Thursday, July 29, 2010
[The following, by bataween, is crossposted from Point of No Return.]
Karmel Melamed, then a toddler, with his father, before their departure from Iran
It was the cruel execution of their relative Ebi, a young man of 30, which caused Karmel Melamed and his family to flee Iran. Without personal experience of the random brutality of the Ayatollahs' regime, the Melameds might still be living in Iran today. Writing in the Jewish Journal of Los Angeles Karmel Melamed movingly recalls that terrible time 30 years ago:
"I will never forget when I first saw his body -- they shot him with one bullet at point-blank range in his heart," my father, George Melamed, shared with me a few weeks ago, reflecting on his friend -- and brother-in-law's brother -- Ebrahim (Ebi) Berookhim, who was executed in an Iranian prison on July 31, 1980, at the age of 30. For the past 30 years, my father has rarely spoken of this young Jewish man's killing and the circumstances that propelled our family's abrupt flight from Iran. During these past three decades, he's tried to forget how Ebi was unjustly accused of being an Israeli and American spy, then ruthlessly murdered by Iran's radical Islamic regime.
"Yet as Ebi's 30th yahrzeit approached this month, my parents, our relatives and some local Iranian Jews who knew this successful young Jewish businessman finally opened up to me about this tragedy that completely transformed all of our lives.
"With news of the Iranian government's pursuit of nuclear weapons continually filling today's airwaves, the story of Ebi's killing serves as a stark reminder to us all of the continuing brutality and illogical nature of the ayatollahs' regime in Iran. The Iranian government's inhumane practice of random arrests and imprisonment of innocent individuals continues to this day: On July 31, 2009, the same date that Ebi died but 29 years later, three American hikers were randomly taken hostage in Iran for mistakenly crossing a border; they remain unfairly imprisoned. Last year, Roxana Saberi, an Iranian American journalist based in Tehran, was arrested on false charges of espionage -- she was one of the lucky ones; after immense pressure from abroad, the Iranian authorities released her.
"Ebi, my relative, wasn't so lucky. And the pain of losing him continues to haunt our family three decades later."
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Remembering Ebi: why we fled Iran.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.solomonia.com/cgi-bin/mt4/mt-renamedtb.cgi/18407








Leave a comment to: Remembering Ebi: why we fled Iran
Subscribe to This Thread Without Leaving a Comment
Comment Info and Policy:
1) You must have Javascript enabled in your browser in order to comment (blame the spammers). If you don't know what that is, you're probably fine.
2) HTML is on, so basic html should work. Raw links will be made auto-clickable, too, so even if you don't know html you can just paste in the link and it should work fine. Keep the "http://" in it.
3) Comments are generally unmoderated, which means I don't necessarily agree with the tone and tenor of everything posted. In fact, sometimes people post things they don't really mean just to make other people look bad. The internet is an anonymous place for the most part. That said...
4) I welcome you to post here. I'd love to have your input, agree, disagree or just offer a different data point, really. If I didn't want any participation, I'd turn off comments. Be aware, however, that this blog and the comments section exist for my entertainment. Therefore, I reserve ALL RIGHTS here, including the right to remove any or all comments on nothing more than a whim. Please don't even bother complaining. I'm the one providing the space and the free news and thought buffet. I don't owe anyone anything.
Anyone who posts here will be treated as my guest. That means I'm happy to be polite as a default, but if anyone is rude to the host they'll be unceremoniously shown the door.
It may pay to recall a famous line from the Tom Selleck magnum opus, Mr. Baseball: "Jack-san, you want Yoji's advice about the babes, you come to Yoji with respect."
5) Enjoy your stay!