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© 2003 - 2024 NEJAT Society. nejatngo.org
The cult of Rajavi

From Attraction to Action — How Young People Are Radicalized

In the search for ‘what makes young people vulnerable to radicalization’, there are many push pull factors we can consider: home life, culture, politics, religion, criminality, social ills and the very children themselves – what on earth is wrong with them?!

A different approach is to focus instead on the actual process of radicalization. Who and what is it that changes an ordinary young person into a monster?

When I left a terrorist organization twenty years ago, I discovered that the number of reasons why people got involved in my group was exactly equal to the number of members. In other words, we all took our individual paths into the group. But once inside, we were all subjected to the same controlling methodology, we were all subjected to abuse. And for those who managed to get out, we all suffered the same emotional and mental difficulties toward recovery.

I also learned that this devastating and traumatizing experience was the same for people involved in other cultic groups and that academics and scientists have described and explained this process in detail. This is important because by understanding the harm that the process of radicalization does to its victims, we can recognize it as abuse. We can then better understand it, identify it and try to prevent it. We can give this abuse a specific name: cultic abuse.

For most people the word cult conjures up weird religious groups which suck in vulnerable people. But sticking a label on groups does not explain the harm they do. Instead we can explain cultic abuse, like any other form of abuse, not from the point of view of the beliefs but by looking at their behaviours – what they actually do.

To explain the very real harm that cultic abuse does we should begin by looking at the outcome. We know what grooming for child sexual exploitation (CSE) is for. We know what coercive control in domestic violence (DV) is for. What is cultic abuse for?

The ultimate aim of any form of cultic abuse is to enslave so-called followers, to produce people who are: controllable, exploitable, deployable and disposable. Somebody who will act to order, even when that is against their own and their society’s best interests. Now we can see how this would be of interest to groups pursuing violent and criminal agendas. Interestingly, a defining feature of cultic abuse is the no exit principle. As a slave, you are not supposed to leave. There is no exit.

Our next question is – who wants slaves and why?

Terrorism and extremist violence doesn’t simply spring up on its own. The driving force behind this kind of behaviour will be a charismatic narcissist – it’s all about them! – they are self-appointed, unaccountable and totalitarian leaders and they are motivated by power, sex and money. Usually all three, but notice, religion is not one of them.

In order to recruit followers, they begin by creating a deceptive recruiting script based on a genuine grievance which reflects their own personal philosophical concerns and which may appeal to a particular audience. The script essentially acts as bait to attract potential recruits to the cause. The ideas it expresses are exclusive – ‘you must believe this and nothing else for only we have the answers’ – and simplistic, with black and white thinking – ‘they are wrong, we are right, there is no room for questions’. This script is essentially fictitious. What matters is that you believe in it. This is what we on the outside refer to as a group’s ideology.

Of course, getting people to fall for this dodgy script which aims only to enslave them requires the kind manipulative recruitment methods used in hard sales – foot in the door, soft sales, hard closure. Using their charismatic style to preach their ideology, such leaders will find other intuitive manipulative persuaders who can literally con people into believing. The kind of people who can sell snake oil and other miraculous cures to just about anyone. Thus the process begins with deceptive recruitment.

Victims who have resisted or escaped radicalization often talk about the relentless nature of the assault on their minds and hearts. This is, of course, a deliberate act. Here’s why. Simply put, there is a world of difference between getting somebody to believe in extremist ideas and actually getting them to act on them. Getting ordinary people to take part in extremist violence requires them to make a radical break with their past values and beliefs and relationships. They must be isolated from their normal forms of support and stability and security – their family and friends – in order for the process of coercion to begin which will change their emotional and moral response to outrageous acts, which will literally ‘change their minds’.

For this reason, cultic abuse involves the systematic and sustained application of recognized methods of psychological manipulation. Relentlessly swamping the victim with stress in this way suppresses critical thinking. Once this is achieved, new beliefs can be indoctrinated into the unprotected mind of the victim.

