehran]] (Qods Street, across Tehran University, 140 m away from [[Ali Khamenei]] residence), taken 2011]]
[[File:Central Assemblies of God Church of Tehran.jpg|thumb|[[Protestant]] church in [[Tehran]] (Qods Street, across Tehran University, 140 m away from [[Ali Khamenei]] residence), taken 2011]]

The authorities are "vigilant in curbing [[Christian evangelization|proselytizing]] activities by [[evangelical]] Christians" including when services are conducted in [[Persian language|Persian]],<ref name=2006Report/> but some sources indicate that Bibles and religious material on Persian are freely available to Iranians.<ref>[[RT (TV network)|RT]]: [http://rt.com/news/iran-people-church-tv/ “Anyone in Iran can buy the New Testament"]</ref> Status related to this issues can be hard to determine because of poor relationships between Iran and other states, [[Iran–United States relations|such as the United States]], and due to Iran's strict controls of media and information. For example, [[Youcef Nadarkhani]] is an Jammiat-e Rabbani (Christian) pastor who was given a death sentence for apostasy,<ref>{{cite news |title= Iranian Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani's potential execution rallies U.S. Christians |first= Adelle M. |last= Banks |url= https://www.washingtonpost.com/on-faith/us-christians-rally-around-iranian-pastor/2011/09/28/gIQA11YJ5K_story.html |newspaper= [[The Washington Post]] |date= 2011-09-28 |accessdate= 2011-10-05 |quote= Religious freedom advocates rallied Wednesday (Sept. 28) around an Iranian pastor who is facing execution because he has refused to recant his Christian faith in the overwhelmingly Muslim country. }}{{dead link|date=June 2018}}{{cbignore}}</ref> though eventually he was released after winning an appeal. Nevertheless, he was sentenced to three years in prison for proselytizing. Iran has denied many components of Nadarkhani's story, and has even described such claims by Western media as "[[Anti-Iranian sentiment|propaganda]]".<ref>[[PressTV]]: [http://www.presstv.ir/detail/202870.html Iran denies death penalty for convert]</ref> [[Blasphemy law in Iran]] is used as a weapon against Christians and Christianity within Iran's borders.<ref name="Iran">{{cite web
[[Blasphemy law in Iran]] is used as a weapon against Christians and Christianity within Iran's borders.<ref name="Iran">{{cite web
|title = Iran
|title = Iran
|publisher = Amnesty International
|publisher = Amnesty International
|year = 2009
|year = 2009
|url = http://report2009.amnesty.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/iran&title=Iran
|url = http://report2009.amnesty.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/iran&title=Iran
|accessdate = 7 July 2009
|access-date = 7 July 2009
|url-status = dead
|url-status = dead
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110826003015/http://report2009.amnesty.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/iran%26title%3DIran
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110826003015/http://report2009.amnesty.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/iran%26title%3DIran
|archivedate = 26 August 2011
|archive-date = 26 August 2011
}}</ref><ref name="Vann">{{cite web
|last=Vann
|first=Carole
|title=Shirin Ebadi chides Switzerland over Iran
|work=Human Rights Tribune
|publisher=www.humanrights-geneva.info
|date=11 June 2008
|url=http://www.humanrights-geneva.info/Shirin-Ebadi-chides-Switzerland,3199
|accessdate=9 July 2009
|url-status=dead
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081116012308/http://www.humanrights-geneva.info/Shirin-Ebadi-chides-Switzerland,3199
|archivedate=16 November 2008
}}</ref>
}}</ref>


Government-sanctioned translations of the [[Bible]] are reported to be available in Iran; however unsanctioned copies have been confiscated by the government.<ref name=US2022 />
The annual report of the World Religious Freedom Commission emphasizes that Christians in Iran face discrimination.<ref>{{cite news |title=ایران و عربستان بار دیگر در فهرست "ناقضان آزادی مذهب" |url=https://www.dw.com/fa-ir/%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86-%D9%88-%D8%B9%D8%B1%D8%A8%D8%B3%D8%AA%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%B1-%D8%AF%DB%8C%DA%AF%D8%B1-%D8%AF%D8%B1-%D9%81%D9%87%D8%B1%D8%B3%D8%AA-%D9%86%D8%A7%D9%82%D8%B6%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%A2%D8%B2%D8%A7%D8%AF%DB%8C-%D9%85%D8%B0%D9%87%D8%A8/a-53295919 |agency=DW |date=2020-04-30}}</ref>

In 2010 [[Youcef Nadarkhani]], a Jammiat-e Rabbani (Christian) pastor, was given a death sentence for apostasy; he was acquitted of apostasy, sparing him the death penalty, but found guilty of proselytizing and released as he had already served his time.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.christianpost.com/news/iran-pastor-youcef-nadarkhani-acquitted-of-apostasy-released-from-jail-81291/|title=Iran Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani Acquitted of Apostasy, Released From Jail |first=Lillian |last=Kwon |date=8 September 2012 |work=The Christian Post |archive-date=14 September 2012 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120914001932/http://www.christianpost.com/news/iran-pastor-youcef-nadarkhani-acquitted-of-apostasy-released-from-jail-81291/ |access-date=8 September 2012}}</ref> In 2017, he was arrested on charges of “acting against national security” and promoting “Zionist Christianity,” and was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment; both his sons were denied educational advancement.<ref>[https://www.uscirf.gov/news-room/releases-statements/uscirf-calls-permanent-release-iranian-pastor-youcef-nadarkhani US government USCIRF statement dated April 15, 2022]</ref> He was released in February 2023, but faced new charges in July 2023.<ref>[https://www.churchinchains.ie/prisoner-profiles/youcef-nadarkhani/ Church In Chains website, article dated July 20, 2023]</ref>

In 1976, the Christian population numbered 168,593 people, mostly [[Iranian Armenians|Armenians]]. Due to the [[Iran–Iraq War]] in the 1980s and the [[dissolution of the Soviet Union]] in the 1990s, almost half of the Armenians migrated to the newly independent [[Armenia]]. However, the opposite trend has occurred since 2000, and the number of Christians with Iranian citizenship increased to 109,415 in 2006 and 117,704 in 2011. According to the national statistical centre, Christians were fastest growing religion in Iran during 1996-2006 period (+38.9%), and second fastest during 2006-2011 period (+7.6%, after Zoroastrianism). At the same time, significant immigration of [[Assyrians in Iraq|Assyrians]] from [[Iraq]] has been recorded due to massacres and harassment in [[Iraq under U.S. Military Occupation|post-Saddam Iraq]]. However, most of those [[Assyrians in Iran]] do not have Iranian citizenship. In 2008, the central office of the International Union of Assyrians, a mistranslation in the Iranian press for the Assyrian Universal Alliance, was officially transferred to Iran after being hosted in the United States for more than four decades.<ref>''[[Tehran Times]]'', [http://old.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=180160 "Assyrians' central office officially transferred to Iran"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150331174726/http://old.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=180160 |date=2015-03-31 }}</ref>

