Baha'i faithful find refuge at U
By: Jaime Winston
Issue date: 10/19/07 Section: News
Refugee Naeim Sobhani moved to Utah to attend college because he thought he would be thrown out of school in Iran as some of his friends were because of their Baha'i religion.
"They were trying to find any reason to kick us out of school or class," said Sobhani, a sophomore in electrical engineering.
Sobhani
was raised in Tehran, Iran, until he was 14. He moved with his parents
six years ago and spent one-and-a-half years in Turkey, before coming
to the United States. In Iran, he was a witness to discrimination
against Baha'i members in school and remembers the administration
trying to find reasons to expel students who belonged to the religious
group.
The Baha'i religion follows the teachings of Baha'u'llah,
a man who claimed to be the most recent messenger sent to earth by God.
He taught that Abraham, Jesus, Buddha and Muhammad were also messengers
from God. The religion is practiced by millions of people around the
world.
According to the Baha'i World News Service website, a
letter was found in 2006 from Iran's Ministry of Science, Research and
Technology that instructed schools to expel Iranian students who were
Baha'i.
"In the (United States), refugees have more freedom and are more open to take classes," Sobhani said.
He
relates newfound experiences in America with members of the U's Baha'i
Campus Association that includes three Iranian-born refugees and about
five others who have refugee parents, said Lazarina Topuzova, president
of the group and doctoral student in social work.
The group helps the refugees explore options they have in the United States, which they might not have had in Iran.
"When
most of them come here, their English is not so great and they feel
like they need to do a lot more before they go to school, and often --
because of their experience in Iran -- they don't know the
opportunities they have here," Topuzova said. "Usually when Baha'i
refugees leave Iran, Turkey is the closest country where they have a
commission on refugees."
One of the major ways the Iranian
refugees are included in the campus group is through a gathering called
the Dawnbreaker Movement, which takes place every Saturday at
Westminster College. The meetings include discussion groups and study
circles often involving Baha'i writings.
The U and Westminster used to have a combined Baha'i group, but now
that more Baha'i students are attending the college, a new group has
formed at Westminster.
Both groups participate in the Dawnbreaker Movement.
"We're trying to create religious tolerance and understanding on campus," Topuzova said.
Interfaith
devotional meetings are held by the group in addition to service
projects for the community. The major difference between Baha'i in Iran
and in Utah is that they can more openly express their faith in the
United States, Sobhani said.
"I've traveled a lot and I find
that wherever I go in the world and look up Baha'i communities there
are a lot of similarities," she said.
Topuzova, originally from
Bulgaria, studied peace and conflict resolution in Europe before coming
to Utah. While attending a summer school in Sweden, she met an Iranian
Baha'i who had been imprisoned because of his religion.
"I had
never met a person who had actually been tortured, and I knew a lot of
the history of the faith and persecution going on in Iran," she said.
"He was just thankful to be alive and was still working to build peace
and unity and that was really amazing."
Sobhani's extended
family still lives in Iran. Despite persecution, he isn't afraid for
his family because the country is not in an extreme situation where
fatalities would occur, he said.
His family often relays
information to him regarding the situation of Baha'i in Iran. He would
like to go back to visit, but knows his mother would not be willing to
send him because of the current attitude towards Baha'i members in
Iran, Sobhani said.
"Hopefully it won't get worse," he said.
Daily Utah Chronicle, USA
http://media.www.dailyutahchronicle.com/media/storage/paper244/news/2007/10/19/ News/Bahai.Faithful.Find.Refuge.At.U-3043579.shtml
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