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Massoud Rajavi
Massoud Rajavi

Where is Massoud Rajavi?

Massoud Rajavi disappeared in 2003
The last time Rajavi was heard of was in 2003 when he issued a statement on Ashura Day. Since then, no video of him has appeared.

Massoud Rajavi

There have been numerous accounts about Massoud Rajavi’s destiny. But what is very significant about him is that he disappeared just in the most critical situation. He disappeared after the US invasion but the most iconic event at that time was the arrest of Maryam Rajavi by French Police and the fall of Saddam Hussein as the main financial and military supporter of the group.

Occasionally the group publishes statements under the came of Massoud Rajavi.

The MKO’s propaganda might be seeking to maintain the sacred figure they have always portrayed for Massoud Rajavi, according to critics, because after the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the coincident disappearance of Massoud Rajavi, many criticized him for leaving his members in danger and escaping to save his own life.

The fact is that nobody outside the MEK really cares whether Rajavi is dead or alive.

April 21, 2021 0 comments
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Mehdi Hamidfar mum
The cult of Rajavi

Mother and son, a separation by the MEK

Mehdi Hamidfar, member of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi) is from Kermanshah, Iran. In 1997, as a young boy, he told his mother that he was supposed to go mountain climbing with his friends but he never got home back. The MEK recruiters deceived him to move to Iraq. They smuggled him through Kurdestan, Iraq to join the group in camp Ashraf.

Mehdi Hamidfar mother-kermanshah

Since then, Mehdi has not contacted his family. In 2003, a former member of the MEK called Mehdi’s family telling them that Mehdi was in the MEK. His parents went to Camp Ashraf to visit him. Mehdi was allowed meet his parents for only two hours. The parents were not allowed to stay in Ashraf. “It was clear that he wanted to leave the camp and come with us but he was terrified,” Mehdi’s mother, Tajodoleh Heidarian says. “If I talk of leaving the group, I will be tortured, he said.”

After that short visit, Mehdi’s family traveled to Iraq several times but the MEK leaders did not allow them to visit their beloved son any more. His brothers, Bizhan and Iraj believe that Mehdi is not actually a member of the MEK but he is taken as a hostage by the group leaders.

Today, Mehdi is still in the MEK’s Camp Ashaf 3 in Albania. He is not permitted to leave the group. His mother is still looking forward to his release from the Cult of Rajavi. She has written several letters to her beloved son, to the International human rights bodies and the Albanian government.

April 21, 2021 0 comments
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Maryam Rajavi
Maryam Rajavi

Maryam Rajavi tries to cover her violence under benevolent gestures

Maryam Rajavi tries to cover her violence under benevolent gestures but the Iranian people’s hatred returns the path of the bullet against herself

Maryam Rajavi

April 21, 2021 0 comments
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MEK Israel
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Attempts to sabotage America’s return to the Iran nuclear deal

Attempts to sabotage America’s return to the Iran nuclear deal. When the United States (US) and Iran held a meeting in Vienna last week – Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility suddenly came under a power cut sabotage attack. Reports indicate that the Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, was behind the attack.

The latest attack follows a number of explosions that took place across Iran last summer as a series of Israeli strikes in an attempt to derail negotiations – given that during the US presidential election campaign, Biden promised that if elected he would reinstate the US in the 2015 Iran nuclear deal or the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. (JCPOA) that Trump withdrew in 2018.

Mohsen fakhrizade

Mohsen fakhrizade- iran nuclear scientists assassinated – israel – mek

Iran, aware of Israel’s hard and open game, does not seem provoked to retaliate, including responding to the assassination of its top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, carried out by Israel using sophisticated weapons in November 2020 in the city of Absard outside Tehran.

Not only through attacks, high-ranking Israeli officials also went directly to lobbying the US Congress to cancel the agreement. This time, Mossad chief Yossi Cohen will travel to Washington to meet top White House and US intelligence officials, and hopes to meet in person with Biden to make sure that Iran cannot be trusted because it has hidden details about its nuclear program.

It is ironic, considering that Israel itself has never disclosed about its nuclear weapons and refuses to disclose any information about its program.