====Education of Armenian Christians====


Some issues dealing with Christianity in Iran deal more directly with the Armenian ethnic minorities. For example, in early 1983 the MET specifically requested that the [[Armenians|Armenian]] religious schools teach religion in Persian and time allocated to the Armenian languages must be reduced or eliminated.<ref name="Sanas2000" /> While the community responded to these orders issues raised in discussions included if the Armenians could speak/teach their own language other minorities would demand the same but also if Persian was used it would make proselytization easier as facility with Persian language use of religious issues improved. At the end of the 1983 academic year the MET requested the questions that were to be included in the final exam and the questions had to be sent in Persian and were ordered to be used in Persian as the final exam. Most fifth grade students refused to take the test and 3rd grade students handed in blank pages. The authorities then failed all the students. Some schools ignored the demands on languages, others did limit teaching to 2 hrs and others removed it entirely.<ref name="Sanas2000" /> Some continued religious classes and some dropped them all together. Observance of these rules on Armenian language teaching was most strict in Tehran while 6 to 8 hrs per week were common beyond. However, in 1995 the limit on languages was raised from 2 hrs to 5 hrs per week in Tehran as well.<ref name="Sanas2000" /> Circa 1996 a settlement was reached; during the first two months of each school year, the ministry-provided Persian book on religious ethics is taught in Armenian schools while Armenian-approved religious lessons are taught in Armenian for the rest of the year. This was not a totally satisfactory settlement of the issue for both sides, but it settled the issue.<ref name="UNHCR-Armenia" />
Some issues dealing with Christianity in Iran deal more directly with the Armenian ethnic minorities. For example, in early 1983 the MET specifically requested that the [[Armenians|Armenian]] religious schools teach religion in Persian and time allocated to the Armenian languages must be reduced or eliminated.<ref name="Sanas2000" /> While the community responded to these orders issues raised in discussions included if the Armenians could speak/teach their own language other minorities would demand the same but also if Persian was used it would make proselytization easier as facility with Persian language use of religious issues improved. At the end of the 1983 academic year the MET requested the questions that were to be included in the final exam and the questions had to be sent in Persian and were ordered to be used in Persian as the final exam. Most fifth grade students refused to take the test and 3rd grade students handed in blank pages. The authorities then failed all the students. Some schools ignored the demands on languages, others did limit teaching to 2 hrs and others removed it entirely.<ref name="Sanas2000" /> Some continued religious classes and some dropped them all together. Observance of these rules on Armenian language teaching was most strict in Tehran while 6 to 8 hrs per week were common beyond. However, in 1995 the limit on languages was raised from 2 hrs to 5 hrs per week in Tehran as well.<ref name="Sanas2000" /> Circa 1996 a settlement was reached; during the first two months of each school year, the ministry-provided Persian book on religious ethics is taught in Armenian schools while Armenian-approved religious lessons are taught in Armenian for the rest of the year. This was not a totally satisfactory settlement of the issue for both sides, but it settled the issue.<ref name="UNHCR-Armenia" />


In 2002, Armenian Christians reported that they were permitted to teach their practices to Armenian students as an elective at some schools. Assyrian Christians were also permitted to use their own religious textbooks in their schools, as long as the government authorized their content.<ref name=US2022 />
In 1976, the Christian population numbered 168,593 people, mostly [[Iranian Armenians|Armenians]]. Due to the [[Iran–Iraq War]] in the 1980s and the [[dissolution of the Soviet Union]] in the 1990s, almost half of the Armenians migrated to the newly independent [[Armenia]]. However, the opposite trend has occurred since 2000, and the number of Christians with Iranian citizenship increased to 109,415 in 2006 and 117,704 in 2011. According national Statistical centre Christians were fastest growing religion in Iran during 1996-2006 period (+38.9%), and second fastest during 2006-2011 period (+7.6%, after Zoroastrianism). At the same time, significant immigration of [[Assyrians in Iraq|Assyrians]] from [[Iraq]] has been recorded due to massacres and harassment in [[Iraq under U.S. Military Occupation|post-Saddam Iraq]]. However, most of those [[Assyrians in Iran]] do not have Iranian citizenship. In 2008, the central office of the International Union of Assyrians, a mistranslation in the Iranian press for the Assyrian Universal Alliance, was officially transferred to Iran after being hosted in the United States for more than four decades.<ref>''[[Tehran Times]]'', [http://old.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=180160 "Assyrians' central office officially transferred to Iran"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150331174726/http://old.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=180160 |date=2015-03-31 }}</ref>


===Jews===
===Jews===
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|url = http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/iranjews.html
|url = http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/iranjews.html
|title = The Jews of Iran
|title = The Jews of Iran
|accessdate = 2006-11-08
|access-date = 2006-11-08
|publisher = The Jewish Virtual library
|publisher = The Jewish Virtual library
}}</ref>
}}</ref>


===Shia===
===Shia===
The Special Clerical Court (SCC) system, established in 1987 to investigate offenses and crimes committed by clerics and which the Supreme Leader oversees directly, is not provided for in the constitution and operates outside the domain of the judiciary. In particular, critics alleged that the clerical courts were used to prosecute certain clerics for expressing controversial ideas and for participating in activities outside the area of religion, including journalism.<ref name=2006Report/>
The Special Clerical Court (SCC) system, established in 1987 to investigate offenses and crimes committed by clerics and which the Supreme Leader oversees directly, is not provided for in the constitution and operates outside the domain of the judiciary. In 2006 critics alleged that the clerical courts were used to prosecute certain clerics for expressing controversial ideas and for participating in activities outside the area of religion, including journalism.<ref name=2006Report/>


During the latter part of 2000, a Special Clerical Court began the trial of Hojatoleslam Hassan Yousefi Eshkevari, a cleric who participated in a conference in Berlin on Iran, on charges of apostasy, "corruption on earth," "declaring war on God," and "denial of basic religious principles," which potentially carry the death penalty. Eshkevari has called for more liberal interpretations of Islamic law in certain areas. The verdict was not announced, but, according to [[Amnesty International]], Eshkevari widely was reported to have been sentenced to death. In November 2001, following domestic and international criticism, his sentence reportedly was reduced to 30 months' imprisonment and removal of his status as a cleric.<ref name=2002Report>{{Include-USGov |agency=United States Department of State |url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2002/13995.htm |article=International Religious Freedom Report |date=2002-10-07 |accessdate=2006-11-08}}</ref> On February 6, 2005, the special clerical court agreed to his conditional release (parole); he had served two thirds of his seven-year sentence and was therefore eligible for parole under the law.<ref name=2006Report/>
During the latter part of 2000, a Special Clerical Court began the trial of [[Hasan Yousefi Eshkevari| Hojatoleslam Hassan Yousefi Eshkevari]], a cleric who participated in a conference in Berlin on Iran, on charges of apostasy, "corruption on earth," "declaring war on God," and "denial of basic religious principles," which potentially carry the death penalty. Eshkevari has called for more liberal interpretations of Islamic law in certain areas. The verdict was not announced, but, according to [[Amnesty International]], Eshkevari widely was reported to have been sentenced to death. In November 2001, following domestic and international criticism, his sentence reportedly was reduced to 30 months' imprisonment and removal of his status as a cleric.<ref name=2002Report>{{Include-USGov |agency=United States Department of State |url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2002/13995.htm |article=International Religious Freedom Report |date=2002-10-07 |accessdate=2006-11-08}}</ref> He served four years in prison and was released on 6 February 2005.<ref name="englishpen.org">{{cite web |url= http://www.englishpen.org/writersinprison/writersinexile/hojjatoleslamhasanyousefieshke/ |title= PEN, Hojjatoleslam Hasan Yousefi Eshkevari |publisher= PEN |access-date= |archive-date= 2012-02-12 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120212193858/http://www.englishpen.org/writersinprison/writersinexile/hojjatoleslamhasanyousefieshke/ |url-status= dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://iranpresswatch.org/post/16521/apostasy-in-the-islamic-republic-of-iran/ | title= Apostasy in the Islamic Republic of Iran | publisher = Iran Press Watch }}</ref> During the crackdown on protestors of the [[2009 Iranian presidential election|2009 presidential elections]], he fled to Germany to seek [[political asylum]].<ref name=lambasts>[https://web.archive.org/web/20111113195426/http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5itpGXTfY8zSWlfumoBntqvN4rZog?docId=f457cf78a5fe4e30b578af701d3a1b1d Dissident cleric lambasts current Iranian &#91;government&#93;] By JUERGEN BAETZ, Associated Press, 11 November 2011</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://tavaana.org/en/book/hassan-yousefi-eshkevari-no-no-longer-my-god |title= HASSAN YOUSEFI ESHKEVARI: "No! This is no longer my God!" |publisher= Tavaana }}</ref>