The success of cultic abuse rests on the end product – if the recruiter is successful and the radicalization has claimed its victim they can then be deployed according to the whims of the leader.

The radicalized person will never recognize their own predicament. They sincerely believe their group and their relationships are righteous and no amount of logic will persuade them otherwise. They weren’t converted by logic so you can’t argue them out of it by logic.

To our eyes, the overt horror of terrorism and extremist violence appears a crude instrument. But recruiters are involved in a highly sophisticated game of mind control which we ignore at our peril. If we don’t take seriously the methodology behind the bloodied images, then we will continue to allow our young people and even whole families to be deceptively stolen away from their normal lives and put on a conveyor belt toward death and destruction.

Follow Massoud Khodabandeh on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ma_khodabandeh

Anne Khodabandeh (Co-authored by Massoud Khodabandeh),

May 25, 2016 0 comments
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Former members of the MEK

Babapour; MKO Cult defector joined his family after three decades

Mr. Ali Asghar Babapour joined his family after 27 years of captivity within the destructive cult of Mujahedin-e Khalq.

Babapour family as well as cult defectors and families of MKO hostages welcomed Aliasghar at Nejat Society office, Mazandaran.

Mr. Babapour said: "I should thank my family who came to Camps Ashraf and Liberty several times to visit me. I am very joyful that I managed to liberate myself from the damned Cult of Rajavi and returned to my family. I also thank you accepting me within Nejat Society families’ meeting. I wish to see all hostages of Rajavis’ criminal Cult, being free."

May 24, 2016 0 comments
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Camp Liberty

Suffering parents of MKO hostages in front of Camp Liberty

A number of families of residents of Camp Liberty picketed in front of the camp advocating the release of their loved ones taken as hostages by the leaders of the Mujahedin Khalq.

48 people including families of Ashraf residents traveled to Baghdad , Iraq from Fars, Khuzestan, Lorestan, Kermanshah, Qazvin and Tehran on Saturday May21st, 2016. They went to gate of Camp Liberty the next morning and launched their campaign to call on their loved ones in the Camp who have had no contact with them for years now. The families have had no information on the physical and mental conditions of their children since they were recruited by the MKO. The group has kept members in isolation under a sever manipulation system.

Suffering parents, brothers and sisters of the MKO members have one main demand; a free visit with their beloved ones. However, families were faced with harsh behavior of the guards of the camp who had covered their faces. They were filming families carrying cameras while insulting them from time to time.

But families offered them, flowers and candies and told them about their real request which was getting some information about their loved ones but an MKO guard hit the candy container and offended them.

Nevertheless, picketing people kept calm and repeated their demand. A grieving brother tried to give them some photos of former members who previously left the group — to encourage them to leave the camp– but the guard threw back the photos torn!

On the other side of the walls and curtains some residents of the camp were seen from a narrow split between the wall and curtain. They looked sad and depressed regretting the free world. Eventually the split was covered by a cloth.

This is the fifth time that families of MKO hostages go to the gate of Camp Liberty and they do not succeed to visit their beloveds. Although, they know that the MKO leaders will not allow them to see their children, they repeat their campaign because no other way is left for them.

 Unfortunately, Rajavi still has an absolute rule over his members exploiting and abusing them and there are still authorities who ignore the sever violation of human rights that takes place in the cult-like MKO under the rule of Massoud Rajavi.  

Translated by Nejat Society,

May 23, 2016 0 comments
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Human Rights Abuse in the MEK

Children who belong to Massoud Rajavi

Victoria Cayzer and Laura Hue-Williams have not had anything to do with their families since they were psychologically manipulated by a self-styled “spiritual healer”, Anne Craige. The two distressing parallel cases of two sociable girls were recently reported by the Daily Mail. Eventually, parents of the girls together with certain authorities are campaigning for a change in the law to make psychological manipulation and mental abuse a crime, according to the Mail. [1]

Children in destructive cults belong to the leader, with all members of the group considered their”family,”and the leader, their father or mother. The Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MKO/ the Cult of Rajavi) is a notoriously known example of such destructive cults that indoctrinate children to leave their parents behind and to yield themselves to the leaders’ ambitions. Somayeh Mohammadi was 17 when she left her family in Canada for Camp Ashraf, Iraq to receive military training with the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MKO).