Apart from that, Iran’s enemies on American soil also did not stay silent to thwart Iran’s nuclear diplomacy. Like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the Israeli lobby group tried to convince Biden not to return to the JCPOA. Even last month AIPAC pressed the Biden administration using the hands of the House and Senate to demand an expanded deal that includes missiles, human rights and Iranian activities in the region. If the pressure is successful, of course Tehran will refuse to continue talks with Washington.

Meanwhile, the neoconservative think-tank Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD), which worked within the Trump administration during and after Trump withdrew from the JCPOA, has been relentlessly pushing for war with Iran. This came to light most clearly when former CIA officer and FDD colleague Reuel Marc Gerecht, speaking on CNN on April 11 voiced their disappointment that Trump had not led the US and Iran to war.

Then there is the Christians United for Israel (CUFI) group, one of the most powerful pro-Israel voices in the US that recently urged the Senate not to confirm Colin Kahl’s top policy position at the Pentagon, claiming “Kahl was the one driving the US comeback. in the Iran nuclear deal.

Maryam Rajavi and Giuliani

Do not miss the Mujahidin-e Khalq terrorist organization, abbreviated as MEK, which is known for its killings and bombings. This terrorist organization strongly opposes US-Iran diplomacy. In March 2021, a number of US Senators, including Senator Bob Menendez, the strong chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, attended a virtual event hosted by the MEK-backed Iranian American Community Organization (OIAC) calling for continued US sanctions on Iran.

fakhrIsrael, AIPAC, CUFI, FDD, MEK, Menendez, and similar groups probably really hope that Iran will immediately take revenge as often called by their top brass. If Iran takes revenge, it will certainly drag the US into a war it will not necessarily win. (Agus Setiawan)

NUSANTARANEWS.CO – originally Indonesian – Translated by Nejat Society

April 19, 2021 0 comments
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MEK trolls on Twitter
Mujahedin Khalq Organization's Propaganda System

A list of over 250 MeK’s Fake Twitter Accounts releases

A list of 256 fake Twitter accounts owned by the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization was released by Habilian.

These accounts, most of which operating from Albania, were identified by the cyber monitoring division of Habilian Association, which is engaged in monitoring online activities of anti-Iranian terrorist groups.

MEK trolls on Twitter

According to Habilian, at least hundreds of other fake accounts affiliated with the Mujahedin-e Khalq are operating in Twitter.

the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MeK) is a violent anti-Iranian terrorist group which has formed a cyber army to launch large-scale propaganda operations against Iranian Government.

In late November of 2020, Twitter suspended the official account of the MEK leader Maryam Rajavi for three weeks due to the promotion of violence. After that, users’ access to other pages of this group was restricted.

Also, in early April 2021, Facebook announced that it has removed a network of over 300 Facebook accounts, Pages, Groups and accounts on Instagram operated by the MeK which appear to be run from a troll farm located in Albania. In its Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior monthly report, Facebook wrote that these accounts targeted primarily Iran and also global audiences with content related to Iran.

In his letter to the Twitter company, Habilian announced its readiness to send details of hundreds of other fake accounts affiliated with the MeK terrorist group.

Earlier, a number of dissident members of the group, who had previously worked in the group’s cyber sector, reported the existence of a troll farm inside the Tirana camp, in which 1,000 to 1,500 members are operating thousands of fake Twitter accounts dedicated to incite violence throughout Iran in order to advance political goals and portray Iranian government as an authoritarian regime opposing the rights of its citizens.

Most of these fake accounts were launched after Donald Trump came to power. Taking advantage of this new opportunity, the terrorist group focused its content on hate speech and promotion of violence as a means to further their cause.

April 19, 2021 0 comments
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Salimi Namin argument on a book
Iran

The Secret War With Iran . An Argument Against Ronen Bergman’s Book- Part 7

Imam Khomeini expressed himself in clear and honest terms in private meetings with other anti-Pahlavi groups about their policies and struggles. But at the same time he always recommended that his followers refrain from highlighting such differences.

