The whole situation makes me think a lot about my time in Turkey. The video and pictures (now limited by government restrictions) reminded me of the people and cityscapes of Turkey. The political divide reflected in the division between Ahmadinejad's and Mousavi's supporters is similar in Turkey as well. On the right are middle-class, conservative (but not radical) Muslims (just like the support base of the Turkish AK Party). On the left are the young, secular, sometimes upper class and wealthy. While it seems that Mousavi probably won the election, don't underestimate the support that middle class conservatives could put behind Ahmadinejad.
Seeing the video of the streets filled with people crying out for freedom makes something rise up in my heart. It is so right for these people to seek justice and truth. The repression and lies that they live under are so wrong. That people are shot in the street for exposing a lie is the basest kind of wickedness. Certainly, people don't have to be Muslims to engage in this kind of sin, but I think Islam equips the tyrants in Iran with a weapon that is hard to oppose in their culture.
Hearing about the events in Iran also makes me think of the Iranian friends I had in Turkey. Two students in particular, one a nominal Muslim trying to enter university in Turkey. His father, a doctor in Iran, supported him, his mother, and his sister and their relatively free lives in Turkey. A bit of a playboy, he told me stories of underground drinking parties in Iran and cursed the conservative government's restrictions of freedom. I was invited to an "iftar" (the daily feast at sundown during Ramadan that breaks the day's fast) at the apartment he and his mother lived in. We ate the meal according to Islamic tradition while across the room sat a liquor cabinet well stocked with Western alcohol. I think his family is representative of the Shah's Iran.
The other, a true refugee, was in Turkey trying to earn a spot in university in Belgium where his uncle lives. He had rejected Islam and was open-minded spiritually. He blamed Islam for destroying true Persian culture. Hateful towards the the government, he feared being forced to return to Iran where he would have to serve in the military of a government that he hated.
In Turkey I also met Iranian Christians living as refugees in Turkey, often on their way to Europe or the US. I pray for the thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands of Christians underground in Iran. The Gospel has gone forth even under the Islamic Republic (Jesus did say His Church is unstoppable - Matt. 16:18) I've heard stories of what God is doing, from people who know, that give me goosebumps.
Pray that these events will lead to greater religious freedom. Pray that the government would be further exposed and hearts turned toward true hope in Jesus. Pray with me that God would sovereignly bring justice and freedom from the chaos.
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