Somayeh was a Canadian and American teenager who was deceitfully recruited by MEK and sent to Camp Ashraf, where she was trained for guerilla fights and forced to stay inevitably. In an independent letter sent to the Canadian embassy in Jordan, Somayeh asked for the Canadian government’s help to get her back to Toronto. Later however, she was forced by MEK in a court hearing to denounce her family and state that she wants to stay with MEK, according to a documentary made by CBS Television in 2006. [2]

Somayeh’s father, Mustafa was a faithful supporter of the MKO himself for more than 30 years. He encouraged his daughter, Somayeh, to join the group in Iraq at their training camp for a few months training but the passage of time, and the confinement of his daughter for years in the Cult of Rajavi (the MKO), caused Mustafa to lose trust in Masoud Rajavi and his cult-like group. Now, He is deeply concerned about his daughter, her future and safety. So he has continued his quest in international bodies and his multiple journeys to Iraq and the group’s headquarters in Paris to get his daughter back.

Yet, Mustafa is not alone. The number of children who were recruited by the MKO cult is countless and the years that their parents haven’t seen them mount to over a decade. Every now and then, there are reports on families who have picketed in front of the MKO’s camp near Baghdad. But, they are not allowed by the MKO leaders to visit their loved ones who are taken as hostages in the camp.

The list of young and teenage recruits who were tricked to join the cult of Rajavi include a large number of children of the group’s members who were once separated from their parents and had been sent to Europe or those adolescents who had left Iran to immigrate to Europe seeking job and a better life but they were kidnapped by the MKO recruiters in third countries especially Turkey.

Very few children of the MKO members were lucky enough to get rid of the MKO cult-like system. Hanif Bali, the Iranian Swedish parliamentarian whose parents were MKO members, was sent to Sweden when he was only three but later on he decided to never get back to the group’s camp in Iraq. “I was lucky that I didn’t get back to Iraq”, he says.  ”If I had accepted to join the group at that day, I would have been in a camp in the midst of war, in the midst of misery.” [3]

No matter why and how they joined the MKO, they are now kept under a severe mind control system that indoctrinates them to forget their family, friends and normal life. According to the Daily mail, both British families who are now campaigning to release their daughters from cult abuse, have not seen their loved daughters for a few years. However, the British Prime Minister is supporting them in their efforts to get their children back to the family. ”David Cameron is backing a campaign for new laws protecting vulnerable adults from control or slavery by predators, including therapists,” reported the Mail. ”Justice Secretary Michael Gove and Cabinet troubleshooter Oliver Letwin are examining how to clamp down on psychological manipulation and abuse.” [4]

As a matter of fact, cult indoctrination and psychological manipulation and its perils are not restricted to British boundaries and British families. Definitely, the UN and other international human rights bodies should also be considerate enough to listen to many families who have been suffering grievously since their children were abducted by the Cult of Rajavi.

So far, the UN and its supporters have turned blind eye on numerous letters and petitions written by families of the MKO hostages. The Mujahedin khalq Organization and its affiliates should be considered by the international bodies as destructive cults and its leaders should be brought to justice for the crimes the committed against humanity.