Iranian journalist and expert Abbas Salimi Namin has disproved the claims and opinions of Israeli analyst Ronen Bergman in the book ‘The Secret War with Iran’. ‘The Secret War with Iran’, written by renowned Zionist journalist Ronen Bergman, was published in 2008 by Simon & Schuster publishing company in the United States.

Salimi Namin argument on a book

Born in 1972, Bergman is a graduate of Tel Aviv University in the Middle East political relations. He is a famous Zionist journalist and analyst in the military and security fields who has worked with Israeli newspapers ‘Haaretz’ and ‘Yedioth Ahronoth’, American dailies and weeklies such as ‘The New York Times’, ‘Newsweek’, ‘The Wall street Journal’, and British media groups including ‘The Guardian’ and ‘The Times’.

Bergman has been interested in topics relating to the enemies of the Zionist regime (particularly Iran, Hezbollah and the Palestinian resistance groups), as well as subjects on the history of the Israeli regime’s assassination operations, which are cited in his recent book ‘Rise and Kill First’.

In an interview with Persian TV channel ‘Iran International’, Bergman has pointed to the Iranian nuclear program and the issues surrounding it -particularly the Zionist regime’s secret attempts to halt the process of nuclear activities in Iran and assassinate Iranian scientists. He has also cited ex-CIA chief Michael Hayden as saying that the assassination of nuclear scientists is the best way to impede Iran’s growing process in that field, and has implicitly held Israel responsible for it.

In the book ‘The Secret War with Iran’, Bergman has written a history of encounters between Iran and the Zionist regime, while the bulk of the book relates to the Lebanese Hezbollah -Iran’s main ally in the battle against the Zionist regime since its formation until the 33-day War- focusing on the role of Martyr Imad Mughniyeh.

His book also includes sections about the final years of the Pahlavi regime and victory of the Islamic Revolution in Iran, short periods of the war imposed by the Ba’thist party of Iraq on Iran (focusing on the McFarlane affair), Iran’s role in supporting the Palestinian groups, and the Iranian nuclear program.

Bergman’s multiple undocumented and untrue comments as well as personal and purposeful analyses (with the main purpose of displaying Israel’s power, specially in a competition with the US) that have repeatedly come in his book make a critical review of the book necessary for Iranian readers.

Director of the Iran History Studies and Compilation Bureau, Abbas Salimi Namin, has written an extensive criticism in a book about ‘The Secret War with Iran’. Born in 1954, Salimi Namin is an experienced journalist and a renowned Iranian researcher in history and political sciences who has published many articles and books.

Part 7:

In this passage, in a stark contrast with himself, the author first acknowledges that Israel was seeking to harm the Islamic Revolution in Iran since its triumph. Second, he implicitly acknowledges Israel’s involvement in inciting Arab governments hostile to developments in Iran, including the Baath party of Iraq. Third, Imam Khomeini brought to victory Iran’s nationwide uprising, creating an unprecedented obstacle in the way of the Zionists’ attempts to dominate the Muslim world.

This fact implies that as much as nations have become resentful of Zionist-leaning regional Arab leaders they have become interested in the developments created by the Islamic Revolution and its leadership. Therefore, it is not unreasonable if Bergman seeks in vain to sully the squeaky clean image and character of Imam Khomeini.

“Khomeini’s next step was to shatter the most important traditional custom of Shi’ite theology. He allowed the believers, even encouraged them, to call him ‘Imam’. This title had been reserved by the Iranian Shias for Ali and the eleven leaders who came after him. Until the inevitable return of the missing thirteenth imam at some unpredictable time, no religious sage had had the right to use the title. Without stating it explicitly, Khomeini was creating the impression that he was the missing imam, who had returned as a messiah, or Mahdi.” (p. 12)

Without presenting any reason, the author portrays the founder of the Islamic Revolution totally different from his real character. First and foremost, Ayatollah Khomeini never and under no circumstances showed willingness to be referred to as “Imam” and he was totally strange with such things. Second, the title “imam”, meaning leader and harbinger, has been common in the history of Islam (among both Shias and Sunnis) and is not reserved to the 12 infallible Shia imams. Imam Ghazali, Imam Bukhari and Imam Musa Sadr are just cases in point that the author has preferred to not note. Third, such outdated and threadbare allegations stem from Savak before the Islamic Revolution, which were never accepted by people. Has the author bothered himself studying slogans chanted by several million people who welcomed Ayatollah Khomeini? The answer is negative.

