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Abbas Golrizan uncle
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

leaders of Camp Ashraf kidnapped Abbas from his family

Abbas Golrizan was a child when both his mother and father died. He was then raised by his uncle and his wife. His uncle was a farmer in one of the villages in the central province of Iran. He was 18 years old when he started serving as a soldier in the Iranian army. He went to the Iran-Iraq war front and soon he was taken as a war prisoner by the Iraqi forces.

“I and my sister got shocked to hear that Abbas was imprisoned by Iraqis,” Soltan Golrizan, Abbas’s sister says. “He used to write letters to us from Iraqi POW camp via the International Red Cross from time to time but when the war was over and eventually the Pows were released by the Iraqi government, Abbas did not return home.”

Abbas Golrizan family

Abbas Golrizan family

The Golrizan family tried to find Abbas. They were afraid of his being dead in Iraqi jail but they soon found out that Abbas had been taken to the camp of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi). Abbas has been in the MEK for over 30 years. His family have no access to him. Their only resort is writing letters to the Albanian authorities or to publish messages on the Internet.

The wife of Abbass’s uncle says that Abbas was like his son for her. “I miss him a lot, I hate the leaders of Camp Ashraf who kidnapped Abbas from his family,” she said in an interview with Nejat Society.
In her recent message to Abbas, Soltan Golrizan addresses her brother, “Abbas! You have not contacted me for many years. They showed me a photo of you, Last year. I could not believe it was you. You looked so old. What did the terrorist leaders of MEK do with you?”

Then she calls on the leaders of MEK, “Why did you imprison my brother? Why do you hate the Iranian people? Goddamn you! You made us suffer for years. You do not let my brother call me and you name yourself humans! In Iran, a prisoner has the right to visit his family. You are so cruel.”

October 6, 2021 0 comments
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Tahereh Nouri; MEK ex-member
Former members of the MEK

Tahereh was a prisoner of the MEK Cult

Tahereh Nouri was only twenty years old and the mother of a nine-months old baby when she was taken as a hostage by the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi).
“As a young girl, I had married a greedy man who ruined my life,” Tahereh writes in the memoirs she has published on her experience of involvement with the MEK. “My husband was jailed in Arak, Iran, where he got to know a man named Mehdi.”

Mehdi was actually an MEK recruiter who succeeded to deceive Tahereh and her husband to join the MEK. “He promised to take us to Iraq to work in the MEK camps with good payments for two months and he claimed that eventually we would be sent to Europe to build a new life.”
As Mehdi asks them, Tahereh and her husband take their passports and travel to Turkey where they are welcome by MEK agents. “We were settled in a safe house of the MEK for about a week,” she recalls. “They showed us films of the life of families in Camp Ashraf.”

Tahereh Nouri; MEK ex-member

Tahereh Nouri

The group agents take them to Iraq. They are housed in base of the MEK in Baghdad called Tabatabayee. “We were received warmly with good food and residence,” Tahereh says. “Again, we were shown videos of Massoud and Maryam Rajavi’s speeches. After several hour, they put a document before me and told me to sign it. They told me to divorce my husband in order to comply with the rule of Massoud Rajavi.”

Fahimeh Arvani is the female commander to coerce Tahereh to leave her family life; to divorce her husband and to give her little daughter to the group. “I was shocked to hear that,” Tahereh utters. “I said that we were supposed to move to Europe via Iraq but Fahimeh started shouting at me that there would be no exit for a Mujahed. She told me ‘There is only war here’.”

Tahereh was not allowed to see her husband any more. Her daughter was not with her. She was only allowed to visit her twice a week. The group commanders had scheduled a daily work plan for her, she received military trainings, she worked and she attended daily self-criticism sessions and brainwashing meetings.
“The daily routines were exhausting,” she says. “I was looking for a way to release myself. Everyone who arrives in the Cult of Rajavi is stuck in a space that there is no way out of it. The Cult of Rajavi is very dangerous. When I looked at those women in the cult, they looked really desperate. They seemed to have a lot to say but they did not have the courage to say.”

Tahereh was surprised to see that even brothers and sisters were not allowed to meet each other in the MEK’s camp. “I asked Fahimeh Arvani why sisters cannot talk to their biological brothers,” she recalls. “She replied sexual instincts are equal for every one!”

