Saturday, September 21, 2013

Jewish MP to accompany President Rouhani


Ciamak MorehSedgh greets Sayyed Hassan Khomeini, grandson of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini

When under international pressure, show how tolerant you are to your minorities.Well, that seems to be Iran's strategy. Enter arch-dhimmi Siamak MorehSedgh (Morsadegh), Iran's sole Jewish Parliamentarian to vouch for the absence of antisemitism in his country. The Times of Israel reports:

The Jewish parliament member set to accompany Iranian President Hasan Rouhani to a UN summit in New York next week is a critic of Israel who has dubbed its treatment of Palestinians “inhuman.”

 Siamak Moreh Sedgh, a medical doctor and the sole Jewish member of Iran’s 290-strong Majlis (parliament), told Reuters in May 2008 that Iran’s Jewish community would not mark Israel’s 60th anniversary. “We are in complete disagreement with the behavior of Israel,” Moreh Sedgh told the news agency, adding that in Gaza Israel displayed “anti-human behavior… they kill innocent people.”

 Prior to his selection as the Jewish representative to parliament in March 2008, Moreh Sedgh headed the country’s Jewish community, estimated at 9,000 according to a 2012 census. Five seats in parliament are reserved for Iran’s recognized religious minorities — one for a Jew, two for Christians and two for Zoroastrians.

 In an interview with Russia Today in 2010, Moreh Sedgh denied that anti-Semitism existed in Iran, claiming it was a uniquely European phenomenon. He highlighted the affiliation of the country’s Jews to Iranian culture, noting that he had served 12 months at the front during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

 “Jews are safe in Iran. That’s true. Nobody needs guards. There has never been a single instance of anti-Semitism in Iranian society. This phenomenon belongs to the European, Christian world. There is no anti-Semitic sentiment in Iran. We have no attacks on synagogues or cemeteries as happens in Paris. Just so you know, there are 15 synagogues in Tehran,” he said.

 Raz Zimmt, an Iran expert at Tel Aviv University’s Alliance Center for Iranian Studies, said this would not be the first time representatives of Iran’s religious minorities accompany the president to the UN gathering.

In 2009, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad brought along the five minority parliamentarians with him to the summit. “This is supposed to express [Iran's] so-called tolerance toward religious minorities,” Zimmt told The Times of Israel.

Read article in full

5 comments:

  1. well, I am not surpised. what else could he say?
    I myself when intervied at university (such a very long time ago)said that Nasser was good for Egypt!!!When I think of that, it gives me the creeps!!!
    sultana

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  2. another side of Iranian policy. Michael Rubin on Iranian Holocaust denial:

    http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2013/09/22/a-brief-history-of-iranian-holocaust-denial/

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  3. I suspect the 100,000 Persian Jews living in Israel in particular, and the remaining Persian Jewish diaspora, largely in California, would tell us that Morsedegh doesn't speak for them.

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  4. Morgh's children, meanwhile, will stay in Iran in the Revolutionary Guard's loving embrace.

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