Independent newspapers and magazines have been closed,<ref>[https://www.independent.co.uk/news/long_reads/world/iran-bans-newspaper-ayatollah-ali-khamenei-b1954164.html Independent UK Newspaper website, article dated November 9th, 2021]</ref><ref>[https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2015/05/iran-womens-magazine-zanan-emrooz-suspended.html AL Monitor website, article dated May 18th, 2015]</ref> and leading publishers and journalists imprisoned, with 25 journalists detained in the first 8 months of 2023.<ref>[https://rsf.org/en/country/iran Reporters Without Borders website, retrieved 2023-08-22]</ref>
Independent newspapers and magazines have been closed, and leading publishers and journalists were imprisoned on charges of hate speech and "insulting Islam" and sparking revolutionary sentiments whilst "calling into question the Islamic foundation of the Republic."<ref name=2006Report/> In 2002 academic Hashem Aghajari was sentenced to death for blasphemy against the Prophet Muhammed, based on a speech in which he challenged Muslims not to blindly follow the clergy, provoking an international and domestic outcry.<ref name=2006Report/>


In 2002 academic [[Hashem Aghajari]] was sentenced to death for blasphemy against Muhammed, based on a speech in which he challenged Muslims not to blindly follow the clergy.<ref>"Iranian Court Again Spares Professor's Life"
In 2003 his death sentence was revoked by the Supreme Court, but the case was sent back to the lower court for retrial. He was retried on charges that did include revolutionary incitement and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment, two of which were suspended, and five years of additional "deprivation of social right" (meaning that he could not teach or write books or articles). His time served was counted towards his three-year sentence; the court converted the remainder of the time to a fine. He was released on bail in 2004.<ref name=2006Report/>
Burton Bollag. ''The Chronicle of Higher Education''. Washington: June 18, 2004. Vol. 50, Iss. 41; p.A.41</ref> After domestic Iranian and international outcry, his sentence was reduced to five years in prison.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2004/7/20/iranian-dissident-spared-death-sentence | title= Iranian dissident spared death sentence | publisher = ALJAZEERA }}</ref> He was released from prison in July 2004 after paying a bail of $122,500.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://ifex.org/academic-hashem-aghajari-released-on-bail/ | title= Academic Hashem Aghajari released on bail | date= 6 August 2004 | publisher = ifex.org }}</ref>
In 2014, he is sentenced to one year in prison on a charge of "propaganda against the regime".<ref>{{Cite web |last= |date=2014-08-03 |title=محکومیت هاشم آقاجری به یک سال حبس تعزیری |url=https://www.rfi.fr/fa/%D9%85%D8%AD%DA%A9%D9%88%D9%85%DB%8C%D8%AA-%D9%87%D8%A7%D8%B4%D9%85-%D8%A2%D9%82%D8%A7%D8%AC%D8%B1%DB%8C-%D8%A8%D9%87-%DB%8C%DA%A9-%D8%B3%D8%A7%D9%84-%D8%AD%D8%A8%D8%B3-%D8%AA%D8%B9%D8%B2%DB%8C%D8%B1%DB%8C-20140803/%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86 |access-date=2023-07-02 |website=ار.اف.ای - RFI |language=fa}}</ref>


Late November, 2018 prison warden Qarchak women prison in Varamin, near the capital Tehran attacked and bit three [[Dervish]] religious minority prisoners when they demanded their confiscated belongings back.<ref>[https://iran-hrm.com/index.php/2018/11/27/gonabadi-dervish-women-brutally-beaten-up-in-qarchak-prison/ Gonabadi Dervish Women Brutally Beaten Up In Qarchak PrisonBy Iran HRM Last updated Nov 27, 2018]</ref>
In November 2018, a prison warden at Qarchak women's prison in Varamin, attacked and bit three [[Dervish]] religious minority prisoners who were demanding their confiscated belongings back.<ref>[https://iran-hrm.com/index.php/2018/11/27/gonabadi-dervish-women-brutally-beaten-up-in-qarchak-prison/ Gonabadi Dervish Women Brutally Beaten Up In Qarchak PrisonBy Iran HRM Last updated Nov 27, 2018]</ref>


===Zoroastrians===
===Zoroastrians===
Line 205: Line 210:
Zoroastrian served as the national- or state religion of a significant portion of the Iranian people for many centuries before it was gradually marginalized by Islam from the 7th century onwards. The political power of the pre-Islamic Iranian dynasties lent Zoroastrians immense prestige in ancient times, and some of its leading doctrines were adopted by other religious systems.
Zoroastrian served as the national- or state religion of a significant portion of the Iranian people for many centuries before it was gradually marginalized by Islam from the 7th century onwards. The political power of the pre-Islamic Iranian dynasties lent Zoroastrians immense prestige in ancient times, and some of its leading doctrines were adopted by other religious systems.


There are no official reports of government harassment of the Zoroastrian community to date. Unofficial reports of discrimination in employment and education has come up, but are by no means frequent. Zoroastrians are free to make, without government interference, their annual pilgrimage to one of the holiest sites of their faith, the temple of Chak-Chak (near the city of [[Yazd]]).<ref name = 2006Report/>
There are no official reports of government harassment of the Zoroastrian community to date. Unofficial reports of discrimination in employment and education has come up, but are by no means frequent. Zoroastrians are free to make their annual pilgrimage to one of the holiest sites of their faith, the temple of Chak-Chak (near the city of [[Yazd]]).<ref>[https://ifpnews.com/chak-chak-temple-hosting-zoroastrians-for-annual-pilgrimage/ Iran Front Page News website, article dated June 16, 2019]</ref>


==Societal attitudes==
==Societal attitudes==
Line 212: Line 217:
The Jewish community has been reduced to less than one-half of its prerevolutionary size. Some of this emigration is connected with the larger, general waves of departures following the establishment of the Islamic Republic, but some also stems from continued perceived anti-Semitism on the part of the government and within society.<ref name=2006Report/>
The Jewish community has been reduced to less than one-half of its prerevolutionary size. Some of this emigration is connected with the larger, general waves of departures following the establishment of the Islamic Republic, but some also stems from continued perceived anti-Semitism on the part of the government and within society.<ref name=2006Report/>


