Thursday, May 24, 2007


May 21, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Prominent Iranian *Sufi leader Nurali Tabandeh (aka Majzub Ali Shah) was detained today by security forces on the outskirts of the northeastern city of Gonabad.Tabandeh loyalists claimed that several of his supporters were beaten and detained along with him.

The reason for the arrest of Tabandeh, the leader of the Nematollah Gonabadi order, is unclear.
In October, 300 security forces surrounded Tabandeh's Gonabad residence after he refused to leave his city of birth.

Gonabad is the birthplace of the leaders of the Nematollahi Gonabadi dervish order, many of whom lived and were buried there.

Tabandeh's arrest has upset many supporters, who have said they will peacefully protest his arrest and call for his release.
One of Tabandeh's loyalists in Tehran who asked not to be identified told RFE/RL that this arrest followed calls by authorities for him to leave Gonabad.
"Some time ago, intelligence officials in Mashhad said [Tabandeh] should leave [the city], but he said, 'I will remain in Bidokht' -- because there was no legal reason for him to leave the city and go to Tehran and because they had asked to do that forcefully and illegally," the supporter said. "It's been15 days now [since the warning] that he had stayed in Bidokht. But they acted like thieves -- they arrested him on the road [to Aliabad] -- they didn't come to Bidokht."
The same source said some supporters have considered far more serious acts to draw attention to what they regard as official persecution.

"By tomorrow, all the [dervishes] will depart for Bidokht -- they're going from different provinces to Bidokht," the source said. "Two of the dervishes had wanted to immolate themselves in front of the governor's office because none of the officials have provided a response. But other dervishes prevented that from happening because it could have a negative impact. But they cannot end this story like this. What the government has done is illegal."
Increasing Pressure On Religious Minorites High-profile cases like Tabandeh's suggest that pressure on minority religious groups, like Sufis and dervishes, has increased in Iran.
Last year, a Sufi house of worship was destroyed in Qom, and hundreds of Sufis were detained.

The U.S. Commission On International Religious Freedom said in a May 2 statement that an already "poor" government record on religious freedom had deteriorated in the past year -- particularly for religious groups like Sufi Muslims and Evangelical Christians.
Critics are likely to claim that Iranian authorities' latest move against the leader of the Nematollahi order is another sign of intolerance toward those who do not practice Islam as it is promoted by the political and religious establishment.


Several conservative clerics have in recent months described Sufism as a danger to Islam.
Tabandeh's Nematollahi Gonabadi order is reportedly among the largest Sufi groups in Iran.


*Sufism is a mystic tradition within Islam and encompasses a diverse range of beliefs and practices dedicated to divine love and the cultivation of the heart.
"Sufism" has been defined as a type of knowledge by the great Sufi masters. Shaykh Ahmad Zarruq, a 14th century Sufi who wrote "The Principles of Sufism" defined Sufism as, "a science whose objective is the reparation of the heart and turning it away from all else but God.” Ibn 'Ajiba, one of the best known Sufi masters defined Sufism as "a science through which one can know how to travel into the presence of the Divine, purify one’s inward from filth and beautify it with a variety of praiseworthy traits."
The Tariqas (Sufi orders) may be associated with Shi'a Islam, Sunni Islam, or other currents of Islam. It has been suggested that Sufi thought emerged from the Middle East in the eighth century, but adherents are now found around the world.[1].

5 comments:

Gayle said...

Interesting, Serendip. I'd never heard of Sufism until you posted this. Every time I turn around I'm learning something new!

Ahmadinejad's regime is not exactly one of tolerance, is it! We are going to have to deal with him, and I think we'd better do so before he goes nuclear. That man cannot be trusted as far as I can throw a fattened sow!

blank said...

Serendip, all these arrests, for all these reasons is beginning to add up. Clearly it shows the hardcore Islamic revolutionaries infesting the Iranian leadership are terrified of every fly on the wall.

I have a cute political art I'm working on. I hope it get it up for the weekend.

Serendip -- Iran's new English TV station is not even on air, and it is possible they are already putting clearly false information on their website as news. Stay tuned as they move to broadcasting -- it may be a fictional commedy to out do Baghdad Bob.

Rosemary Welch said...

Dear Serendip,
How awful! What could this man possibly have done? I read it, and I still don't get it. Is jerk-face trying to start a war? If he gets those Human Rights groups mad at him...

OT: I have a link for you to check out: Survey of US Muslims' Views Pleases, Worries Islamic Groups. I received it from Dr. Jasser, chairman of American Islamic Forum for Democracy.

Have a nice day. :)

SERENDIP said...

" many people who are tired of the official terrorist-breading religion supported by the regim are joining them (many people are looking for a doze of religion not controled by politicians)".

Goli jan: so very true and brilliantly descriptive of these psychopaths. All of this recent repressive measures are a symptom of a degenrating regime with deep anxiety, which is going to lead to more savagery meted out on the Iranian people.

Anonymous said...

Nope, not a " Sympton of a degenrating regim with deep anxiety". They are as strong as ever. the difference is this: for 3 decades no one dared to complain, now there are a few complains here and there, and the regim wants to make sure to stop the voices before they get louder. Scaring them so badly that they won't be able to ever rise.