By Mazda Parsi

Source:

[1] Joseph, Claudia, The cruel agony of losing our gorgeous girl to the spell of her ‘spiritual healer’ guru: Artist daughter cuts family out of her life after getting close to ‘therapist’, The Daily Mail , April 30, 2016

[2] https://www.nejatngo.org/en/posts/1446

[3] https://www.nejatngo.org/en/posts/6483

[4] Joseph, Claudia, The cruel agony of losing our gorgeous girl to the spell of her ‘spiritual healer’ guru: Artist daughter cuts family out of her life after getting close to ‘therapist’, The Daily Mail , April 30, 2016

May 21, 2016 0 comments
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Iran Interlink Weekly Digest

Iran Interlink Weekly Digest – 144

++ When the MEK reported on the resolution introduced by Mr. Poe of Texas on March 17, 2016 to the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Middle East and North Africa and which was passed by that Committee this week, they gleefully added anything and everything they liked to promote themselves on the back of it. It was as though the whole of the American political class, including the Obama Administration itself, had come out in support of Maryam Rajavi. Analysis reveals that this ridiculous spinning of news is typical of a group which has no real substance to it. They use a low-level human rights issue for which support is inevitable and then spin it to pretend the politicians are actually supporting Maryam Rajavi and her so-called movement. Clearly this version is for internal consumption only. In reality, what is significant is that the Committee has asked the USG to help the Iraqis remove the MEK from Iraq ASAP.

++ This week KSA’s Al Arabiya published an interview with an officer of the Free Syrian Army in which he goes out of his way to stress that his group were given information about the location of Khan Tuman (a location the FSA subsequently attacked, killing fifteen Iranians) by the Mojahedin Khalq. At the same time Kuwait’s AlDastour newspaper published an advertorial written by infamous Saddamist Davoud Al Basari – who recently claimed that the US army is actually a Shia army and that Saddam was its victim [?!]. His article is full of praise for the MEK and in a few places emphasises that ‘the Arabs are now waking up to recognise the MEK as a strong tool to use and that investors in this group will surely not regret it’.

In reaction to these issues, Behzad Alishahi titles his article ‘Advertisement for a permanent job’. He says the MEK want to swap their current position as contractors for a permanent role similar to the arrangement they had with Saddam Hussein. An article by Nejat points out that the KSA knows that the IRI knows the MEK inside out and therefore there is no leverage in supporting them. Only US lobbyists will fall for the MEK’s tricks and so their level will never be more than short term mercenaries. Nejat lists other times the MEK has tried to aggrandise itself to get sponsorship, saying “the MEK never seem to learn the lesson that foreign agencies will not take their word at face value. They tried it with the US, with French Intelligence and with Saddam and failed. Yet they still can’t see that their self-aggrandisement doesn’t work.”

++ Another delightfully incisive article by Majid Rouhi this week is titled ‘Rajavi! What is this struggle of yours that the aim of it is to ‘topple’ the families and the strategy is swearing and shouting?’ Rouhi exposes the fact that the only real activity of the MEK for the past decade and a half has been against the families who come looking for their loved ones in his closed, inaccessible camps.

++ Many commentators have reacted to Maryam Rajavi’s announcement that she will hold her annual rally to celebrate the start of armed struggle on July 7th in Paris. The event marks the MEK’s failed coup d’état of ‘Sie Khordad’ and the anniversary of her arrest in 2003. Both events resulted in the deaths of the MEK’s own people. Most comments ask ‘why does she have to do this?’ and answer themselves ‘because she can’t do anything else’. Rajavi’s only talent is to pay for both speakers and audience to create an artificial event. What is new this year is that the MEK have opened up several new websites and social media sites in the Polish language advertising a weekend trip to Paris on condition people participate in the rally. Payvand Rahai site lists tens of these sites and Facebook pages. And ridicules them. Mohammad Razaghi points out that the MEK haven’t used their name or that of Rajavi on these advertisements. He concludes that not only has Massoud Rajavi been in hiding for over fifteen years, he now can’t even bear to hear his own name mentioned without shivering with fear.

++ This week one of the videos taken of families in front of Camp Liberty near Baghdad captured a poignant moment. In one heart breaking scene, Narges Beheshti recognises, as his face covering slips, that one of the MEK swearing at them is her own brother. He also recognises her as his sister. The film captures their mutual reaction. It is clear their instinct is to make contact, but her brother cannot because he is under the supervision of MEK commanders.