In 2022, officials continued to use antisemitic rhetoric in official statements and permitted its use in publications and media. It was reported that the government-affiliated Fars News Agency accused Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of “Zionist behavior”; it was also reported that the Jewish Studies Center had published more than 1,000 antisemitic articles, reports, commentaries, books, and videos across 6 years.<ref name=US2022 />
The government's anti-Israel policies, along with a perception among radical Muslims that all Jewish citizens supported Zionism and the state of Israel, created a hostile atmosphere for the small community. For example, in 2005 many newspapers celebrated the one-hundredth anniversary of the anti-Semitic publication Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Jewish leaders reportedly were reluctant to draw attention to official mistreatment of their community due to fear of government reprisal.<ref name=2006Report/>

It was reported that ISIS were active in the country in 2022, in particular, attacking the Shia Shah Cheragh Shrine in Shiraz and killing 15 people.<ref name=US2022 />


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Iran|Religion}}
{{Portal|Iran|Religion}}
* [[Religion in Iran]]
* [[Religion in Iran]]
* [[Human rights in Iran#Religious freedom]]
* [[Human rights in Iran#Religious freedom|Human rights in Iran]]
* [[Human rights in Iran#Freedom of religion]]


==References==
==References==
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* [http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC05.php?CID=2402 Religious Freedom and the Middle East] at The [[Washington Institute for Near East Policy]] PolicyWatch
* [http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC05.php?CID=2402 Religious Freedom and the Middle East] at The [[Washington Institute for Near East Policy]] PolicyWatch
* [http://www.iranhrdc.org Iran Human Rights Documentation Center]
* [http://www.iranhrdc.org Iran Human Rights Documentation Center]
{{Human rights in Iran}}
{{Asia topic|Freedom of religion in}}
{{Asia topic|Freedom of religion in}}
{{Segregation by type}}
{{Segregation by type}}

Latest revision as of 17:50, 12 November 2024

The constitution of Iran states that the country is an Islamic republic; it specifies Twelver Ja’afari Shia Islam as the official state religion.[1]

In 2023, the country was scored zero out of 4 for religious freedom.[2]

In the same year, it was ranked as the 8th most difficult place in the world to be a Christian.[3]

Background

[edit]

Freedom of religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship, and observance in the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) is marked by Iranian culture, major religion and politics. The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran mandates that the official religion of Iran is Shia Islam and the Twelver Ja'fari school, and also mandates that other Islamic schools are to be accorded full respect, and their followers are free to act in accordance with their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites. The Constitution of Iran stipulates that Zoroastrians, Jews, and Christians are the only recognized religious minorities.[4] The continuous presence of the country's pre-Islamic, non-Muslim communities, such as Zoroastrians, Jews, and Christians, had accustomed the population to the participation of non-Muslims in society.

However, despite official recognition of such minorities by the IRI government, the actions of the government create a "threatening atmosphere for some religious minorities".[5] Groups reportedly "targeted and prosecuted" by the IRI[6] include Baháʼís, Sufis, Muslim-born converts to another religion (usually Christianity),[7][8][9] and Muslims who "challenge the prevailing interpretation of Islam".[6] In 2020, the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (ICRC) annual statement described the Islamic Republic as a country of particular concern under international law on religious freedom,[10] and US Secretary of State included the Islamic Republic among the most egregious violators of religious freedom.[11]

Religious demography

[edit]

With a population of approximately 87 million, approximately 99.4% of Iran is Muslim (as of 2022).[1] Of these an estimated 90-95% were Shi'a and 5-10% Sunni (mostly Turkomen, Arabs, Baluchs, and Kurds living in the southwest, southeast, and northwest); although there are no official statistics of the size of the Sufi Muslim population, some reports estimated several million people, while Baháʼís, Christians, Zoroastrians, Mandaeans, and Jews combined constitute approximately one percent of the population.

An independent survey in 2020 showed that Iranians defined themselves as follows; 32% as Shia, 5% Sunni Muslim and 3% Sufi Muslim, as well as 9% atheists, 8% Zoroastrians, 7% spiritual and 1.5% Christian.[12]

Status of religious freedom

[edit]

The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran states that "the investigation of individuals' beliefs is forbidden" and that "no one may be molested or taken to task simply for holding a certain belief."[13] Five seats in the parliament are reserved for the minority religions; two seats for Armenian Christians, one for Assyrian and Chaldean Christians together, one for Jews, and one for Zoroastrians.[1] Iran’s Penal Code has no provisions criminalizing apostasy, as of January 18, 2012.[8]

However, the adherents of religions not specifically protected under the Constitution do not enjoy freedom of activity, nor do Muslims who convert to another religion. Constitutional protections of freedom of belief are tempered by the fact that the death penalty has been imposed on the basis of vague charges, such as “‘attempts against the security of the state,’ ‘outrage against high-ranking officials,’ and ‘insults against the memory of Imam Khomeini and against the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic,’” and has been imposed on the basis of crimes like "drug smuggling" that religious (and political) dissidents have no plausible connection with.[8] While there is no specific law against apostasy, courts can hand down the death penalty for apostasy to ex-Muslims, and have done so in previous years, based on their interpretation of Sharia’a law and fatwas (legal opinions or decrees issued by Islamic religious leaders).[8] There are laws against blasphemy and the punishment is death.[14][15]

Sufis have been sentenced to prison terms for among other charges “establishing and membership in a deviant group.”[16] Ex-Muslim atheists have been harassed.[17] But limits on freedom of religion in the IRI most directly affects adherents of the Baháʼí Faith. The Government regards the Baháʼí community, whose faith originally arose from a movement within Islam, as a misguided or wayward "sect."[18]

In 2004, the Expediency Council approved appending a note to Article 297 of the 1991 Islamic Punishments Act, authorizing collection of equal "blood money" (diyeh) for the death of Muslims and non-Muslims. All women and Baháʼí men were excluded from the equalization provisions of the bill. According to law, Baháʼí blood or anyone' who marries or helps a Baháʼí or gets involved with them is considered mobah, meaning it can be spilled with impunity.[1]

The Government fuels anti-Baháʼí sentiment in the country. Government officials have stated that the Baháʼís are not a religious minority, but a political organization which was associated with the Shah's regime, is against the Iranian Revolution and engages in espionage activities.[19] Nonetheless, government officials have reportedly stated that as individuals, all Baháʼís are entitled to their beliefs and are protected under other articles of the Constitution as citizens. In response to repeated attempts (between 1982 and 1984) by the Iranian representative to the United Nations to convince the United Nations diplomatic community that the Baháʼí Faith is a politicized organization with a record of criminal activism against the Iranian government,[20] the United Nations has stated that there has been no evidence of Iran's claims and that the Baháʼí community in Iran professes its allegiance to the state. The United Nations pointed to the Baháʼí teaching of obedience to the government of one's country and stated that any involvement in any subversive acts against the government would be antithetical to precepts of the Baháʼí religion.[20] The United Nations also stated that if the Iranian government did acknowledge that the Baháʼí Faith is a religion, it would be an admission that freedom of religion does not apply to all in Iran and that it is not abiding by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and International Covenants on Human Rights to which it is a signatory.[19]

Unlike the Baháʼí Faith, Judaism is a recognized religion in Iran. Despite Iran's official distrust of the country of Israel, the government does not directly attack Judaism itself.

