Until we are free My fight for human rights in Iran

Shīrīn ʻIbādī

Book - 2016

"For several years the Iranian government tried everything to silence Shirin Ebadi: They arrested her, bugged her phones, attacked her home, shadowed her everywhere she went, seized her office, and nailed a death threat to her front door. But nothing could stop Ebadi from her work as a human rights lawyer defending women, children, and the persecuted in Iran. After several years of harassment and intimidation, the Iranian spy services turned their sights onto Ebadi's only weakness: those she loved the most, her family. First the authorities detained her daughter, then they laid a trap for her husband straight out of a spy novel. The Iranian government took everything from Shirin Ebadi--her marriage, her home, her property, her ban...k accounts, they even seized her Nobel Prize--but the one thing they could not take was her spirit and her desire for a better future for her country. Shirin Ebadi is one of the most revered leaders on the global stage. For the first time she's telling the full story of how the government of Iran tried to destroy her, and almost succeeded"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Shīrīn ʻIbādī (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiii, 286 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780812998870
  • Prologue: Death Threat
  • 1. Intimidation
  • 2. A Wedding
  • 3. The Man Who Wanted to Buy a Centrifuge
  • 4. A Midnight Visit
  • 5. In the Shadow of Ahmadinejad
  • 6. The Women Who Dared to Rise Up
  • 7. Spies on the Doorstep
  • 8. A Fatwa to Defend
  • 9. Besieged
  • 10. A Mother's Test
  • 11. The Farewell
  • 12. The Stolen Election
  • 13. Alone in the World
  • 14. Betrayal
  • 15. Life Without a Home
  • 16. The Forged Passport
  • 17. Dispossession
  • 18. The Spring That Led to Winter
  • 19. Bloodbath as Lesson
  • 20. The Suspicious Neighbor
  • Epilogue
  • Author's Note
  • Acknowledgments
Review by New York Times Review

THE NUCLEAR DEAL with Iran has been reached, and sanctions have been lifted. In Iran's recent parliamentary election, reformists took more seats. To the outside world, it may appear as though the country could be on the verge of taking a new turn. But this is still a place where those who say the wrong thing risk being thrown into solitary confinement, where women are not allowed to work or hold a passport without permission from their husbands, and where the charge of "insulting sanctities" by writing poetry could be punished by a public lashing. Through a powerful and deeply disturbing account of her own work as a human rights lawyer and activist, Shirin Ebadi's latest memoir, "Until We Are Free: My Fight for Human Rights in Iran," offers little optimism that more personal freedoms and rights for Iranians will come anytime soon. Rather, her chilling description of how the country treats its own citizens - including her, its Nobel Peace Prize laureate - builds on the fear expressed by many Iranians at this moment: that precisely because of the nuclear deal, the religious leadership may feel a need to crack down even harder on its own people to reassert power and demonstrate its autonomy. A former judge (and Iran's first female judge), Ebadi was deemed too "fickle and indecisive and unfit" to issue legal rulings after the 1979 revolution because she was a woman. But unlike the Iranians who emigrated in the decades that followed, Ebadi found it necessary to stay behind, and navigate the "duplicity and compromises" required for survival in Iran to this day. Armed with her training in both Sharia and civil law, and taking on the cases of persecuted reporters, dissidents and minorities, she enters a trench war within Iran's deteriorating and corrupt legal system. At times, she can only offer "words and tea" to her clients and their families, like the parents of a blogger whose mysterious death was ruled a suicide, or the wife of a journalist who slowly starves himself to death in prison. But as she speaks publicly about such cases, she also becomes a credible whistle-blower; her words advocate for freedom of expression, both to Iranians and to the outside world. After Ebadi was awarded the Peace Prize in 2003, Iran's intelligence apparatus ramped up its endlessly creative battery of intimidations. Ebadi writes that she was surveilled, interrogated, detained and threatened. The human rights organization she created with the Nobel money was raided and shut down. Her home was attacked by a mob. One after another, her colleagues and members of her staff left, went into hiding or ended up in prison. That is still only a prelude to the cruelty she is later subjected to, in her "second life." After remaining in post-revolutionary Iran for three decades, by the time of the student protests and their violent dissolution in 2009, she decided not to return after a trip abroad, knowing that she had long been on an official kill list. Set against the backdrop of her mournful and intense struggle for her country in exile, the second half of her book continues to describe many interesting contradictions of the religious leadership and its foot soldiers, its infighting and the dangerous paranoia that permeates the country. Ebadi also puts Iranian involvement in the Syrian civil war into context, arguing that Iran's leadership not only wants to advance its geopolitical interests but also aims to demonstrate to its own people how