Tahereh observed various examples of discriminations and brutality in the MEK. “I remember the day that I had to work in the kitchen of the camp. The rank and file had to eat food with a very bad quality but I saw some pots with special foods cooked for female commanders who were members of the group’s so-called Elite Council. Unlike other, they did not come to the eating place. Their meals were taken to their rooms.”

It took Tahereh a few years to get determined to leave the group. She endured long hours of criticism sessions in which commanders and peers tried to convince her to stay. “When I officially asked them to let me leave the group, they immediately hold meetings for me,” she says. “I was determined to leave. Fahimeh Arvani was mad at me. She threatened me to death. ‘I will bury you alive’, she said.”

Ultimately, Tahereh could manage to liberate her daughter and herself from the bars of the MEK. “Years after leaving the MEK, I am living a free life in Iran but I feel pity for the women who are still imprisoned in the cult of Rajavi.”

Taherh Nouri tries to keep in touch with Nejat Society. In her last text message to female members of the MEK she writes, “As I experienced it, I know that the cult-like pressure on female members is very high in the MEK. Maryam Rajavi claims of women’s right but no woman is free in the MEK. We had no right to open up for the cult leaders. We had no right to think about our children or our family. No one can ask for a phone call with her family.”

She adds, “We just worked as slaves. We had to chant ‘Maryam! Maryam!’. The cult of Rajavi is retarded it will not change. I released myself and chose a free life. You can do it too. Do not let the cult leaders demolish you behind the bars of their cult!”

October 6, 2021 0 comments
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Mohammad Mehdi Sabet Rostami family
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Why don’t leaders of the Cult of Rajavi respond to our requests?

Mohammad Mehdi Sabet Rostami is from Behshahr, a town in the North of Iran. He was a soldier in Iran-Iraq war in 1982 when he was taken as a prisoner of war by Iraqi forces. He was in Iraqi POW camps until 1988. He used to write letters to his family in Iran during those six years.

“We had no news of Mohammad Mehdi from 1988 to 2003,” his brother Hossein Sabet Rostami says. “In 2003, some defectors of the group told us that Mohammad Mehdi was in the Mujahedin Khalq (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi).”

Mohammad Mehdi Sabet Rostami family

Mohammad Mehdi Sabet Rostami family

Mohammad Mehdi had been deceived to move to Camp Ashraf by the MEK recruiters who used to commute the POW camps of Iraq to recruit members. The MEK was the private army of Saddam Hussein before his collapse by the American invasion.

The Sabet Rostami family traveled to Iraq to visit Mohammad Mehdi at Camp Ashraf, in 2004. “We waited the whole day to get permission to meet my brother,” Hossein says. “Finally, we were only allowed to visit him for half an hour under the strict supervision of other members and commanders of the group.”

Since then, Hossein and his parents have not been able to meet Mohammad Mehdi. “In 2010 we went to Camp Ashraf, Iraq three times,” Hossein says. “The camp authorities did not allow us to visit my brother. This was the right of my parents to see their son but they were deprived of their right.”

Sabet Rostami Family

the Sabet Rostami family traveled to Iraq to visit Mohammad Mehdi at Camp Ashraf, in 2004

Hossein Sabet Rostami and his parents have taken a lot of actions in order to find a way to meet Mohammad Mehdi. They have written several letters to the Albanian authorities since the group has been relocated in Albania. They frequently send text and video massages addressing their beloved one who is a hostage in the Cult of Rajavi in Albania as well as the leaders of the cult. Nejat Society publishes the messages in the hope that Mohammad Mehdi might see them sometime.

“Why can’t my brother choose for his own life?” Hossein wonders in his last message. “Why can’t he call his family? Why don’t leaders of the Cult of Rajavi respond to our requests? My elderly parents are sick and tired of waiting for the day they will be able to see their beloved son in the free world after forty years of imprisonment.”

October 4, 2021 0 comments
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Ali Askar Jafarpour dad
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

The MEK has deprived us from visiting our children

Mr. Jafarpour, the father of Ali Askar Jafarpour, a member of the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK, MKO, Rajavi Cult), stated at the nationwide online conference of the Nejat Society held in August 2021:

Thanks to Mr. Khosropour and Mr. Moradi of the Nejat Society office in the Province of Lorestan, who have worked hard over the years. They have guided and have helped the families to follow their children’s case.