The central feature of the country's Islamic republican system is rule by a "religious jurisconsult." The Supreme Leader of Islamic Republic controls the most important levers of power; he is chosen by a group of 86 religious scholars. All acts of the Majles (legislative body) must be reviewed for conformity with Islamic law and principles by the Council of Guardians, which is composed of six clerics appointed by the Supreme Leader and six Muslim jurists (legal scholars) nominated by the Head of the Judiciary and elected by parliament.[21]

Religious activity is monitored closely by the Ministry of Islamic Culture and Guidance and by the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS). Adherents of recognized religious minorities are not required to register individually with the Government; however, their community, religious, and cultural events and organizations, including schools, are monitored closely. Registration of Baháʼís is a police function. Evangelical Christian groups have been pressured by government authorities to compile and submit membership lists for their congregations, but evangelicals have resisted this demand. In the early 2000s, non-Muslim owners of grocery shops were required to indicate their religious affiliation on the fronts of their shops.[5]

Restrictions on religious freedom

[edit]

Politics

[edit]

By law and practice, religious minorities can be elected to a representative body or to hold senior government or military positions, and have 5 of a total 270 seats in the majlis reserved for religious minorities. Three of these seats are reserved for members of the Christian faith, including two seats for the country's Armenian Christians, and one for Assyrians. There is also one seat for a member of the Jewish faith, and one for a member of the Zoroastrian faith. While members of the Sunni Muslim minority do not have reserved seats in the majlis, they are allowed to serve in the body. Sunni members tend to come from the larger Sunni communities. Members of religious minorities are allowed to vote. All of the minority religious groups, including Sunni, are barred from being elected president.[1]

Employment

[edit]

Members of religious minorities, are supported in their pursuit of serving in the judiciary and security services. All applicants for public sector employment are screened, irrespective of their faith, for their adherence to and knowledge of Islam, and members of religious minorities can serve in lower ranks of government employment. The constitution states that the country's army must be administered by individuals who are committed to the objectives of the Iranian constitution, regardless of faith. No religious minorities are exempt from military service. Members of religious minorities with a college education could serve as an officer during their mandatory military service but could not be a career military officer.[1]

Education

[edit]

University applicants are required to pass an examination in Islamic theology, which limits the access of most religious minorities to higher education, although all public school students, including non-Muslims, must study Shia Islam. Applicants for public sector employment similarly are screened for their knowledge of Islam.[1]

The Ministry of Education sets the religious curricula of public schools. All schools must teach a course on Shia Islamic teachings and all pupils must pass this course to progress to the next stage of study. Applicants to university must pass an exam on Islamic, Christian, or Jewish theology, based on their official religious affiliation.[1]

Ministry of Education

[edit]

The condition imposed began from 1981 and were reiterated in the fall of 1983 - the Ministry of Education and Training ordered that religious education must be done in Persian, a text written by the MET must be taught in all registered religious minority schools, schools must seek special permission for any ceremonies, and in keeping with society-wide restrictions, female teachers and students must observe Islamic dress code including Hijab when necessary (this last was re-inforced in 1985.)[22][23] Even most of the time and occasions, all female citizens, including non-Muslims, are required to wear Hijab as Iran is currently an Islamic republic. There have been other requirements of citizens as well. In 1984 the government began to request religious affiliation on questionnaires for passports. Events held for religious groups were broken into and if the meetings were mixed sexed and or women were not wearing headscarves, arrests were made and meetings canceled. It was prohibited that Muslims attend these meetings of minority groups - some groups restricted events so only their own religious members could attend. There were restrictions on music at events. Many of these restrictions moderated in time or were applied to or affected one religion more vs others (see below) and the government has occasionally also taken steps to bring attention to issues important to a religion - in 1982 the Ministry of Post and Telegraphs printed a stamp commemorating the birth of Jesus.[22]

The textbook the MET wrote on the minority religions was called Talimat-e Maxhadi Vizheh-ye Aqaliathaye Mazhabi - (Kalimi, Zarthoshti, Masihi); Religious Studies Specifically for Religious Minorities: (Jews, Zoroastrians, Christians.)[22] The course was taught by Muslim teachers at least 3 hrs/wk. All the religious minorities objected to the text in 1982 claiming the book was a violation of Article 13 guaranteeing freedom in religious teaching, that there were overt and covert passages from the Quran, and lack of any qualifications of the anonymous author(s) rather than members of the religious minorities writing about their own religions. The situation moderated[clarification needed] for Armenians significantly by 1995-6.[23] There was also compromise of sorts allowed both Hebrew and Persian language use in Jewish schools.[24]

In the early 2000s, recognized religious minorities were allowed by the Government to establish community centers and certain cultural, social, sports, or charitable associations that they finance themselves; this did not apply to the Baháʼí community, which since 1983 has been denied the right to assemble officially or to maintain administrative institutions.[5]

Marriage

[edit]

In the early 2000s Muslim men were free to marry non-Muslim women; a non-Muslim woman automatically became Muslim when the marriage took place. However, marriages between Muslim women and non-Muslim men were not recognized unless the man showed proof that he has converted to Islam. If the child of a non-Muslim family converted to Islam, he or she inherited all the wealth of the family.[25]

Religious conversion and proselytizing

[edit]

The Government does not ensure the right of citizens to change or renounce their religious faith. Apostasy, specifically conversion from Islam, can be punishable by death.[4] In 2022, the penal code specified the death penalty for proselytizing and any attempt by non-Muslims to convert Muslims.[1]

Imprisonment

[edit]

A summary of 2013 incidents of prison sentences, fines and punishments showed "79 religious minorities were sentenced to a total of 3620 months in prison, 200 months probation, 75 lashings and 41,030,000,000 rials in fines. In this area, 49% of the cases involved Baháʼí minorities, 16% Christian and Dervish and 14% Sunni minority. Arrests of religious minorities increased by 36% in relation to last year."[26]

In 2022, the UN Special Rapporteur expressed concern about the number of executions of members of minority communities, noting that members of the Baluch and Kurdish minorities accounted for 35% of executions in the first half of the year; the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran reported 576 executions in 2022, compared to 317 executions in 2021 and 248 in 2020.[1] In the same year, the Human Rights Activists News Agency reported 140 arrests, 51 travel bans, 94 house raids and 11 court cases based on citizens' religious beliefs.

Dress code

[edit]

November 2022 saw the death of Mahsa Amini at the hands of morality police, after she was detained for allegedly wearing her hijab in an incorrect way. By the end of the month, protests throughout the country had led to the deaths of at least 448 people[27] and an estimated 18,170 arrests.[28]

Baháʼís

[edit]
Images of the faces of the Yaran, a group of 7 Bahá'í leaders imprisoned in Iran, at a rally in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The Baháʼí Faith originated in Iran during the 1860s. The Baháʼís believe their prophet to be the Messiah for this era. Initially it attracted a wide following among Shi'a clergy. The political and religious authorities of that time joined to suppress the movement, and since then the hostility of the Shi'a clergy to the Baháʼí Faith has remained strong. Baháʼís are considered apostates by the Shi'a clergy because of their claim to a valid religious revelation subsequent to that of Mohammed. The Baháʼí Faith is defined by the Government as a political "sect," historically linked to the Pahlavi regime and, hence, counterrevolutionary, even though one of the tenets of the Baháʼí Faith is non-involvement in partisan politics.[29]

