Éxito en Irán: El primer libro en Farsi sobre el Holocausto

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Dr. Ari Babaknia, an Iranian Jewish doctor based in Southern California,  spent 15 years working on what some viewed as a quixotic project: the first-ever  history book about the Holocaust in Farsi. But now the four-volume work—which  details the facts of the Holocaust from the rise of Nazism in Germany to the  final days of World War II and eventually chronicles the other genocides of the  20th century that occurred in Armenia, Bosnia, Cambodia, Rwanda, and Sudan—is  becoming a hit among the very audience Babaknia intended to reach: Iranian  Muslims.

“There are about 120 million-plus people in the world who speak Farsi, but  there has never been a book written in their mother language about the  Holocaust,” said Babaknia, an obstetrician-gynecologist by profession who said  he wrote the first draft of the work by hand.

Priced at $200 each, more than 2,000 copies have been sold—the vast majority  within the United States, according to booksellers, Babaknia said, and online to non-Jewish Farsi  readers. He has been invited to speak at more than a dozen Iranian mosques and  Iranian Muslim community organizations across the United States. In addition, he  has been interviewed by countless Farsi-language radio and satellite TV news  outlets based in the Los Angeles area that broadcast worldwide. He has also spoken to Jewish groups and garnered the attention of a wide variety of press.


It is perhaps fitting that Babaknia’s book should appear at the end of the term of office of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who earned himself worldwide notoriety by repeatedly denying the Holocaust and hosting several Holocaust-denial conferences featuring known neo-Nazis and Holocaust revisionists. As a result of Ahmadinejad’s statements about the Holocaust, Babaknia said his friends who travel to Iran frequently have informed him that his book has been very popular among average Iranians who bought the book through a Swedish book distributor.

“What Dr. Babaknia has done with this book is no easy task and nothing short  of remarkable,” said Massoud Sadr, an Iranian Muslim TV host of the  Farsi-language Pars TV program based in Southern California. “He has  chronicled every detail of the Holocaust in Farsi with such accuracy and raw  emotion that the reader truly obtains a real sense of this human calamity.”

Iranian-Americans of the Muslim, Baha’I, and Christian faiths said the  history of the Holocaust written in Farsi by Babaknia resonated with them,  especially since many of them have encountered suffering at the hands of Iran’s  current radical Islamic regime over the years.

“I believe Iranians living in the U.S. sympathize with the story of the Jews  and others who were ‘undesirables’ by the Nazis,” said Ali Massoudi, a  77-year-old Iranian Muslim journalist and former Farsi-language TV show host  living in Irvine, Calif. “These Iranians fled their homes in Iran more than  three decades ago and experienced similar executions, tortures, and  imprisonments at the hands of Iran’s current regime.” Babaknia added that  non-Jewish Iranians have welcomed him and his book because he has not presented  the Holocaust as a tragedy only for the Jewish people, but rather a tragedy for  all mankind.

“Jews were the victims Holocaust, but I don’t believe it was exclusively a  Jewish thing, and I do not think it belongs to the Jewish people—it belongs to  all humanity, it was the death and failure of Western civilization and  democracy,” he said. “If you present the Holocaust as a tragedy for all of  mankind, people tend to drop their guard and are able to better understand or  relate to this massive tragedy.”

Ironically, one group that has decidedly not embraced Babakina’s Holocaust  education project is Iranian  Jews. Despite the praise and interest Babaknia has received from non-Jewish  Iranians, the leadership of Southern California’s 40,000-strong Iranian Jewish  community has not been as receptive. He’s upset they have not invited him to  their events and engaged in the same type of community dialogues and education  about the Shoah that Muslims and other non-Jewish Iranians have done.

“I am baffled and disappointed at the lack of interest from Iranian Jews  about the Holocaust,” Babaknia said. “I am sick and tired of hearing people in  the community saying that they don’t want to get sad from reading this book—it’s  a story about more than a million children being killed. You’re supposed to get  sad! And what I said is, ‘Shame on those Iranian Jews who don’t want to know  about Auschwitz and what happened to their brothers and sisters at the hands of  the Nazis.’ ”

Leaders at Southern California’s Iranian Jewish Federation and Beverly  Hills-based Iranian Jewish Nessah Synagogue did not return calls for comment on  Babaknia’s book. But individual Iranian Jewish activists praised his efforts to  educate all Iranians about the Holocaust.

“For Farsi-speaking Jews, it is a must for them to connect and learn more  intimately and closely about how our fellow Jews perished during the Holocaust,”  said Dariush Fakheri, a Los Angeles-based Iranian Jewish activist. “Dr. Babaknia  has unselfishly and honestly presented this unique and vital opportunity to all  Farsi-speaking communities, and his book encourages us to deal with the biggest  human failure in the face of evil.”

Proceeds from the sale of book will go directly to Babaknia’s newly formed Memorah Foundation, a  nonprofit organization that is geared toward educating Farsi speakers worldwide  about the Holocaust. And Babaknia said he will continue to pursue his passion of  speaking to and educating Iranians and other groups about the Holocaust.

“Education is key but not enough,” he said. “You need to have passion,  understanding, and sensitivity to the suffering of others. Otherwise, another  Holocaust could happen.”

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