a popular uprising at home would be mercilessly struck down. Her excruciating personal story, glimpsed through her restrained and careful prose, tells of the almost unthinkable human cost of one person's battle against a much stronger and very sophisticated enemy. The Islamic Republic eventually found a new way to get to Ebadi in exile when they targeted the family she left behind. To have one's sister taken away at night and imprisoned; to be humiliated by the betrayal of a lonely husband who has lost his dignity - such degradations feel like lashes to the soul. "This is what they do," she writes of her enemies. In the end, although her memoir underscores that a slow change will have to come from within Iran, it is also proof of the stunning effects of her nonviolent struggle on behalf of those who bravely, and at a very high cost, keep pushing for the most basic rights.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [February 28, 2016]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Ebadi's credentials as a human rights activist are above reproach. A judge who lost her position following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, she subsequently practiced law for decades before being forced into exile. In 2003, she became the first Muslim woman awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, which was later seized by the government. A tireless supporter of the Iranian people, especially its women and children, she has traveled the world speaking out against the human rights violations and abuses that permeate the country she loves so much. As she reveals here, for her dedication to justice she has paid a bitter price. Her marriage was destroyed through governmental machinations, her home and possessions taken, her family ripped apart, and she was left with exile as the only option to avoid prison. Her eloquent, straightforward assessment of how Iran's political processes were hijacked by religious extremists and the deep roots of that extremism, including the 1953 CIA-backed coup that toppled Iran's government, are eye-opening and necessary to understand the turbulent U.S.-Iran relationship. The story of Iran is the story of my life, Ebadi writes. To say this is a riveting tale would be a vast understatement.--Mondor, Colleen Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The story of Iran is the story of my life," writes human rights activist and Nobel laureate Ebadi (Iran Awakening) at the start of her memoir, which paints a revealing portrait of the state of political oppression in Iran. It begins with the 1979 revolution, when the author, under Ayatollah Khomeini's regime, lost her judgeship simply for being a woman. She uses spare, spirited prose to chronicle the start of her career as a pro bono defender of human rights, working with the most vulnerable-women, children, and dissidents-as the government subjected her to an increasing amount of harassment and scrutiny. She was exiled in 2009 on the eve of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's second term. The Iranian government has since redirected their intimidation schemes toward her family in Iran, coercing her husband and arresting her sister. Yet she continues to fight for Iranians' human rights, finding refuge in London, where she currently lives. Ebadi's tone is distinctly more sorrowful toward the end of the book, where she recounts her years away from Iran. She reflects on the Arab Spring and the many ways the Iranian state hides the costs of its policies from its citizens; despite this corruption, she feels homesick and dislocated in exile. She is an inspiring figure, and her suspenseful, evocative story is unforgettable. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In 2003, Ebadi, a lawyer and cofounder of the Defenders of Human Rights Center in Iran, became the first Muslim women to win a Nobel Peace Prize. Yet here the author doesn't write about her prize-worthy work defending women, children, and refugees against the Iranian government through its own legal system; she tells what came after. For Ebadi, her family, and her -coworkers, harassment, tapped phones, and arrest without cause was a way of life. Following President -Mahmoud -Ahmadinejad's election in 2005, the persecution reached new levels. The government vandalized her home, shut down her offices, and detained and arrested her relatives. They even plotted to destroy her marriage and attempted to use this to publicly humiliate her into silence. Ebadi has been in exile since 2009. Ebadi's trials after winning the Nobel Peace Prize exemplify how crucial her life's work protecting vulnerable citizens through Iranian law was to human rights. Even with her expertise and global voice, every day was a fight to protect herself and her family. -VERDICT This memoir almost reads like a thriller. Ebadi is powerful and courageous; her story will appeal to many readers. [See Prepub Alert, 9/14/15.]