Baháʼís may not teach or practice their faith or maintain links with coreligionists abroad. The fact that the Baháʼí world headquarters (established by the founder of the Baháʼí Faith in the 19th century, in what was then Ottoman-controlled Palestine) is situated in what is now the state of Israel, allows the Iranian government to charge the Baháʼís with "espionage on behalf of Zionism," in particular when caught communicating with or sending monetary contributions to the Baháʼí headquarters.[19]

Broad restrictions on Baháʼís appear to be aimed at destroying them as a community. Baháʼís repeatedly have been offered relief from mistreatment in exchange for recanting their faith. Baháʼí cemeteries, holy places, historical sites, administrative centers, and other assets were seized shortly after the 1979 revolution. None of the properties have been returned, and many have been destroyed.[4][29]

Baháʼís are not allowed to bury and honor their dead in keeping with their religious tradition. They are permitted access only to areas of wasteland that the Government designates for their use, and are not allowed to mark the graves. Many historic Baháʼí gravesites have been desecrated or destroyed.[29][1]

In what appeared to be a hopeful development, in 2002 the Government offered the Tehran community a piece of land for use as a cemetery. However, the land was in the desert, with no access to water, making it impossible to perform Baháʼí mourning rituals. In addition the Government stipulated that no markers be put on individual graves and that no mortuary facilities be built on the site, making it impossible to perform a proper burial.[4]

Baháʼí group meetings and religious education, which often take place in private homes and offices, are curtailed severely. Public and private universities continue to deny admittance to Baháʼí students, a particularly demoralizing blow to a community that traditionally has placed a high value on education. Denial of access to higher education appears aimed at the eventual impoverishment of the Baháʼí community.[19][29] The Baháʼí Institute for Higher Education was founded in 1987 and continues to operate despite government persecution.

Baháʼís regularly are denied compensation for injury or criminal victimization. Government authorities claim that only Muslim plaintiffs are eligible for compensation in these circumstances.[4]

In 1993, the UNSR reported the existence of a government policy directive regarding the Baháʼís. According to the directive, the Supreme Revolutionary Council instructed government agencies to block the progress and development of the Baháʼí community, expel Baháʼí students from universities, cut Baháʼí links with groups outside the country, restrict employment of Baháʼís, and deny Baháʼís "positions of influence," including in education. The Government claims that the directive is a forgery. However, it appears to be an accurate reflection of current government practice designed to eradicate slowly the Baháʼí community.[19][29]

In September 2001, the Ministry of Justice issued a report that reiterated that government policy continued to aim at the eventual elimination of the Baháʼís as a community. It stated in part that Baháʼís would only be permitted to enroll in schools if they did not identify themselves as Baháʼís, and that Baháʼís preferably should be enrolled in schools that have a strong and imposing religious ideology. The report also stated that Baháʼís must be expelled from universities, either in the admission process or during the course of their studies, once it becomes known that they are Baháʼís.[19][29]

While in recent years the Government has eased some restrictions, thereby enabling Baháʼís to obtain food-ration booklets and send their children to public elementary and secondary schools, the prohibition against the admission of Baháʼís to universities remains. Thousands of Baháʼís dismissed from government jobs in the early 1980s receive no unemployment benefits and have been required to repay the Government for salaries or pensions received from the first day of employment. Those unable to do so face prison sentences.[29]

Iran has taken some positive steps in recognizing the rights of Baháʼís, as well as other religious minorities. In November 1999, President Khatami publicly stated that no one in the country should be persecuted because of their religious beliefs. He added that he would defend the civil rights of all citizens, regardless of their beliefs or religion. Subsequently, the Expediency Council approved the "Right of Citizenship" bill, affirming the social and political rights of all citizens and their equality before the law. In February 2000, following approval of the bill, the head of the judiciary issued a circular letter to all registry offices throughout the country that provided for any couple to be registered as husband and wife without being required to state their religious affiliation. The measure effectively permits the registration of Baháʼí marriages in the country. Previously Baháʼí marriages were not recognized by the Government, leaving Baháʼí women open to charges of prostitution. Thus children of Baháʼí marriages were not recognized as legitimate and therefore denied inheritance rights.[19]

According to a U.S. panel, attacks on Baháʼís in Iran have increased since Mahmoud Ahmadinejad became president as well as Sunni Muslims.[30] On May 14, 2008, members of an informal body known as the Friends that oversaw the needs of the Baháʼí community in Iran were arrested and taken to Evin prison.[30][31] Officers from the Ministry of Intelligence in Tehran searched and raided the homes of the six people in the early hours of May 14.[32] The arrest of the six follow the detention of another Baháʼí leader in March,[30] who was originally taken to answer questions relating to the burial of a Baháʼí in the Baháʼí cemetery in Mashad.[32] They have not been charged, and are prisoners of conscience.[33] The Iran Human Rights Documentation Center has stated that they are concerned for the safety of the Baháʼís, and that the recent events are similar to the disappearance of 25 Baháʼí leaders in the early 1980s.[32] The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom has stated that it fears that the "development signals a return to the darkest days of repression in Iran in the 1980s when Baha'is were routinely arrested, imprisoned, and executed."[30]

Geneva, June 10, 2020, The Baháʼí International Community (BIC) issued a statement on the situation of Baháʼís in Iran, expressing concern over the "unprecedented number of new prison sentences, re-incarceration and a media campaign of hatred, are raising concerns of the long-persecuted religious minority in the country.," "re-incarceration," and "media disgusting campaign" against Baháʼís in Iran. According to the statement, the Iranian authorities have ramped up their persecution of the Baháʼís, targeting at least 71 individuals across the country in recent weeks. Reports of new threats to “uproot” the community in Shiraz.[34] [35]

Jews

[edit]
A poster on the website of Ali Khamenei blaming Jews for the 9/11 attacks.

While Jews are a recognized religious minority, allegations of official discrimination are frequent. The Government's anti-Israel policies, along with a perception among radical Muslim elements that all Jewish citizens support Zionism and the State of Israel, create a threatening atmosphere for the small Jewish community. In the past, Jewish leaders reportedly were reluctant to draw attention to official mistreatment of their community due to fear of government reprisal.[36]

Persecution and discrimination has increased among the government and society since the Revolution in 1979. On the eve of Passover 1998, 13 Iranian Jewish men were arrested on charges of espionage. The United States and Israel both demanded their release. Iran accused the men of spying for "world arrogance" (being the U.S.) and the "Zionist regime" (being Israel). The conviction is highly doubted by the rest of the world.[37]

Institute for Monitoring Peace and Cultural Tolerance in School Education (IMPACT-se) reviewed school textbooks in 2022 and noted that Jewish history in Iran is avoided and the Holocaust is ignored; there is also much antisemitic rhetoric, anti-Israeli propaganda, and anecdotes which present the Jews as partners to Sunni Muslims, without any counterbalancing material.[1]

The head of the Anti-Defamation Union says that the tomb of "Esther and Mordecai", the burial place of Xerxes' Jewish wife, which is considered a Jewish religious site, has been set on fire in Hamedan.[38]

Mandaeans

[edit]

According to the U.N. High Commission for Refugees Background Paper on Iran, the Mandaeans are regarded as Christians, and are included among the country's three recognized religious minorities. However, Mandaeans regard themselves not as Christians, but as adherents of a religion that predates Christianity in both belief and practice. Mandaeans enjoyed official support as a distinct religion prior to the revolution, but their legal status as a religion has been the subject of debate in the Majles and by 2002 it was not yet clarified.[36] It is almost impossible for declared Mandaeans to work or study at university and many have left the country since 2000.[39]

