000 03506nam a22002297a 4500
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020 _a9798985669701
040 _cNew Zealand National Baha'i Reference Library
100 _91459
_aFarsheed Ferdowsi
245 _aUnder the Staircase: A Martyr's Journey
246 _aRemembering Fatollah Ferdowsi (1818-January 4, 1982)
260 _aNashville, TN
_bJazab Press
_c2022
300 _axviii, 19-459, illus
505 _aUnder the Staircase is a biography of Fatollah Ferdowsi, a remarkable man who was executed by the Islamic Republic of Iran on the morning of January 4, 1982. His only crime was his belief. He was a member of the Baha'i Faith, a persecuted minority in Iran. The regime gave him a choice: "Recant your faith and go free, or you will die." Fatollah remained steadfast. He chose faith over lifeā€”the eternal over the ephemeral. Under the Staircase is more than a story of the unjust killing of an innocent man. It is much more than that. It is the spiritual triumph of a man over the awesome power of the state. The Islamic Republic imprisoned and tortured Fatollah. They tried to force him to utter the words, "I reject the Baha'i Faith and agree to become a Muslim." His response was a knowing smile. The Islamic Republic seized his assets and belongings and promised their return if Fatollah would simply recant his faith. His response was a nonchalant shrug. "My faith can't be bought." The Islamic Republic condemned him to death unless he signed a piece of paper that said, "I renounce my faith." Fatollah's response was "Never!" So, the Islamic Republic crushed Fatollah's body, but could not vanquish his soul. Fatollah Ferdowsi's journey to martyrdom is meticulously narrated by his youngest son, Farsheed. His preparation for writing Under the Staircase started in the mid-1980s, a few years after his father's execution. Farsheed felt a burning desire to write a book about his father's life. He began to collect and read articles, letters, memoirs, and books about the persecution of the Baha'is in Iran in general, and the events related to his father's life in particular. To comprehend the powerful force that drove Fatollah Ferdowsi throughout his eventful life, one needs to understand the Baha'i Faith. His life story is deeply intertwined with his religion. A number of chapters in Under the Staircase are devoted to the history, teachings, and administrative structure of the Baha'i Faith in order to provide the proper framework for Fatollah's story. Likewise, a basic history of Iran during the second half of the nineteenth century to the present, and the convulsion of the Islamic Revolution are presented for context. Under the Staircase is, in a larger sense, the story of the entire community of Iran's Baha'is, who have endured more than a century and a half of severe persecution, and who have responded to their predicament with determination to do whatever they can, in the face of unrelenting indignities and injustice, to preserve their identity and to work for the good of their country. Under the Staircase is a story from Iran. Yet it is not merely an Iranian story. In it, there are lessons for both the oppressors and the oppressed across the world.
600 0 _91460
_aFatollah Ferdowsi
650 0 _9170
_aBiography
_vBaha'i Faith
650 0 _aPersecution
_vBaha'i Faith
_zIran
_9371
650 0 _9926
_aMartyrdom
_vBaha'i Faith
942 _2ddc
_cBOOK
999 _c30608
_d30608