“During the 1970s he became, from afar, one of the most powerful of the Shah’s opponents. This physically weak, stern-featured seventy-seven-year-old, after a brief sojourn as an exile in Paris from September 1978, returned to his homeland on February 1, 1979. He was received by millions at Tehran’s airport, and without any weapons, defeated the sixth strongest army in the world.” (p. 12)

How did the millions who attended the welcoming ceremony refer to Ayatollah Khamenei? Wasn’t this devotion and deep-seated belief born out of his reputation for honesty and piety? Could anyone claim to be Mahdi and the public then recognize him as their spiritual leader? Shia hadiths have clearly noted that even if someone claims to have ties with the 12th imam as long as Imam Mahdi remains occult, he has to be billed as liar. Therefore, people’s ties with Imam Khomeini during nearly two decades of costly struggle stemmed from this assessment he was moving in the way of revival of dignity in this land, far from any mundane passion, but the performance of other opponents of the Pahlavi dictatorship during that time was assessed as exactly contrary. Bergman has deliberately ignored this field experience and instead he tries to attribute the failure of other political leaders in attracting people to Imam Khomeini.

“The elderly cleric realized that he would never be able to take power without the help of certain opposition groups, some of which were ideologically opposed to him. With the Shah as their common enemy, however, he entered into pacts with all of the rivals of the monarchy, playing down the vast differences among them. The Shi’ites have a name for this technique: khod’e, which means tricking someone into misjudging his position.” (p. 14)

Imam Khomeini expressed himself in clear and honest terms in private meetings with other anti-Pahlavi groups about their policies and struggles. But at the same time he always recommended that his followers refrain from highlighting such differences. He believed that the main issue in Iranian society was to bring an end to the ruling dictatorship and the US, British and Israeli dominance. Ayatollah Khomeini believed that any political current has to follow its own methodology and that such differences of view should not eclipse the main enemy, i.e. dictatorship and dominance. Without taking into account this reasonable and principled policy of the Imam, Bergman puts it:

“As for the opposition movement closest to his ideology, the Mujahideen Khalq, he (Khomeini) promised the group a share of power when he got his hands on it. It was a promise he would fail to keep.” (p. 15)

A review of exchanged words between the Imam and the representative of Mujahideen Khalq Organization (MKO) in Najaf in 1972 shows the nullity of Bergman’s allegations. In those meetings, which were held for hours during different days, the Imam never endorsed MKO and he even warned that the armed struggle policy they had adopted was doomed to failure.

Hossein Rouhani, an MKO leader, said in an interview following the victory of the Islamic Revolution: “From within, I [along with Torab Haqshenas] was advised to contact the Imam to tell him about MKO’s affairs and internal issues so that the Imam would issue a statement, if possible, in support of death-row prisoners, i.e. our combatant leaders. I accepted to handle it. I contacted Mr. Mahmoud Doaei who was our sympathizer at that time. In 1972 I managed to have numerous meetings with the Imam. Except for the first session where he (Mr. Doaei) was present to introduce me, I was alone in future meetings which total 7. They lasted about one month. Each meeting was one hour to one hour and a half. I discussed various issues with the Imam. We discussed the politico-ideological fundamentals of MKO. I had two books on me: Imam Hussein and The Prophets’ Route. I gave him both and he studied them completely and shared his written views with us. One issue was our analysis of Judgment Day. He considered our analysis as material and in conflict with what is in the Quran. The other issue was ‘evolution’. We believed in the Darwin principle of evolution, but he considered it to contradict Quranic instructions. Another issue under discussion was ‘armed struggle’ in Iran…The Imam was firmly opposed to it, saying:

‘I’m opposed to armed struggle and I believe that it would destroy your organization.’