Abuses of religious freedom

[edit]

It was noted in 2014 that individuals who have been "targeted and prosecuted" by the Iranian state" for religious crimes of apostasy and blasphemy/"Swearing at the Prophet", were "diverse" and included "Muslim-born converts to Christianity, Bahá'ís, Muslims who challenge the prevailing interpretation of Islam, and others who espouse unconventional religious beliefs"; some cases had "clear political overtones", while others "seem to be primarily of a religious nature".[6]

On October 27, 2020, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a statement on World Religious Freedom Day, including Iran as one of the three of the world's most egregious violators of religious freedom—the People's Republic of China, Iran and North Korea—and that these countries "have tightened their coercive measures to silence their own people".[11]

Baháʼís

[edit]

Information in 2022 suggests that there were 300,000 Baháʼís in Iran.[1]

According to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States, between 1979 and 2005, more than 200 Baháʼís were killed and 15 disappeared and are presumed dead.[29]

Manuchehr Khulusi was arrested in June 1999 while visiting fellow Baháʼís in the town of Birjand, and was imprisoned until his release in May 2000. During his imprisonment, Khulusi was interrogated, beaten, held in solitary confinement, and denied access to his lawyer. The charges brought against him remain unknown, but they were believed to be related to his faith. The Islamic Revolutionary Court in Mashhad held a 2-day trial in September 1999 and sentenced Khulusi to death in February 2000. He was released the following year.[40]

The Government appears to engage in harassment of the Baháʼí community by arresting Baháʼís arbitrarily, charging them, and then releasing them, often without dropping the charges against them. Those with charges still pending against them fear arrest at any time.[4] In 2022, Baháʼís in the USA stated that there were over 1,000 Baháʼís in Iranian prisons.[1]

The property rights of Baháʼís generally are disregarded. In the early 2000s, it was noted that the Government's seizure of Baháʼí personal property, as well as its denial of Baháʼí access to education and employment, are eroding the economic base of the Baháʼí community.[4][29] In 2020, a court ruled that Baháʼí was “a perverse ideology” and therefore they had no “legitimacy in their ownership” of any property; Baháʼís argued that their property rights are enshrined in a 1984 fatwa issued by then Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini.[1]

In 1998, after a nationwide raid of more than 500 Baháʼí homes and offices, as well as numerous arrests, the authorities closed the Baháʼí Institute of Higher Learning. Also known as the "Open University," the Institute was established by the Baháʼí community shortly after the revolution to offer higher educational opportunities to Baháʼí students who had been denied access to the country's high schools and universities. This was one of several closures between 1987 and 2005,[41][19][29] with more arrests in 2011 and 2014.[42]

A confidential letter sent on October 29, 2005 by the Chairman of the Command Headquarters of the Armed Forced in Iran stated that the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Khamenei instructed the Command Headquarters to identify people who adhered to the Baháʼí Faith and monitor their activities; [43] In a press release, the UN Special Rapporteur states that she "is highly concerned by information she has received concerning the treatment of members of the Baháʼí community in Iran." She further states that "The Special Rapporteur is concerned that this latest development indicates that the situation with regard to religious minorities in Iran is, in fact, deteriorating."

Shahnaz Sabet, a Baháʼí citizen living in Shiraz, was arrested on Monday, October 12, 2020, and transferred to Adelabad Prison in Shiraz to serve his sentence.[44][45]

Christians

[edit]
Saint Mary Park in Tehran (2011)
Protestant church in Tehran (Qods Street, across Tehran University, 140 m away from Ali Khamenei residence), taken 2011

Blasphemy law in Iran is used as a weapon against Christians and Christianity within Iran's borders.[46]

Government-sanctioned translations of the Bible are reported to be available in Iran; however unsanctioned copies have been confiscated by the government.[1]

In 2010 Youcef Nadarkhani, a Jammiat-e Rabbani (Christian) pastor, was given a death sentence for apostasy; he was acquitted of apostasy, sparing him the death penalty, but found guilty of proselytizing and released as he had already served his time.[47] In 2017, he was arrested on charges of “acting against national security” and promoting “Zionist Christianity,” and was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment; both his sons were denied educational advancement.[48] He was released in February 2023, but faced new charges in July 2023.[49]

In 1976, the Christian population numbered 168,593 people, mostly Armenians. Due to the Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, almost half of the Armenians migrated to the newly independent Armenia. However, the opposite trend has occurred since 2000, and the number of Christians with Iranian citizenship increased to 109,415 in 2006 and 117,704 in 2011. According to the national statistical centre, Christians were fastest growing religion in Iran during 1996-2006 period (+38.9%), and second fastest during 2006-2011 period (+7.6%, after Zoroastrianism). At the same time, significant immigration of Assyrians from Iraq has been recorded due to massacres and harassment in post-Saddam Iraq. However, most of those Assyrians in Iran do not have Iranian citizenship. In 2008, the central office of the International Union of Assyrians, a mistranslation in the Iranian press for the Assyrian Universal Alliance, was officially transferred to Iran after being hosted in the United States for more than four decades.[50]

Education of Armenian Christians

[edit]

Some issues dealing with Christianity in Iran deal more directly with the Armenian ethnic minorities. For example, in early 1983 the MET specifically requested that the Armenian religious schools teach religion in Persian and time allocated to the Armenian languages must be reduced or eliminated.[22] While the community responded to these orders issues raised in discussions included if the Armenians could speak/teach their own language other minorities would demand the same but also if Persian was used it would make proselytization easier as facility with Persian language use of religious issues improved. At the end of the 1983 academic year the MET requested the questions that were to be included in the final exam and the questions had to be sent in Persian and were ordered to be used in Persian as the final exam. Most fifth grade students refused to take the test and 3rd grade students handed in blank pages. The authorities then failed all the students. Some schools ignored the demands on languages, others did limit teaching to 2 hrs and others removed it entirely.[22] Some continued religious classes and some dropped them all together. Observance of these rules on Armenian language teaching was most strict in Tehran while 6 to 8 hrs per week were common beyond. However, in 1995 the limit on languages was raised from 2 hrs to 5 hrs per week in Tehran as well.[22] Circa 1996 a settlement was reached; during the first two months of each school year, the ministry-provided Persian book on religious ethics is taught in Armenian schools while Armenian-approved religious lessons are taught in Armenian for the rest of the year. This was not a totally satisfactory settlement of the issue for both sides, but it settled the issue.[23]

In 2002, Armenian Christians reported that they were permitted to teach their practices to Armenian students as an elective at some schools. Assyrian Christians were also permitted to use their own religious textbooks in their schools, as long as the government authorized their content.[1]

Jews

[edit]

In 1984 the government began to request religious affiliation on questionnaires for passports.[22] In contrast to other registered religious minorities starting in 1983, Jewish families were prevented from traveling as a group and if one member of the family traveled then another family member's passport was held. Regardless, thousands of Jews had emigrated in the first eight months of 1987 through Austria. Perhaps half the Jews left Iran leaving about 30,000 Jews by 1986. Some may have returned in the late 1980s. Generally the overall economic position has deteriorated significantly post revolution.[22]