In English:

++ Nejat Society published another of its ‘Elimination Project’ stories, this time about the death of Masoumeh Gheibipour at the hands of the MEK. With testimony from former members, in particular Batul Soltani and Edward Termador who knew her well, Nejat pieces together the MEK’s shocking treatment and murder of one of their own members.

++ Tasnim News Agency, Tehran – “Iran’s Police spokesman said the Interpol has arrested a female member of the terrorist Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO) in Albania for involvement in a bomb blast at the headquarters of the Islamic Republic Party in Tehran in 1981. Speaking to the Tasnim News Agency on Sunday, General Saeed Montazer-al-Mahdi said the woman was arrested after she was put on the Interpol’s Red Notice, a warrant that necessitates measures to seek the location and arrest of a person wanted by a judicial jurisdiction or an international tribunal with a view to his or her extradition.”

++ Nejat Society – “[A] protest gathering was held on May 14th, in front of Dame Church in down town, Cologne. The human rights activists who participated the gathering appealed for the basic rights of MKO Cult members who are under the systematic manipulation practices of the Cult leaders. Homeira Mohammadnejad, Zahra Moeini, Batoul Soltani, Ali Jahani, Nader Keshtkar, Davoud Baghervand Arshad, Amir Mowaseghi, Mehdi Khoshhal and Abdolkarim Mahmoudi participated the rally.”

++ Habilian Association, Iran, writes about support given by controversial French Bishop Jacques Jean Edmond Georges Gaillot (known in France as Monseigneur Gaillot) to Maryam Rajavi. “In 2004 Bishop Gaillot met with Maryam Rajavi, MKO’s leader. Rajavi publicly thanked the bishop and expressed that his support had been very effective in promoting the cause of what she calls “Iran resistance”. Jacques Gaillot has praised the terrorists in Camp Liberty in Iraq for their brutal activities, what he calls it fighting for “bring freedom and democracy to Iran.” Camp Liberty in Iraq houses thousands of members of the terrorist group MKO.”

++ Nejat Society reports that a former MEK member from Camp Liberty has been reunited with his family in Iran after 27 years. “Mr Esmaeil Fallah Ranjkesh managed to escape Mujahedin-e Khalq Cult Camp Liberty on November 2015. Ranjkesh who is from Gilan Province contacted his family as soon as he stepped the free world. Mr Ranjkesh who was under the manipulation practices of the MKO Cult for years and lost his youth over the interests of the power thirsty leader of the Cult, Massoud Rajavi, finally dared to liberate himself from the destructive cult affairs. He is now reunited with his family.

“During his first meeting with his family members after 27 years, he said: “I cannot express how very happy I am. Especially when I hugged my elderly mother, I could realize the depth of Rajavis’ oppression against my family and I. He is surely a traitor. I will share my experiences within the MKO Cult affairs with the suffering families of the cult hostages…” Nejat Society congratulates Mr Fallah Ranjkesh and his family for their being back together after many years.”

May 20 2016

May 21, 2016 0 comments
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Former members of the MEK

MKO Cult ex-member reunited his family after 27 years

Mr. Esmaeil Fallah Ranjkesh managed to escape Mujahedin-e Khalq Cult Camp Liberty on November 2015. 

Mr. Fallah Ranjkesh who is from Gilan Province contacted his family as soon as he stepped the free world.

Mr. Ranjkesh who was under the manipulation practices of the MKO Cult for years and lost his youth over the interests of the power thirsty leader of the Cult; Massoud Rajavi finally dared to liberate himself from the destructive cult affairs.

He is now reunited with his family.

 During his first meeting with his family members after 27 years, he said:” I cannot express how very happy I am .  Especially when I hugged my elderly mother, I could realize the depth of  Rajavis’ oppression against my family and I . He is surely a traitor. I will share my experiences within the MKO Cult affairs with the suffering families of the cult hostages…”

Nejat Society congratulates Mr. Fallah Ranjkesh and his family for their being back together after many years.

