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Negar is fasting but is not Muslim. She’s among many to do so this month

Followers of the Baha’i faith are fasting this month, which coincides with the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan this year. Many of Australia’s 15,000 Baha’is have migrated from Iran, where many face ongoing persecution.

A woman in a black shirt sits in front of a temple in Sydney.

Negar Sabet at the Baha'i House of worship in Sydney. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon

Negar Sabet is among those praying at a temple in Sydney’s north. As a devoted follower of the Baha'i faith, she abstains from food and drink during daylight hours in early March each year.

"It's not only about the fasting,” says Sabet, 39. “Rather it is a time to reflect, and remind yourself of why you are not drinking, why you're not eating.

"That leads to meditation and greater focus on spiritual life."

This year, Baha'is are fasting during daylight hours from March 1-19 - which coincides with both Muslim fasting for Ramadan, and Christian fasting for Lent.
A woman in a black shirt sitting on a chair with her head tilted forward.
Negar Sabet at prayer during Baha'i evening worship. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
Sabet is among 15,000 practising Baha'is in Australia, according to the 2021 Australian census. Like many, she migrated from Iran.

In fact, 10 per cent of Australia’s 80,000 strong Iranian diaspora are followers the Baha’i faith.

When Sabet joins her community at the Baha'i temple, the plight of her family in Iran is never far from her thoughts.

"This beautiful freedom that we have praying here in Australia, it's nothing like the conditions in Iran," she says.
A Baha'i temple with ornate windows against a blue sky.
Sydney's Baha'i House of Worship. Source: SBS / Liam Murphy
“Living in Iran as a Baha’i is a constant terror because you don't know the next morning you wake up, are you still at your home or in jail? Do you still have your job or not? So, nothing is secure for us.”

Sabet’s parents are in Iran and also follow the Baha’i faith. Like many in Iran’s 300,000 strong Baha’i community, her parents have suffered for their faith.

"My dad's workshop in Tehran was recently confiscated by the government. It was his building, paid for with 75 years of hard work. It was also his only source of his income," she says.
A man with a grey beard has his arm around a woman wearing a black top.
Negar Sabet's parents Siyvash Sabet and his wife, Mahvash in Iran. Source: Supplied / Negar Sabet
Her mother Mahvash Sabet Shahriari, is a Baha’i leader and poet in Iran, currently detained in Tehran’s Evin prison.

In February 2009, Tehran’s Security Prosecutor’s Office charged Mahvash Sabet Shahriari and six other Baha’i leaders with crimes including spying for Israel, insulting sacred sites, and disseminating propaganda against Iran’s Islamic Republic.

She was released in September 2017 but re-arrested in 2022 and is now serving a 10 year sentence.

Iran’s constitution does not recognise Baha’is as a religious minority and refers to it as a 'cult'. According to Human Rights Watch, authorities routinely harass, prosecute, and imprison Baha’is actively practising their faith.
A woman in a black top standing with a woman in a white t-shirt in front of the Sydney Opera House.
Negar Sabet (left) and her mother Mahvash in Sydney. Source: Supplied / Negar Sabet
Negar Sabet, who migrated to Australia in 2017, is desperately concerned for her mother’s health.

“She is a 71-year-old grandmother who's only desire is to come here and visit the only grandchild she has, my daughter. And this has never happened.

“While we are safe here, we cannot do anything for [my parents]. The situation is not good at all."

The Baha'i faith originated in Iran in 1844 and is estimated to be practised by more than 5 million people worldwide.

However, in Iran followers cannot go to universities, have cemeteries for their dead, or freely run businesses and own property.
A woman wearing glasses and a blue top sitting in front of the Baha'i temple.
Roya Shahgholi is Director of Sydney's Baha'i House of Worship. Source: SBS / Liam Murphy
Roya Shahgholi is Director of the Sydney Baha'i House of Worship, and says the ongoing persecution of Baha'is in Iran is deeply distressing. Yet, she remains hopeful.

"We draw strength from their suffering," Shahgholi says.

"Baha’is in Iran have lost their jobs, homes, and livelihoods, yet they are not only able survive but also continue to help others in their neighbourhood and communities.”