It is estimated that a minimum of 13 Jews have been executed by Iran since the country's revolution. Of them include two men (not of the ones written above) hanged in 1997 for allegedly spying for Israel and the United States; as well as businessman Ruhollah Kadkhodah-Zadeh who was hanged in prison without a public charge or legal proceeding, apparently for assisting Jews to emigrate.[51]

Shia

[edit]

The Special Clerical Court (SCC) system, established in 1987 to investigate offenses and crimes committed by clerics and which the Supreme Leader oversees directly, is not provided for in the constitution and operates outside the domain of the judiciary. In 2006 critics alleged that the clerical courts were used to prosecute certain clerics for expressing controversial ideas and for participating in activities outside the area of religion, including journalism.[5]

During the latter part of 2000, a Special Clerical Court began the trial of Hojatoleslam Hassan Yousefi Eshkevari, a cleric who participated in a conference in Berlin on Iran, on charges of apostasy, "corruption on earth," "declaring war on God," and "denial of basic religious principles," which potentially carry the death penalty. Eshkevari has called for more liberal interpretations of Islamic law in certain areas. The verdict was not announced, but, according to Amnesty International, Eshkevari widely was reported to have been sentenced to death. In November 2001, following domestic and international criticism, his sentence reportedly was reduced to 30 months' imprisonment and removal of his status as a cleric.[36] He served four years in prison and was released on 6 February 2005.[52][53] During the crackdown on protestors of the 2009 presidential elections, he fled to Germany to seek political asylum.[54][55]

Independent newspapers and magazines have been closed,[56][57] and leading publishers and journalists imprisoned, with 25 journalists detained in the first 8 months of 2023.[58]

In 2002 academic Hashem Aghajari was sentenced to death for blasphemy against Muhammed, based on a speech in which he challenged Muslims not to blindly follow the clergy.[59] After domestic Iranian and international outcry, his sentence was reduced to five years in prison.[60] He was released from prison in July 2004 after paying a bail of $122,500.[61] In 2014, he is sentenced to one year in prison on a charge of "propaganda against the regime".[62]

In November 2018, a prison warden at Qarchak women's prison in Varamin, attacked and bit three Dervish religious minority prisoners who were demanding their confiscated belongings back.[63]

Zoroastrians

[edit]

Zoroastrian served as the national- or state religion of a significant portion of the Iranian people for many centuries before it was gradually marginalized by Islam from the 7th century onwards. The political power of the pre-Islamic Iranian dynasties lent Zoroastrians immense prestige in ancient times, and some of its leading doctrines were adopted by other religious systems.

There are no official reports of government harassment of the Zoroastrian community to date. Unofficial reports of discrimination in employment and education has come up, but are by no means frequent. Zoroastrians are free to make their annual pilgrimage to one of the holiest sites of their faith, the temple of Chak-Chak (near the city of Yazd).[64]

Societal attitudes

[edit]

The continuous activity of the country's pre-Islamic, non-Muslim communities, such as Zoroastrians, Jews, and Christians, has accustomed the population to the presence of non-Muslims in society. However, actions of the conservative parts of society and the government create a threatening atmosphere for some religious minorities. For a Christian, Jew or Zoroastrian there is constant pressure at school to convert.[65]

The Jewish community has been reduced to less than one-half of its prerevolutionary size. Some of this emigration is connected with the larger, general waves of departures following the establishment of the Islamic Republic, but some also stems from continued perceived anti-Semitism on the part of the government and within society.[5]

In 2022, officials continued to use antisemitic rhetoric in official statements and permitted its use in publications and media. It was reported that the government-affiliated Fars News Agency accused Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of “Zionist behavior”; it was also reported that the Jewish Studies Center had published more than 1,000 antisemitic articles, reports, commentaries, books, and videos across 6 years.[1]

It was reported that ISIS were active in the country in 2022, in particular, attacking the Shia Shah Cheragh Shrine in Shiraz and killing 15 people.[1]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s US State Dept 2022 report
  2. ^ Freedom House website, retrieved 2023-08-08
  3. ^ Open Doors website, retrieved 2023-08-08
  4. ^ a b c d e f g The Constitute Project (2003-08-01). "Iran (Islamic Republic of)'s Constitution of 1979 with Amendments through 1989" (PDF). constituteproject.org. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
  5. ^ a b c d e Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from International Religious Freedom Report 2006 - Iran. United States Department of State. 2005-09-15. Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  6. ^ a b c "Apostasy in the Islamic Republic of Iran". Iran Human Rights Documentation Center. 25 September 2014. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  7. ^ "Iran chapter. USCIRF - Recommended for Countries of Particular Concern (CPC)" (PDF). USCIRF 2019 annual report. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
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  9. ^ "Iran, Events of 2019". HRW World Report 2020. HRW. 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  10. ^ "2020 Annual Report". United States Commission on International Religious Freedom. 28 April 2020.
  11. ^ a b MICHAEL R. POMPEO (2020-10-27). "International Religious Freedom Day Press Statement". U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
  12. ^ The Conversation website, article on GAAMAN survey dated September 10, 2020
  13. ^ "Constitution of Iran". translation provided by the Iranian embassy in London. Archived from the original on October 4, 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  14. ^ "Iran". End Blasphemy Laws. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
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  16. ^ "Iran: Sufi Activists Convicted in Unfair Trials". Human Rights Watch. 24 July 2013. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  17. ^ Marinde van der Breggen (5 December 2017). "Alleen in stilte kun je ex-moslim zijn". Trouw (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 8 December 2017. Retrieved 8 December 2017.
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  21. ^ Cotran, Eugene; Mallat, Chibli (1995). Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law. Vol. 1. London, UK: Kluwer Law International. p. 87. ISBN 90-411-0883-1.
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  25. ^ "Muslim women should be able to marry non-Muslim men". goatmilkblog.com. 28 August 2010. Archived from the original on 22 August 2013. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  26. ^ "Human rights activists in Iran publish disturbing annual report summarizing human rights violations in 2013". Iran Daily Brief. 23 January 2014. Retrieved January 26, 2014.
  27. ^ "Iran Protests: at Least 448 People Killed". Iran Human Rights. 29 November 2022.
  28. ^ "Iran lawmakers demand severe punishment for 'rioters' as protests rage". Reuters. 6 November 2022. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Affolter, Friedrich W. (2005). "The Specter of Ideological Genocide: The Baháʼís of Iran" (PDF). War Crimes, Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity. 1 (1): 59–89. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 8, 2006.
  30. ^ a b c d "Iran's arrest of Baha'is condemned". CNN. 2008-05-16. Archived from the original on May 19, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
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  32. ^ a b c Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (2008-05-14). "IHRDC Condemns the Arrest of Leading Baháʼís" (PDF). Iran Human Rights Documentation Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-09-02. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
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  34. ^ "Persecution of Iran's Baháʼís ramped up: threats to "uproot", prison sentences and psychological pressures". Baháʼí International Community. 2020-06-08.
  35. ^ "اعلامیه مرکز جهانی بهاییان: تهدید و آزار بهاییان؛ "تحولی هولناک و بسیار نگران کننده"". DW_fa. 2020-06-09.
  36. ^ a b c Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from International Religious Freedom Report. United States Department of State. 2002-10-07. Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  37. ^ "Jews Arrested In Iran As Spies". Jewish Virtual library. Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  38. ^ "رییس "اتحادیه ضد افترا" از آتش کشیده‌شدن مقبره "استر و مردخای" مکان مقدس یهودیان در همدان خبر داد". VOA. 2020-05-16.
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