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Friday, 27 December 2019

Me and Nazanine Zaghari-Radcliffe

Some weeks ago I found myself talking to Richard Radcliffe.  We'd just watched Nazanine's Story.  It was a play about his family and events of the past 3 and half years. The play was about the arbitrary detention his of wife Nazanine in an Iranian jail. She'd been detained at Tehran airport on her way home to London from a regular visit to her family with her then 21 month old daughter.  The play tracked her detention in April 2016 to the present when, in real life their daughter Gabriella has just returned to live in London with her father Richard Radcliffe; Nazanine's husband.  The 5-year old girl is now disconnected from her mother and the family she has known for the past 3 and a half years and Nazanine is still in Evin prison for allegations of  plotting against the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

I watched the play at the Lakeside Theatre, University of Essex with my Iranian born son Ben.  I'd had mixed feelings about going to see the play.  Part of me wanted to ignore the horror, to turn away, close my eyes and put my hands over my ears so as not to hear their cries, not to remember. I didn't want to get upset and get distracted from my mission to just get on with my life. To get on with my life because I'm not in Evin prison today.  I often think to myself - hey, I'm not in prison today - but it's never a very happy or particularly liberating realisation. Because there's Nazanin Zahari Radcliffe and at least 30 other dual nationals that whose lives are being spent in arbitrary detention in Iranian jails.

Since the first alarming news of Nazanine's detention I'd been following the horror as it's unfolded.  Each press release reporting the unlucky arbitrary detention allowed me to get immersed in their story.  Those headlines in the Guardian giving updates on Nazanine's detention somehow served to ease my breath, her trials and their anguish gave me an uncomfortable sense of well-being.  Following thier story allowed me to relax and take stock of where I was at.  I was not in prison. There's an episode in my life-story that I don't talk about much. I keep it quiet because it's an experience that is awkward to share. It remains buried: deep under a pile of more easily relatable anecdotes and life experiences.  At times I have told and been left feeling like some kind of paraniod fantasist. If I do talk about it I've learned that it's best to keep it light-hearted and easily digestable.  It's becaome a survival story.
 
Now I'm safe, living another episode of my life-story and I'm living as a regular, ordinary person.  Living in a secure home with a job that just about pays the bills if I'm resourceful. I didn't act on the job, offer, I'm not a spy and I'm not in prison.   Life is OK for me these days.  The panic attacks are less frequent and my body is less uptight and my outlook is more often upwards at the clouds and less around corners.  I can now walk up and down the streets in daylight and at night, cycle around town and hop on and off buses and trains feeling the freedom of anonymity.  I carry a mobile phone and leave it switched on becauase I have no reason to think I'm of any concern for the authorities.  Some habits haven't changed. I still like to run. I feel safe if I can run. So I keep fit and alert. I've learned to expect the unexpected and to feel safe in the knowledge that I'm prepared for fight or flight just in case.

I'd wanted to watch the play with my Ben. I wanted Ben to know what it is to be half Iranian;.to have 2 bloodlines from politically opposed countries; to hold 2 passports and to have 2 alliegances. I'd hoped the play would communicate what it means to be a trans-national. Watching the play, I'd felt a deep connection to their story and wanted to talk to Richard Radcliffe who'd been sitting in the front row, watching actors portray the horror of his life over the past 3 and half years. After the performance Ben and I walked down the steps of the auditorium and approached Richard who was in conversation with actors, the producer and academics from the Human Rights Centre.

We got his attention, he looked at me, shook my hand kindly and there was so  much I wanted to say but just as his wife is stuck in Evin prison the words were stuck in my head.  I tried to say thank you for sharing, thanking him was offensive, as if we'd been suitably entertained by this horror so my next idea was to say I can't imagine how horrific this is for you.  No, I couldn't say that because I could imagine it. Maybe I could say I understand what you're going through.  Fuck, no I don't really understand, my experience doesn't justify saying that I understand their experience.  My understanding is a very superficial understanding of their deep and ongoing torment. Then I came up with the word connection.  Yes, that's it, I feel connected to your ...   Oh shit, to their ... what? He's been framing it as their story but I couldn't use that term, this isn't just a story, it's real and traumatic and is ongoing, he's living it. It's their life. I can't say it's a story to his face. Neither can I simply say that I liked the play, it would be like saying thanks, that was entertaining, what's on at Lakeside next Tuesday?  couldn't even bring myself to say it was good or just that I enjoyed the evening.   I looked at Richard, knowing his wife is locked up in Evin prison  looked around at the others, the actors in the play the host from the Essex Uni Human Rights centre, at my son Ben standing beside me and then I looked back at Richard, noticing his thinning hair and said,
'I feel a deep connection with your case'.

Watching the play, shaking hands with Richard Radcliffe and hearing of the family's new challenges as their daughter Gabriella adapts to life in London all enabled me to express huge my sense of relief.  But that sense of relief is matched by feelings of guilt. Guilt is an odd feeling. Why should I be feeling guilty just because I'm not in prison today? I suppose it could be understood as survivor's guilt.  It's survivors guilt because Nazanine's detention is arbitrary.

arbitrary |ˈɑːbɪt(rə)ri|
adjective
1 based on random choice or personal whim, rather than any reason or system: an arbitrary decision.


Nazanine Zaghari-Radcliffe was in Iran to visit her family. She wasn't there to plot against the regime.  Her detention is arbitrary and cruel.  It's an unbearable injustice.

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