-Heidi Uphoff, -Sandia National Laboratories, NM © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A leading activist speaks out about inequality and injustices in Iran. Stripped of her judgeship and demoted to clerk by the Iranian government in 1980, Ebadi (The Golden Cage: Three Brothers, Three Choices, One Destiny, 2011, etc.) began taking on pro bono cases in the 1990s, defending the rights of children and women in Iran. For this work, she won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 (the first Muslim woman to do so), but she also came under far more serious scrutiny by the extremist rulers in Iran. With honesty and zeal, the author details how the Iranian government has used all manner of tactics to stop her from defending her clients. She was thrown into jail, her phones were bugged, and she was shadowed and watched by government officials; despite their efforts, she continued to defend those who came to her in need. After years of horrifying harassment, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's government stepped up its efforts and detained Ebadi's daughter. They also increased their persecution of Ebadi's co-workers and other lawyers who also sought to rectify the inequalities so readily evident under the extremist leaders. When none of these tactics forced the author to stop speaking out about the injustices in Iran, the leaders went one step fuarther and set her husband up in a sting operation, which almost caused her to back down. However, she knew if she caved to their demands, then they would have won, which was a situation that she could not tolerate. Ebadi's courage and strength of character are evident throughout this engrossing text, which illuminates the power the few have had over the many, particularly the women and children of Iran. The captivating and candid story of a woman who took on the Iranian government and survived, despite every attempt to make her fail. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Intimidation The story of Iran is the story of my life. Sometimes I wonder why I am so attached to my country, why the outline of Tehran's Alborz Mountains is as intimate and precious to me as the curve of my daughter's face, and why I feel a duty to my nation that overwhelms everything else. I remember when so many of my friends and relatives began leaving the country in the 1980s, disheartened by the bombs raining down from the war with Iraq and by the morality police checkpoints set up by the still new Islamic government. While I did not judge anyone for wanting to leave, I could not fathom the impulse. Did one leave the city where one's children had been born? Did one walk away from the trees in the garden one planted each year, even before they bore pomegranates and walnuts and scented apples? For me, this was unthinkable. When I walked into the country's highest court and the new revolutionary authorities told me that women could no longer be judges, I stayed. I stayed when the authorities demoted me to clerk in the same court I had presided over as a judge. I shut my ears when the revolutionaries who had taken over the justice system talked in my presence about how women were fickle and indecisive and unfit to mete out justice, which would now be the work of men. I stayed as the Iraqi warplanes bombed houses on our street to rubble. I stayed when the new authorities said Islam demanded violent justice, that Islam allowed for young men and women to be executed on rooftops and hung from cranes for their political beliefs, their bodies dumped in mass graves. In the same way that I did not leave Iran, I did not leave Islam, either. If we all packed our suitcases and boarded planes, what would be left of our country? If we bowed our heads and stayed quietly at home, permitting them to say that Islam allowed the assassination of writers and the execution of teenagers, what would be left of our faith? I wrote long letters to friends who had emigrated, on the thin, diaphanous paper we used for airmail in those days, and told them that I was still managing to live. In the mid-1980s, I stopped working altogether and turned inward, disconnected from the brutal politics of the new regime. Despite the bombs and the morality checkpoints, my husband and I raised our two girls, who went to school in pigtails and learned how to read. We had dinner together every night. My husband, Javad, continued with his work as an engineer, and I raised the girls, contemplating how I could reinvent myself, now that the judiciary had become the realm of men. In the early 1990s, after the war had ended, the girls were older and didn't need me as much. I briefly tried practicing family law, but I saw quickly that the courts under the Islamic Republic operated very differently than they had under the shah. The authorities permitted women to work as lawyers, but the system and all its new procedures were so dysfunctional that it was impossible to take a case forward. On several occasions, I had trouble simply trying to review a file at the courthouse. The clerk, upon realizing that I wasn't going to "tip" him for retrieving the file (corrupt countries have endless euphemisms for bribery), would say, "Sorry, the file is missing. Come back tomorrow." I would go back the next day, and he would say, "Sorry, I haven't had a chance to search for your file." On the third or fourth day, knowing that I would keep coming back, he would finally produce the file. But because I wasn't prepared to pay a bribe, I had lost two or three days of work. It was much worse in the courts. There, the person who was willing to pay more was in the right; justice was bought, not fought for or deliberated. To protest, I eventually hung a big sign in front of my law office: "Due to the current inhospitable circumstance of the courts, I will no longer be accepting clients and can only offer legal advice." This did not feel, at the time, like a particularly risky thing to do. I was simply being