Of course, it was the issue whose truth we saw in 1977 and 1978 in the intra-organizational ideological struggles in our splinter groups.” (MKO, From Beginning to End, Institute for Political Studies and Research, Winter 2005, vol. 1, pp. 522-523)

The Imam did not make public what he had noted in the private meeting with the MKO representative up until after the nationwide revolt of the Iranian nation in 1979. But his prediction, as confirmed by Hossein Rouhani, came true and in the second half of 1970s, MKO was disbanded and only some of its members were seen in prisons. However, under the auspices of the Islamic Revolution under the leadership of the Imam from 1978 until the victory of the revolt in 1979, MKO prisoners were released and the organization was revived. Therefore, it is not clear which Imam-MKO agreement Bergman refers to. No MKO agent has ever expressed this allegation of Bergman, which has no solid basis. Meantime, after the meeting between MKO’s senior member and the Imam in Najaf, no other such meeting has been recorded until after the Islamic Revolution as the Imam rejected MKO’s theoretical fundamentals and cast doubt on the organization’s strategy and tactic. In light of its dogmatism, this group never spoke publicly against the Imam as people massively showed willingness for the Imam’s leadership, but in private meetings they missed no chance to discredit him.

But Bergman is trying to create the impression that before the victory of the Islamic Revolution, Imam Khomeini was seeking to rally political groups behind himself on false promises. But the undeniable truth is that leaders of various groups who travelled to Paris saw that the Imam stuck strongly with his principles. For instance, Dr. Sanjabi, leader of the National Front, received no promise in return for aligning himself with the Islamic Revolution; rather, he was presented with some preconditions. In an interview in Paris, Dr. Sanjabi openly declared the Pahlavi regime illegitimate and laid emphasis on the dismissal of foreign dominance as another pillar of the Islamic Revolution. The same procedure befell to Mehdi Bazargan. The leader of the Freedom Movement of Iran sought in vain to convince the Leader of the Islamic Revolution to modify his position on these two pillars. Bazargan received no concessions. Finally, the FMI leadership either genuinely or tactically agreed with the two pillars. Therefore, what caused other political leaders to get closer to the Imam was his outspokenness and sincerity in declaring his positions and his firm and brave resistance against dictatorship and dominance. That is exactly for this reason that various social classes distanced themselves from other political leaders and accepted the Imam’s leadership. If he had had minimum trickery, he would have been marginalized like many others. Of course, it has to be noted that playing tricks on the enemy would be a reasonable act. In wars, one way of defeating the enemy is to deceive it. In other words, applying misleading schemes so that the enemy could not predict the attack is among skills of a qualified commander and manager.
Link to previous parts:

Part0, Part 1, Part2, Part3, Part4, Part5, Part6

Abbas Salimi Namin,

April 19, 2021 0 comments
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weekly digest
Iran Interlink Weekly Digest

Iran Interlink Weekly Digest – 283

++ There has been a lot of comment in Farsi from inside and outside Iran about Facebook blocking 300 MEK accounts. Outside Iran a London Kayhan article and inside Iran an article by Ebrahim Khodabandeh for Nejat point out that this 300 is just the tip of the iceberg as far as MEK accounts go. Some comments talk about MEK operatives posing as young girls. Some point out the illegal things MEK do online – teaching bombmaking etc. Some refer back to Trump using the Albanian troll farm during the US election. In spite of all this, Facebook hasn’t actually stopped them. Commentary demands that the MEK must be closed. The MEK issued a statement on the NCRI website claiming that this has been a plot by the Iranian regime. However, some ex-members go into detail about their work in the MEK troll farms in Iraq and Albania. They refute MEK’s version with personal testimony and photos of the troll farm.

++ In Iran in the last two weeks online discussions have been held from Yazd with a variety of ministries and Ebrahim Khodabandeh from Nejat. The theme of the discussions was about the future interference by MEK in the election; what they might do. The summary was published this week by Nejat. This goes into bullet point detail about what the MEK have done in every previous election – infiltration, stoking unrest, paying people, advertisements, stopping people voting, fabricating photoshopped pictures, etc. The summary concludes that MEK are at their weakest point ever but are doing still doing what they have tried and failed in before.