Ali Askar Jafarpour dad

The father of Ali Askar Jafarpour

I support the complaints of 42 former MEK members against the MEK leaders.

We have been requesting to meet with our children for years. But unfortunately, the MEK has deprived us of this meeting.

I thank God for the return of this number of separated members and I hope that they will be able to make a living in Iran without any problems.

I thank you all for your efforts.

October 4, 2021 0 comments
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Neda Hassani and Sedighe Mojaveri
The cult of Rajavi

Women Burned Alive to Save MEK leader

The Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK, a.k.a. MKO and PMOI) has a dreadful record of using women and girls as a tool to achieve its purposes. As a concrete example, the killing of two female members of the group in 2003 in Paris can be noted.

On June 17, 2003, French counter-intelligence forces stormed the MEK’s headquarters in Paris, seizing over $8 million in cash and detaining 159 people, including Maryam Rajavi, the group’s ringleader.

Neda Hassani and Sedighe Mojaveri

Neda Hassani and Sedighe Mojaveri who brainwashed by the MEK leaders into immolating themselves

Following the arrest, a number of brainwashed members of the group were forced to set themselves on fire in public. MEK members mobilized throughout Europe in order to hold demonstrations and then the victims carry out a series of forced self-immolations. The self-immolations had been staged publicly by 16 members of the group one after the other in Paris, Rome, Berne, London, Ottawa, Athens, and Nicosia.

Among the victims of the forced self-immolations, the names of three women stand out: Seddiqeh Mojaveri, 40, Neda Hassani, 26, and Marzieh Babakhani. The first two lost their lives and Babakhani was severely burned.

The poor women were used as a tool to pressure the French public opinion and legal system to free Maryam Rajavi. They may have been told that there was no cause to worry and the firemen would intervene to extinguish the fire soon after they set themselves ablaze. But they were duped and burned to death before the TV cameras to influence the court’s ruling. MEK leaders got their wish and the court, concerned that the immolations might be repeated, ordered Maryam Rajavi’s release on bail.

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photo: The raid of the MEK’s Paris compound in 2003, which prompted acts of self-immolation by some of its members.

Following the awkward incident and the media reaction to it, the French officials highlighted various aspects and dimensions of the cult-like activities of the MEK. French Government spokesperson, Jean-Francois Cope, considered these self-immolations as “obviously, extremely dramatic”. He added, “Alas! It also tells us a great deal about the mindset of their leadership”.

The self-immolations were so unexpected for the French officials that they barred all the MEK gatherings “until further orders” and police banned the sale, transport and use of all inflammable products in certain parts of central Paris.

These are the women who are to be burned in the cult of MEK to save the life of the group’s leader and be used for further political leverage and to show their absolute loyalty to public opinion.

October 4, 2021 0 comments
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Nejat Newsletter No.86
Nejat Publications

Nejat Newsletter No. 86

Inside This Issue:

– Bring the MEK Cult leaders to justice
I am a member of the family of Ali-Madad Sadeqi, a member of the MEK from Zanjan province. Unfortunately, heNejat Newsletter No.86 has been brainwashed by the MEK for more than four decades. I, along with other family members,traveled to Iraq several times to secure his release, or at least visit him for a few moments. But the cult leaders denied us..

– Sufferings of the wife of an MEK member in 36 years of separation
Sedigheh Abbasi had just given birth to her third child when her husband Reza was recruited by the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi). The newlyborn baby, Fatemeh has not seen her father since she was born. Thirty-six years ago, Reza Ali Mirzai was deceived by the MEK and cut off from the outside world and in particular his family…

– By deception, the prisoners of war were moved into Ashraf garrison
We wrote to the United Nations several times so that we could meet with him. But there was no answer for us. We continue to pursue the freedom of our uncle and we will not give up our efforts and complaints. We support the complaint lodged with the International Court of Justice in The Hague…

– Negar Abbasi’s family torn apart by the MEK
Negar was only three years old when her parents left her behind in Kermanshah, Iran, to
travel to Turkey seeking for a better life. In Turkey, Negar’s parents, Tayebeh Noori and
Mozafar Abbasi were deceived by the recruiters of the Muja hedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi).Tayebeh and Mozafar were taken by the recruiters to Iraq.This was the start of a one way journey in the isolated system of the Cult of Rajavi