honest about the country's legal climate, rather than consciously trying to defy the state. But I see now, and learned with time, how peaceful disobedience can be a powerful act of defiance. After a while, people who could not afford to hire a lawyer--often defendants who had been accused of political crimes--found their way to me. The state of criminal law was especially grave after the 1979 revolution. The Islamic Republic had replaced the secular criminal code Iran had followed under the shah with a system of Islamic law based on seventh-century readings of sharia, Islamic law. I still vividly remember the case that revealed to me the full extent of the system's dysfunction and cruelty. My friend Shahla Sherkat, the country's foremost feminist editor and publisher, called to ask if I could offer any advice to the family of an eleven-year-old girl named Leila. One day, as Leila was picking wildflowers in the hills outside her village, three men snuck up and attacked her. The men raped her, struck her repeatedly on the head, and then threw her to her death over a nearby cliff. The local police arrested the men. One mysteriously hung himself in prison, and the court found the other two guilty of rape and murder. Because the laws at the time valued the life of a man convicted of murder more than that of a girl raped and tossed off a cliff, Leila's family was held responsible for paying for their executions. The family was unable to come up with the money, and the men were released. The Islamic Republic claimed that these laws were based on the principles of blood money in Islamic sharia, but I believed that not only were they unjust, they were a distortion of true Islamic legal principles. In the course of seeking justice through the courts, Leila's family became destitute. Her mother had taken to sitting outside the courthouse each day in a white shroud, silently holding up a placard that described what had happened to her daughter. As I recounted more fully in Iran Awakening, I took on their case, and while I did not manage to secure anything like justice, their ordeal shaped the sort of legal response that became my second career. Though the judge in Leila's case accused me of contravening Islam in my arguments, I drew on Islamic law and principles to challenge him. I discovered that many judges in the Islamic Republic had little or no understanding of Islamic legal tenets, and also that many Iranian women had no idea of how egregiously the law discriminated against them. It was only when life dragged them to some dark crossroads--divorce, the death of a child, a fight over inheritance--that they realized how little status they had before the law. I made a showcase out of Leila's case, writing articles and speaking out publicly, and extensive coverage in the Iranian press soon led to a public outcry. In one article I described how the criminal code around blood money holds that if a man suffers an injury that damages his testicles, he receives compensation equal to a woman's life. I posed the question this way: If a woman with a PhD is run over by a car and dies, and an illiterate thug gets his testicle hurt in a fight, the value of that woman's life and that thug's testicle are equal. Is this, I wrote, how the Islamic Republic regards its women? For the first time since the revolution, the question of women's equality before the law came into the national spotlight. I saw then how sympathetic Iranian society was to such injustice and how powerful public outrage could be; more than anything else, it made the authorities pay attention. It was then that I started on the course that I follow to this day, seeking justice in the law through upholding the rights of those most vulnerable--women, children, dissidents, and minorities--and pushing for legal change on the battlefield of public sentiment. The Islamic Republic has a myriad of shortcomings. It vests absolute power in an unelected supreme leader, harasses independent-minded clerics who challenge the religious basis of its severe Islamic rule, and pursues policies that are ideologically radical and detached from the national interests of the Iranian people. But like any regime committed to perpetuating its own power, it has on some occasions shown sensitivity to the condemnation of the international community and the brewing discontent of its own citizens. It is the system we have in place, and especially in those years, the 1990s and early 2000s, it made several reluctant adjustments to some of its most inhumane laws and policies, in response to the activism I and many colleagues in the field of human rights and the women's movement pursued. This course seemed the only path possible to follow, bar packing up and leaving. Although, in this era, Iranians began emigrating by the thousands, both those who left and those who stayed behind remained fiercely proud of Iran the nation. We had been ruled by autocrats, kings, and now clerics; our history reached back thousands of years, all the way to Cyrus the Great, the Persian king who inscribed civilization's first human rights charter on a clay cylinder. I viewed myself as an inheritor of this history, of the great tradition of epic Persian poetry that I had read to my girls every night before bedtime. Like most Iranians, I was bitterly disappointed in Iran's present precisely because of the love and admiration I had for its past. I received the Nobel Peace Prize in October 2003 for my