Shahgholi says the Baha'i following in Australia is growing and fasting is a crucial part of the faith.
A vase of colourful flowers on a table inside the Baha'i temple with worshippers sitting on chairs.
Worshippers at Sydney's Baha'i House of Worship. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
"Fasting is a time for us to pray and meditate and basically abstain from any kind of desires," Shahgholi says.

"In Australia, the Baha’i following is a very vibrant community. The focus is the betterment of the world and finding ways to contribute as an individual and also collectively."

Baha’i follower Hari Remala is active in Sydney’s west, running projects that help feed families struggling during the cost of living crisis.

“The juniors group that I run, after listening to the challenges faced by many families, decided to go to the markets together early in the morning to buy groceries in bulk. In return for a weekly fee, families now get fresh food at a fraction of the retail cost.

“The project also improves social cohesion in our neighbourhood because every Saturday when they deliver groceries to families, they're able to have conversations, and meet new people.”

It’s the same story as Baha’i worshippers gather to break their fast after prayers at the temple.

"Being able to share a meal and enjoy the sense of friendship and common calling is really profound," says Remala, 26.

"Each one of us is striving, essentially, to be a better human being and to contribute more fully to the life of our community and also to the life of our society."

Australia established a humanitarian program focused on Baha’i Iranians fleeing persecution, following the 1979 Islamic revolution.
A woman in a white sun visor sits next to another woman in a coral cardigan.
Negar Sabet and her mother, Mahvash. Source: Supplied / Negar Sabet
Sabet knows first-hand how hard living in Iran as a Baha’i follower can be.

“My first experience was at the age of six when I started school and the teacher would encourage the other kids not to talk to me, or sit next to me, share food or interact at any level.

“So I was wandering around alone. And that was the very first time that I tasted the really bitter, unjust treatment.

“When I grew up and I finished school, I could not attend university because Baha’is are denied higher education in Iran.”

Eventually, Sabet studied law at the Bahai Institute for Higher Education (BIHE). Despite her legal qualifications, she says finding work as a Baha’i wasn’t easy.

“Finally, I got a job at a pharmaceutical company which was really great.
Men with their backs to camera sitting on chairs inside a Baha'i temple.
Worshippers at prayer in a Baha'i temple. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
“I was there for a few months, then one day I was heading to prison to visit my mum and I saw the CEO in the elevator. He asked me where I was going.

“I explained to him that my mum was in prison. ANd by the end of that week I was jobless, I was fired.”

The United Nations Commission on Human Rights has passed a resolution highlighting their concerns of human rights violations with the treatment of Baha'is in Iran.
A Baha'i temple building with ornate windows at night.
The Sydney Baha'i House of Worship at night. Source: SBS / Liam Murphy
United Nations experts have called on Iranian authorities to ‘stop the persecution and harassment of religious minorities’.

"We are deeply concerned at the increasing arbitrary arrests and on occasions, enforced disappearances of members of the Baha'i faith and the destruction or confiscation of their properties, in what bears all the signs of a policy of systematic persecution," a statement from 2022 read.

The Iranian Embassy in Canberra has previously told SBS Persian that allegations that 'over 1,000 Baha'is are awaiting imprisonment' are based on "delusional figures'.

"Unfortunately, the unflinching and unflagging support provided to the Baha'is in Iran, which comes from Western countries with political objectives and in some cases by certain international institutions, has led the ground to be ripe for cynical exploitation and instrumentalisation by the Baha'is," the spokesperson said.
A woman with a white top sits next to a man with a grey beard.
Negar Sabet's parents in Iran. Source: Supplied / Negar Sabet
Sabet is building a new life in Sydney but remains fearful for her parents in Iran, and hopes to see more international support.

"We want Iran to be held accountable for what they're doing and ask international entities to shed light on the plight of Baha'is in Iran.

"Let the world hear our voice, be our voice."

Produced in collaboration with SBS Persian.

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7 min read
Published 16 March 2024 6:12pm
Updated 18 March 2024 12:01pm
By Liam Murphy, Sandra Fulloon
Source: SBS


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