– Father of an MEK member: I have forgotten the face of my daughter
Shokooh had just finished high school when she traveled to Turkey in the early 1990s. She was planning to immigrate to Europe via Turkey in order to study in a European university

– Nejat Society CEO remarks about the MEK ex-members’ complaints against the group leaders
Remarks by Ebrahim Khoda bandeh, CEO of Nejat Society, at the Nationwide Online Conference of the Society Ebrahim Khodabandeh gave the following explanations at the nationwide online conference of
the Nejat Society regarding the judicial process in and out of the country:

– Pay attention to the suffering fathers and mothers
We wanted to meet them in Albania, where we were also denied. The Rajavi Cult, which I do not know who is supporting it at the moment, does not allow us to visit our loved ones.Oppressed families and parents suffer a lot. We can tolerate more

– Mother of an MEK member: I am sick and I miss my daughter a lot
Mahin Habibi is the mother of Pravaneh Rabiee Abbasi, a member of the Mujahedin Khalq rganization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi). Parvaneh joined the MEK 28 years ago. She just contacted her other a few times in the early years of her residence in the group’s camp Ashraf, in Iraq. The contacts have been cut off since those days.

To view the pdf file click here

October 3, 2021 0 comments
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Hajar Yaqubi Brother
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

The Rajavis are terrified of a meeting between me and you

Hajar Yaqubi was never a political person but she has been in the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi) for near four decades. “She fell in the trap of the MEK just because her husband was a sympathizer of the group,” Mohammad Yaqubi, Hajar’s brother says.

Hajar is from Neka, Mazandaran, Iran but she has not seen her hometown for forty years. “Our village has become modern and more beautiful than the past,” Mohammad says. “I know that my sister has no access to the Internet otherwise she would be able to see its pictures on the net.”

Hajar Yaqubi Brother

Mohammad sends open letters addressing his sister, to Nejat Society, from time to time. “Whenever I look at the photos of you, I wonder what I should do to be able to meet you,” Mohammad writes to Hajar in his last message published on the website of Nejat Society.

Hajar’s brother has taken various actions in order to visit his beloved sister. He traveled to Iraq several times when the MEK was located there. Mohammad picketed in front of the gates of Camp Ashraf and Camp Liberty holding a placard with the name of his siter on it, calling her to leave the MEK and get back to the family.
Mohammad Yaqubi has also written several letters to the international human rights bodies and the Albanian authorities calling for their aid to families of those who are taken as hostages by the leaders of the MEK.

“The Rajavis are terrified of a meeting between me and you,” Mohammad writes to Hajar in his recent open letter. “They are terrified that you get aware of what is going on around you and you leave the group.”

He continues, “My lovely sister! I know that you think of us in your privacy and this would be a good turning point for you to get determined to leave the group and begin a new life. Please contact us. Hearing your voice will be so cheering for me and the family.”

October 3, 2021 0 comments
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weekly digest
Iran Interlink Weekly Digest

Iran Interlink Weekly Digest – 295

++ This week marked the 40th anniversary of the turning point in the 8-year Iran-Iraq war when Iranian forces took Abedan and forced the Iraqis into retreat. Several media outlets in Iran reminded their readers that at this exact time when Saddam Hussein began to lose the war, Massoud Rajavi ordered the MEK inside Iran to go all out in Tehran to intensify and maximise their indiscriminate terrorist attacks. Rajavi later admitted that ‘we knew that these attacks (armed gangs attacking anywhere and anyone) would not succeed, but we had to try’.

++ This week, schools in Iran opened. Maryam Rajavi called on schoolchildren to take up arms and undertake an uprising. She didn’t say how they could achieve this. Commentators wrote that Rajavi is so nasty that she can’t even bear to see children being educated. Some compared her to the Taliban.

++ Over the past few weeks, Iran has been in the news for various reasons, political, social and economic: Iran became a full member of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization; the US agreed to withdraw combat troops from Iraq (something Iran’s leaders vowed to make happen after the illegal killing of general Soleimani, deputy commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis and eight others); Iran’s naval commander highlighted the navy’s various successes; Iranian fuel successfully arrived in Lebanon to ease shortages there; Ali Landi, a 15-year-old boy who heroically rescued two women from a fire, died of severe burns; Iran’s women’s football team qualified for the AFC Women’s Asian Cup; Iran’s volleyball team beat Japan to win the 21st Asian Volleyball Championship. Maryam Rajavi and the MEK maintained complete silence over all this news, pretending none of it happened at all. Not even a word of criticism or scorn. Nothing. Just sliding rapidly into irrelevance.