May 19, 2016 0 comments
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Former members of the MEK

MKO defectors’ protest gathering in Germany

Mujahedin-e Khalq former members hold protest action in support of the families of the group’s members in Cologne, Germany.

The protest gathering was held on May 14th, in front of Dame Church in down town, Cologne.

The human rights activists who participated the gathering appealed for the basic rights of MKO Cult members who are under the systematic manipulation practices of the Cult leaders.

Homeira Mohammadnejad, Zahra Moeini, Batoul Soltani, Ali Jahani, Nader Keshtkar, Davoud Baghervand Arshad, Amir Mowaseghi, Mehdi Khoshhal and Abdolkarim Mahmoudi participated the rally.

The protest action lasted for hours. Hundreds of brochures – in Germany and English – handed out to the citizens . The brochures illustrated the true nature of the organized Cult of MKO.

MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne
MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne

May 18, 2016 0 comments
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Former members of the MEK

MKO ex-members protest action in Cologne

Mujahedin-e Khalq former members hold protest action in support of the families of the group’s members in Cologne, Germany.

The protest gathering was held on May 14th, in front of Dame Church in down town, Cologne.

The human rights activists who participated the gathering appealed for the basic rights of MKO Cult members who are under the systematic manipulation practices of the Cult leaders.

Homeira Mohammadnejad, Zahra Moeini, Batoul Soltani, Ali Jahani, Nader Keshtkar, Davoud Baghervand Arshad, Amir Mowaseghi, Mehdi Khoshhal and Abdolkarim Mahmoudi participated the rally.

The protest action lasted for hours. Hundreds of brochures – in Germany and English – handed out to the citizens . The brochures illustrated the true nature of the organized Cult of MKO.

May 17, 2016 0 comments
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Nejat Publications

Pars Brief – Issue No. 92

Inside this Issue:

  1. US official: Albanians need reforms for themselves, EU membership as well as dealing with Mojahedin Khalq (Rajavi cult)
  2. Pros and cons of the Prevent strategy (Counter-terrorism Policy)
  3. The Godfather of terror: anti-Iran terrorist Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO) cooperate with ISIS
  4. Suffering parents of MKO hostages in front of Camp Liberty Camp Liberty
  5. The West’s Terrorist “Catch and Release” Program
  6. US admits Mojahedin Khalq (Rajavi cult) are their terrorists, moves to protect them.

Download Pars Brief – Issue No. 92
Download Pars Brief – Issue No. 92

May 17, 2016 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Female Suspect Arrested in Albania over Tehran Blast: Iran’s Police

 Iran’s Police spokesman said the Interpol has arrested a female member of the terrorist Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO) in Albania for involvement in a bomb blast at the headquarters of the Islamic Republic Party in Tehran in 1981. Speaking to the Tasnim News Agency on Sunday, General Saeed Montazer-al-Mahdi said the woman was arrested after she was put on the Interpol’s Red Notice, a warrant that necessitates measures to seek the location and arrest of a person wanted by a judicial jurisdiction or an international tribunal with a view to his or her extradition.

On June 28, 1981, a powerful bomb went off at the headquarters of Iran’s Islamic Republic Party in Tehran, while the members were holding a meeting.

It was revealed later that the MKO was behind the terrorist blast.

72 Iranian officials were killed in the explosion, including Chief Justice Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti, four cabinet ministers, 27 members of the parliament and several other government officials.

The MKO – listed as a terrorist organization by much of the international community – fled Iran in 1986 for Iraq and was given a camp by former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

They fought on the side of Saddam during the Iraqi imposed war on Iran (1980-88). They were also involved in the bloody repression of Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq in 1991 and the massacre of Iraqi Kurds.

The notorious group is also responsible for killing thousands of Iranian civilians and officials after the victory of the Islamic revolution in 1979.

More than 17,000 Iranians, many of them civilians, have been killed at the hands of the MKO in different acts of terrorism including bombings in public places, and targeted killings.

May 16, 2016 0 comments
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