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Baha’is share pain of a persecuted past

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She eventually returned to SIU and graduated with a business administration degree. She and her sisters were granted refugee status, and her sisters came to live with her.

Panahi’s sisters, Mina and Parisa, live with their mother in Golf, along with Parisa’s husband and two children. Panahi said her mother, who spent nearly eight years in prison in Iran for her religious beliefs, taught her the strength of her Baha’i faith.

“She’s such a strong lady,” Panahi said of her mother. “Every time she talks about it, she says, you know what, there was a plan. At least right now we have our family.”

Bayzaee said the Baha’is are all family, and their persecution is just one more example of their resilience.

“Knowing that they belong to a group of Baha’is that have given the ultimate sacrifice — it just, it takes you to such a level of certitude and belief that you might not have otherwise had,” Bayzaee said. “You rise to that occasion. I think that’s what they did.”

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