++ In Albania, news about the Swedish court case has reached the media as several members of the MEK cult travelled to Sweden to give evidence. Commentators point out that this in itself throws the case into question – members of a terrorist cult giving testimony against their sworn enemy. One social media post pointed out that it would be equally possible to ‘find’ fifty witnesses to present exactly the opposite evidence based on their memories of that time.

In English:

++ Swiss media and the MEK’s own sites reported that the investigation into the assassination of Kazem Rajavi in 1990 has been re-opened. Last week, Massoud Khodabandeh wrote a lengthy piece outlining the various stages in which Massoud Rajavi and his family were slowly but surely ousted from their leadership of and involvement with the MEK. One of those stages was this assassination which, according to Khodabandeh, could only have been performed with inside knowledge of Kazem Rajavi’s security. The re-investigation was initiated by Saleh Rajavi last year. Perhaps he too felt that his family had been ignored and pushed aside too far and for too long. Prescient.

++ During a meeting with his counterpart Ann Linde on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, Iranian foreign minister Hossein Amirabdollahian mentioned the ongoing trial of an Iranian national which features witness testimony by the MEK. Amirabdollahian characterised this as a ‘fabricated case’ and that ‘all evidence and allegations presented to the court, are fabricated by a group, which is known to engage in falsification and deceit’. He added, ‘this demonstrates that the court process lacks validity and is politicized’.

++ Iran Front Page reported that the Head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization (AEOI), Mohammad Eslami, warned the IAEA not to allow terrorist groups (MEK) to use it as a plaything. The comments came while the AEOI chief was in Moscow for talks with Russian nuclear officials. Press TV also reported on Eslami’s remarks indicating that the MEK manipulates the IAEA through fake news.

September 02 2021

October 3, 2021 0 comments
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Abrishamchi - Netanyahoo fabrications on Iran nuclear facilities
Iran

Don’t be duped by false reports of Mujahedin Khalq terrorists

Iran’s nuclear chief has advised the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) not to be duped by false reports concocted by a Europe-based terrorist group against Iran’s peaceful nuclear program.

“The Agency should not play into the hands of terrorist groups,” head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Mohammad Eslami said in an interview with Sputnik News published on Thursday.

Eslami made the remarks when asked to comment on the IAEA chief’s call on Iran to explain the presence of uranium particles at several undeclared sites.

“This is once again one of the stories of the counterrevolutionary and terrorist group that is living in a safe haven in Europe and is financed by them and constantly influences the Agency by producing fake news,” he said, making a veiled reference to the anti-Iran Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO), an Albania-based terrorist outfit.

He explained that the terrorist group hoodwinks the IAEA by showing fabricated papers, fake satellite images and false evidence as part of its threadbare tactics which have proved invalid.

Earlier this month, Rafael Grossi, the head of the UN atomic watchdog, called on Iran to provide explanations for the presence of uranium particles at several undeclared sites.

“I remain deeply concerned that nuclear material has been present at undeclared locations in Iran and that the current locations of this nuclear material are not known to the agency,” Grossi told the IAEA board of governors in Vienna on September 13.

Iran hit back at the time, voicing concerns over the “aggrandizing of few insignificant old issues” by the IAEA chief.

‘All countries entitled to peaceful nuclear energy’

Eslami said all countries are entitled to use up-to-date technology, especially in the field of nuclear energy.

He said under its Statute, the IAEA is obliged to encourage all countries to develop their nuclear energy projects and to assist them in using peaceful nuclear energy.

“Iran believes that all countries have the right [to use] nuclear energy and nuclear weapons must be banned for all countries,” the top nuclear official stressed.

In a veiled reference to Israel, which has questioned the peaceful nature of Iran’s program and threatened to target its nuclear facilities, Eslami said it is shocking that an entity that owns nuclear weapons and is not a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) raises such claims against Iran.