++ Every week a few people die in Albania. This week Reza Qoreshi died – one of the known people in MEK. As usual MEK say he was a martyr. Some former members who knew him reacted. They say their memories of him are of a man stuck there saying ‘I have nowhere to go’. One writer recounted that when he escaped MEK, Qoreshi was a prison guard but was nice to him. He wrote, “when I left he wished me luck and said go, and don’t look back. I have got stuck here”. From the UK, Adel Azami wrote a piece titled with a line from a Hafez poem; ‘Those who didn’t escape this dark night’. Azami explains how Qoreshi felt being trapped and recounted that he would openly say that he’d got stuck in MEK.

++ The Islamic Revolution Documents Center published an article called ‘The Embassies War’. The piece was prompted by a question sent to them asking from a historical point of view about the time that MEK attacked Iranian embassies across Europe and North America and what that was about. Dr Javad Mansouri a retired ambassador from that time and Massoud Khodabandeh retired member of the NCRI (LOL) contributed. They explained this history as Massoud Khodabandeh was part of the team who occupied the Iranian embassy in London in the early 1980s. To answer the question, he explained that the main reason for the attacks was to create news so that Massoud Rajavi could ride on it and have interviews. A by-product was that it helped MEK to recruit Iranian refugees and emigres who were prepared to use violence with the promise of toppling the regime in a few weeks or months. Dr Mansouri explained that when MEK attacked these Iranian embassies there was a backlash. The Europeans woke up to the reality that the violent group they are supporting could and did easily undertake violent activities in their backyard as well. This awakening forced MEK stop doing such activities openly in Europe and North America and revert to covert activity.

In English:

++ Global Research published an opinion piece by Massoud and Anne Khodabandeh titled ‘US Iran Talks Undermined by MEK Presence’. The piece looks at the talks in Vienna between signatories of the JCPOA, and the side efforts to start dialogue between Iran and the US. In spite of warnings by the Iranians that MEK would try to derail these efforts, not enough attention was paid to this rogue group. While the US cannot govern Israeli or Saudi responses to the talks, Biden could make a small gesture of goodwill to the Iranians by dealing with the MEK. That his administration does not do this is a signal that he either can’t or doesn’t want to dismantle the MEK, and therefore progress in the talks may stall even over such a small issue.

++ Mehr News Agency reported that “The Secretary of Iranian Judiciary’s Human Rights Headquarters took to Twitter to criticize the impunity of MKO terrorist group in Germany, noting that terrorist laundering is Berlin’s human rights strategy.”

++ AP, Alice Taylor for Exit, Ebrahim Khodabandeh for Nejat and others wrote about Facebook removing 300 MEK accounts. They pointed out that this has been ongoing and characterised by fake identities, fake news and fake narratives aimed at perverting western foreign policy toward Iran.

++ Mazda Parsi examines the influence of cults and how the MEK has used cultic abuse to enthral and exploit people to pursue its anti-Iran agenda. Parsi particularly looks at how cult leaders break the bonds between the cult victim and their family. The piece focuses on individual victims such as Rahim Kayukan, trapped in Albania, and his daughter Leila Kayukan who escaped the clutches of the MEK, revealing how MEK operate to create misinformation and defamatory narratives to attack families.

++ Jack Turner in Geopolitica writes that Massoud Rajavi’s son, who he names Mohammad, has sued the MEK and filed a lawsuit against the group because of the abuse he has been subjected to by them. This is in spite of his being the son of the leader and having no interest in the politics of the MEK. Refusing to promote the MEK is enough to condemn anyone as an enemy.

++ The Tehran Times reported that a series of films are to be made on “war hero General Ali Sayyad Shirazi”. The report reminds readers that Shirazi was assassinated by MEK in 1999 by the order of Saddam Hussein.

++ Nejat Society continues its campaign for families to be able to contact their loved ones in MEK. The families have written a letter to the World Health Organisation expressing concern for the residents in the slave camp in Albania because of the COVID-19 outbreak there, and asking for WHO help to contact them.

Apr 16, 2021

April 19, 2021 0 comments
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Massoud Rajavi
The cult of Rajavi

What happened to Massoud Rajavi’s generation?