efforts for democracy and human rights, and though you would think that this would have propelled my work in Iran and won me some grudging respect, it put me under even more pressure and scrutiny by the government. The Iranian state did everything it could to suppress the news of my award, forbidding the state radio and TV stations to so much as mention it and putting me under an even more severe news embargo. When a reporter asked President Mohammad Khatami, a reformist who was in power at the time, why he had not congratulated me, he responded, "This isn't such an important prize. It's only the Nobel in literature that really matters." But as is always the case with Iran, there are ways to get around official censorship. News that matters finds its way to those who need to hear about it. I invited a Kurdish music group to perform at the Nobel awards ceremony. The Iranian regime has discriminated against its Kurdish minority for years, denying them the right to study in their own language and to maintain their Kurdish identity in public life. Iranian Kurds across the country watched this Kurdish group performing on satellite television and wept with pride at their inclusion. It was a small act, but symbolic, and the rumor spread among Iranian Kurds that I must be of Kurdish background. While the Iranian government sought to ignore my Nobel Prize--which ultimately recognized the work of human rights defenders trying to peacefully moderate the country from within--we had reached an age when satellite television and digital media meant it was no longer possible to keep a nation in the dark. Others took notice of the prize as well, particularly the women of Iran, who had long been working for equal rights and recognition; they saw in the Nobel committee's decision a global support and awareness of their struggle. The chancellor of the all-female Alzahra University, Zahra Rahnavard, invited me to give a public lecture on women's legal status. Rahnavard, the first woman to head a university since the Islamic Revolution, was a distinguished scholar and activist. The world would come to know her in 2009, when she appeared on the front pages of newspapers as the wife of Mir Hossein Mousavi, the Green Movement opposition leader. That day in 2003, Rahnavard greeted me at the campus lecture theater, a tall building of yellow brick surrounded by wide lawns dotted with young women reading under sycamore trees. Hundreds of students were lining up outside for seats, though the room was already filled to capacity and buzzing with voices. We were discussing where to put the lectern when the doors at the back of the auditorium flew open and a mob of about thirty women, their heads covered by black chadors, poured in, shouting angrily. "If Ebadi lectures here today, then tomorrow you're going to ask for George Bush!" they yelled, pushing toward the stage, which Rahnavard and I were standing in front of. They were clearly not students; they were vigilantes supported by the state. "This lecture is canceled!" they shouted. The students in the front rose and moved toward me, forming a protective ring. Rahnavard walked forward a few paces, her face etched with fury. "This lecture is being held with the official permission of the university. You have no right to disrupt it," she said. "All of you must leave immediately." One of the mob women sprang forward and reached for Rahnavard's chador. "You don't even deserve to have this chador on your head," she said, pulling violently at the fabric, which was pinned to Rahnavard's manteau beneath. The rest of her accomplices surged forward. The small band of students who had formed a circle around me started moving toward the back of the lecture hall. "Khanoum Ebadi," they urged, "we have got to get you out of here--follow us." They herded the chancellor and me out a back door and down a long corridor. The students led us into a small classroom and closed the door and barricaded it with chairs and tables. Soon we heard shouts and running, cries of "They're here, they're hiding in this room!" and then fists pounding against the door, trying to push it open. Rahnavard called the security services on her mobile phone. "They've forced me to do something I never wanted to see happen. I don't believe that police should set foot on university grounds, but there's no other choice," she said to me. The police arrived and forcibly escorted the mob of women away. We agreed that canceling the lecture seemed the safest course, and I thanked the chancellor and her colleagues for the invitation and their quick wits as we'd faced attack. We shook hands warmly, and then two officers who had stayed behind walked me safely off university grounds. Nothing ever came of the incident, the authorities made no arrests, and we never found out exactly who had dispatched the women to disrupt my lecture that day. Rahnavard threatened to resign if the authorities didn't find and prosecute those responsible. But they never did, and after Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's election, she eventually stepped down herself or was fired--it was never clear. Though discussing women's rights in Iran had always been fraught with difficulty, what happened there that day seemed the beginning of an altogether new kind of harassment and intimidation. Excerpted from Until We Are Free: My Fight for Human Rights in Iran by Shirin Ebadi All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.