Mona Mahmudnizhad (September 10, 1965 – June 18, 1983) was an Iranian Bahá’í who, in 1983, together with nine other Bahá’í women, was sentenced to death and hanged in Shiraz, Iran because of her membership in the Bahá’í Faith.
Mahmudnizhad was born on September 10, 1965 to Yad’u’llah and Farkhundeh Mahmudnizhad, who had left their home in Iran to teach their religion in Yemen. She was the second child in the family; the family’s first daughter, Taraneh, was seven years old at the time of Mahmudnizhad’s birth. Mona spent her first four years in Yemen; at age two, she was hit by a car and thrown to the sidewalk, but sustained no serious injury.
In 1969 the government of Yemen expelled all foreigners and the Mahmudnizhad family returned to Iran. They spent two years in Isfahan, six months in Kirmanshah and three years in Tabriz before finally settling in Shiraz in 1974. During this time her father repaired small appliances for work and served the Bahá’í community as part of various Bahá’í administrative bodies.
While Bahá’ís regularly faced persecution in Iran, the Islamic Revolution of 1979 refocused the persecution. At 7:30pm on October 23, 1982, four armed revolutionary guards, sent by the public prosecutor of Shiraz, entered the Mahmudnizhad household and ransacked the home in search of Bahá’í material. When they were finished they took Mona and her father into custody. The two were blindfolded and taken to Seppah prison in Shiraz, where they were placed in separate quarters; Mahmudnizhad was detained in Seppah prison for a total of 38 days.
On November 29, 1982, she and five other Bahá’í women were transferred from Seppah prison to Adelabad prison, which was also in Shiraz. After some time in Abelabad she was transferred to the Islamic Revolutionary Court where she was interrogated and then returned to prison. A few days later, she was once again taken from the prison and interrogated in front of an Islamic Revolutionary Judge.[4] After these series of interrogations which involved physical torture by the use of a cable being whipped of the sole of the women’s feet, Mahmudnizhad was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging.[3] At the time of her sentencing, the President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, made a plea for clemency; despite this, the sentence of the 10 women was carried out on the night of June 18, 1983, in a nearby polo field.
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July 28, 2010 4:51 pm
bah bah bah! God bless her! Rhouesh bisiar shad! :) does anyone know when this series is going to appear and which channel? thanks for this wonderful article!
Allah-u-Abha from OK,
Shamim
July 29, 2010 1:36 pm
I am one ardent and strong supporter of Tahiri. The memory of Tahiri with her heroic deed will not stop to linger in my head. I will forever respect her for her strong faith in Baha’u’llah.
July 30, 2010 2:35 am
Iranian you know of controller, that made from cut material with small cutting from electric beam like television tube, with material will cut inside of that’s ( television tube )