Friday, May 8, 2015

Others Comment about Maryam Rajavi

In many years people have told many things about Maryam Rajavi ,that you can write books about it, here are some of those  Comment about Maryam Rajavi.


A Majority in the U.S. House of Representatives, July 1992:
"The council has democratically elected a capable leader, a Muslim, Mojahed woman as an answer to Islamic fundamentalism."

425 British parliamentarians, June 1995:
“Support for the NCR and its President-elect, who reflects the aspirations of the wide spectrum of the  Iranian people, will expedite the establishment of democracy in Iran and contribute to the restoration of stability in the region.”

Senator Robert Torricelli, June 8, 1995:
"Members of this institution have now spoken in support of the recognition of the National Council of Resistance and in particular, Mrs. Rajavi's leadership."

Gary Ackerman, Member of the U.S. House of Representatives, July 28, 1997:
"The National Council of Resistance and its President-elect, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, have turned a new page in Iran's history. It is therefore necessary that this council and Mrs. Rajavi's presidency be supported internationally."

Georgie Anne Geyer, The Washington Times, August 26, 1994
"In my 30 years as a foreign correspondent, I have interviewed many "unusual" leaders -- but I do believe I have finally found the most stunningly unusual one. Her name is Maryam Rajavi; she has been elected the "future president of Iran" by the growing Iranian Resistance, and she is driving the women-hating mullahs of Iran crazy!
"As eloquent as she can be regarding freedom for Iranians -- and particularly freedom for women -- it soon becomes clear that this cultured 41-year-old woman is a figure to be watched... It is also Maryam Rajavi who is rapidly becoming the Rorschah blot of hope into which the long-suffering modern and liberal Iranians can read all kinds of hope... Meanwhile, she is becoming the symbol of something new -- the modest but active Islamic women."

Lord Eric Avebury, June 21, 1996:
"Her presence here [in London] has been noted by the Independent and the Times, which had previously included her in the list of the 100 most powerful women in the world... But nobody who has met Mrs. Rajavi and listened to her can possibly doubt that she reached the top because of her own qualities of leadership and her own commitment to the causes of democracy and human rights."

William Nygaard, Norwegian publisher, October 31, 1995:
"She is charismatic and has very interesting views about how Islam as a religion can be democratic in society, that there is no contradiction between Islam and democracy and human values."

Fouzieh Mehran, distinguished Egyptian writer, June 26, 1996:
"Her message is the message of future and her revolution is victorious. The zenith of our dreams embodies itself in Maryam Rajavi. I believe with her help, we will soon achieve victory. This revolution will soon triumph and change the course of history."

Nina Karin Monsen, Norwegian philosopher and author, July 12, 1996:
"Maryam's impressive compassion and historic character bespeak of a woman totally different from famous women of our history. In her political work for the future of Iran, she can do things which Norwegian women can only dream about. Her character and her call for freedom is indicative of an Islam based on love of humanity and light years away from a terrorist interpretation of the mullahs about Islam. Maryam Rajavi can be compared to such leaders as Abraham Lincoln, Mahatma Gandhi, and Nelson Mandela. She is also a great religious reformer, doing with Islam, what Martin Luther did with Catholicism. Maryam Rajavi can change history."

No comments:

Post a Comment