“Massoud’s generation“is a title Maryam Rajavi gives to those members of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi) who originally joined the group before the 1979 revolution up to 1985 when recruitment methods of the group changed. The average age of these people is between sixty to seventy years old now.

Ann Singleton

Ann Singleton the British former member of the MEK is the author of”Saddam’s Private Army”, a book on the Cult of Rajavi. In 2003 when the group was in Camp Ashraf, Iraq, the writer believed that Massoud’s generation makes it impossible to regard Mojahedin as an ordinary fighting force.”Certainly, it is not a force which can take on Iranian armed forces,”Singleton writes in the book.”However, it is a force which is prepared to sacrifice itself in such a way that makes it just as useful to Rajavi in the long term. These members are in”to the end”. For them ordinary life has no attraction or meaning. Indeed, one of the Mojahedin’s pejorative terms about their supporters is that they are ‘ordinary people’.”

Mahnaz Bazazi mother

Elizabeth Rubin the author of the famous article on the New York Times Magazine,”The Cult of Rajavi“, presents an evidence of what Singlton says. She writes of a woman in Camp Ashraf as”one of the most disturbing encounters“she had in Ashraf. She visited Mahnaz Bazazi, a commander who had been with the Mujahedeen for 25 years up to 2003.

“I met her in the Ashraf hospital,”Rubin writes.”Bazazi was probably on drugs, but that didn’t explain the natural intoxication she was radiating, despite — or perhaps because — she had just had her legs amputated after an American missile slammed into the warehouse she was guarding. The doctor told me he never heard her complain.

”Even in this way, she’s confronting the Mullahs,” he said. Bazazi interrupted him. ”This is not me personally,” she said in a soft high voice. ”These are the ideas of the Mujahedeen. It’s true I lost my legs, but my struggle will continue because I have a wish — the freedom of my country.” At the foot of her bed, surrounded by candles, stood a large framed photograph of Maryam in a white dress and blue flowered head scarf.”

MEK members

Ann Singleton accurately explains this allegedly extraordinary situation.”Members of the Mojahedin exude a kind of attractive purity and intensity of purpose, which on the surface appears as a deep personal confidence and conviction,”she asserts.”Their behaviour however is the result of having lost all their inhibitions and having no personal responsibility for anything or toward anyone beyond obedience to Rajavi. Their existence is completely outside what is recognizable as normal experience. The normal values which govern any society, have no meaning for the Mojahedin. The values of honesty, truth, independent thought, freedom of action to name but a few, have no meaning here.”

MKO defectors in Albania

However, a large number of the so-called generation of Massoud turned out to be ordinary people with ordinary ambitions and values. The Cult-like structure of the group was not so successful in keeping them all in. Many of the early members left the group in recent decades although the majority of defectors still consists of those who were deceitfully recruited as war prisoners or young Iranian job seekers in Turkey.

MEK Defectors in Paris

Saeed Shahsavandi, Ali Rastgoo, GhobanAli Hosseinnezhad, Hadi Shams Haeri, Hamed Sarrafpour, Mohammad Hossein Sobhani, Mohammad Razaghi, Masoud Khodabandeh, Ebrahim Khodabandeh, Mehdi Khoshhal, Mohammad Karami, Esmaeel Vafa Yaghmai are just some of the so-called generation who left the group and as soon as they entered the free world they began denouncing the group’s oppressive structure. Somewhere in the path, they started doubting Massoud Rajavi’s indoctrinations and quit. The glamorous portrait of Massoud and Maryam Rajavi shattered in their minds.

Sooner or later this will happen to the other members of the Mujahedin Khalq. Seemingly, Massoud generation is eating Massoud!

By Mazda Parsi

April 18, 2021 0 comments
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Ashraf 3
The cult of Rajavi

MEK members trapped in Camp Ashraf 3, threatened both by covid-19 and the cult of Rajavi

Covid-19 threatens their physical health and the Cult threatens their mental health

Ashraf 3

April 17, 2021 0 comments
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Ashraf 3
The cult of Rajavi

Rajavi’s rank and file to free Iran with elderly diapers

MEK elderlies from nursing home, sick and tired of freeing Iran
Ashraf 3

April 17, 2021 0 comments
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