Over 30 Baha’i Graves Destroyed in Tehran’s Khavaran

Zamaneh Media
3 min readMar 12, 2024

by Zhinoos Forootan — 12March2024

For over forty years, the Baha’i community in Iran has faced relentless persecution, manifesting starkly in the desecration and destruction of their burial sites. Recently, a new wave of aggression has seen over 30 new Baha’i graves demolished at the Khavaran mass grave site in Tehran, signaling a deepening of the Iranian government’s campaign to erase the Baha’i presence from the nation’s collective memory.

The Baha’i International Community reported this latest act of desecration, where authorities removed grave markers and flattened graves with bulldozers, effectively erasing any trace of their existence. This action is part of a broader, systematic effort to remove the Baha’i identity from Iran’s historical and cultural landscape. Farhad Sabetan, a spokesperson for the Baha’i International Community, shared with Zamaneh the details of this unprecedented attack, emphasizing that the destruction targeted graves of individuals recently buried, marking a new low in the government’s ongoing persecution of the Baha’i community. He told Zamaneh,

“In these destroyed graves, in most cases, more than one or two Baha’i citizens were buried. Therefore, if we want to count the number of deceased, it definitely includes more than 30 deceased Baha’is.”

The Context of Persecution

Since the Islamic Revolution, the Iranian government has targeted Baha’i graves along with those of government critics, intellectuals, and artists, as part of a wider campaign of cultural and religious suppression. However, the recent focus on newly made graves underscores a sinister shift towards erasing the most recent memories of the Baha’i community. The government has also prevented Baha’is from using their own cemeteries, forcing them into using parts of Khavaran, a site also known as the resting place for thousands of political prisoners executed in the 1980s. This forced co-location is seen as a further insult to the dignity of the Baha’i community’s dead and their families.

Sabetan explains that these acts of desecration serve a dual purpose for the Iranian government: to divert attention from the country’s deep-seated crises and to attempt to erase the Baha’i identity from the minds and hearts of the Iranian people. However, he remains optimistic that these efforts will not succeed, citing a growing solidarity among Iranians who support the Baha’i and other minorities, united by a belief that “our story is one.”

The Significance of Burial Sites

Cemeteries are vital cultural symbols, reflecting the religious and cultural identities of a community. The Baha’i burial rites, conducted with dignity and respect, have been denied to many Baha’i families due to the government’s hostility. The Baha’i International Community’s recent statement highlights the universal condemnation of such disrespectful acts, viewing them as a form of cultural cleansing aimed at erasing the Baha’i identity from Iranian consciousness.

This is a summary of original Radio Zamaneh content crafted with the help of AI, edited by a Radio Zamaneh editor. To read the original article, click here.

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