“The Iranian people do not welcome the language of force,” he said, “We have acted honestly and these hostilities will not affect the Iranian people and they have to realize that they must abandon this wrong approach and stop harming the interests of the Iranian people.”

The remarks came days after Israeli prime minister Naftali Bennett claimed that Iran had crossed “all red lines” in its nuclear program and threatened to act alone if the world did not take action.

‘IAEA silence encourages terrorism’

Elsewhere during his interview, Eslami said due to mischievous and hostile acts against Iran by its enemies, the country’s nuclear program has been treated with a “political”, “selective”, and “discriminatory” approach.

He pointed out that the IAEA continues to have access to its surveillance cameras under the Safeguards Agreement, but added that Iran has decided to stop its “voluntary” implementation of the Additional Protocol by halting the Agency’s access to some of its cameras as a response to a gross non-compliance with the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement by the other parties.

“Iran had voluntarily accepted additional surveillance and the Additional [Protocol] in order to build trust and lift the sanctions,” he said, arguing that it would not make sense for Tehran to continue the implementation of the Additional Protocol after the US reimposition of sanctions on Tehran in 2018.

He made the remakes in response to a Sunday IAEA report that while Iran had granted access to its nuclear sites as agreed on September 12, it had prevented IAEA inspectors from visiting a workshop at the TESA Karaj complex, after it was targeted in a sabotage act in June in which one of four IAEA cameras was destroyed.

Iran has censured the IAEA for not condemning the “terrorist attack” at the complex, which Tehran has blamed on Israel. Iran has also blamed the Tel Aviv regime for another attack at Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility in April.

“The Karaj site was attacked in a terrorist incident … and the Agency has not condemned the action. The site is being rebuilt and judicial and security authorities have opened a case on this site,” Eslami noted.

If they are truly law-abiding and sincere, the nuclear chief went on, “they have to acknowledge that the Agency’s failure to condemn a terrorist attack on an official [nuclear] site is a form of encouraging terrorism, which is regrettable.”

Eslami arrived in Moscow on Tuesday to meet with Russia’s senior officials and discuss a new framework for accelerating the implementation of nuclear projects in Iran.

October 3, 2021 0 comments
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Rasool Mahdloo Torkamani mother
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Grieves and sufferings of MEK member’s elderly mother

As a young man from the North of Iran, Golestan Province, Rasool Mahdloo Torkamani wanted to immigrate to Italy. He started learning Italian language when he was very young. He had decided to continue his studies in Italy.

Rasool was in love with Masoomeh, his cousin, the daughter of his aunt. They soon married in a simple romantic wedding party.The newly married couple traveled to Italy together. “We sent him money during the months they were in Italy,” his brother Mohammad Mahdloo Torkamani says. “Then they returned to Iran. They stayed here for a few months and again got back to Italy and this was our last visit.”

The Torkamanis have had no contact with Rasool and his wife, Masooneh Qiasi for almost forty years. They had joined the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi). “A few years later, we learned from some defectors of the MEK that Rasool has been in the group”, Mohammad says. “He was supposed to live in Europe but he turned out to live in the deserts of Iraq.”

Rasool Mahdloo Torkamani

ShirAhmad Roozrokh who is a defector of the MEK and lives in Golestan, recalls Rasool in the group. “Rasool was called Torkman in the MEK,” ShirAhmad says. “He spoke Italian very well. He worked in the administrative unit of the group.”

“Rasool and Masoomeh live in separated units in the MEK’s camp”, ShirAhmad notifies. Couples are forced to divorce according to the MEK regulations. “Rasool used to love Masoomeh very much”, His brother says feeling pity for Rasool’s love life. “The MEK has ruined their romantic marriage, nothing is left of their love.”

Rasool’s sister cannot hold her tears while she is speaking of her brother. “I am the only one who have seen our mother’s grieves and sufferings during the years of the absence of Rasool,” she says. “Our father passed away while he was calling Rasool’s name. I wish mom could see Rasool as soon as possible.”

Rasool’s elderly mother, Nesa HemmatNia is sick and frail. He speaks to the camera of Nejat Society in Torkman language. “My Dear Rasool just come! I’d love to hear your voice in the last years of my life. I am always looking forward to your coming back. Every new year, I say to myself that you may come.”

October 2, 2021 0 comments
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