Open letter to Maryam Rajavi from an Iranian woman has never seen her sister in her life.
Mona Hussein Nejad: I have never seen My older sister who lives in Camp Liberty in Baghdad throughout my life
Mrs. Maryam Rajavi,
After greetings, I am Mona Hussein Nejad – 31 years old, I was an infant aged adult only 10 days had been fired from the bosom of my mother and her milk into tears and wailing ongoing left in the bosom of my grandmother in Tehran. My father and mother with my sister fled out of Iran secretly from the oppression of the Iranian regime within a large number of members of the PMOI thirty-one years ago. I am a youngest daughter of martyr mujahid Farideh Karim Zadeh and the younger sister of Zainab Hussein Nejad one of the residents of Camp Al-Hurriye (Liberty), the headquarter of the PMOI near Baghdad airport.
I cried for the lean years eager to see my mother, looking for her lap intimate freshener tenderly motherhood a lap, who I did not experience it, but for only ten days. So I stayed sighing to see her for the first time in my life, I was 18 years of age, revealing that I lost my mother a few years ago and my waiting will not end up for to see her.
But I ask if my waiting will end up for to see my sister Zainab who have not seen her in my life. I remember that when I was a teenager I wished that my parents had taken me also with them, and I told myself: Blessed sister Zainab who lived with my mom and dad, but I did not know that she was living with the families who do not care about us after the death of our mother, and she grew up under the difficult environment, but today I wish that they were not taking Zainab with them but they left her here to live and we grow up together and share our sorrows and joys and share each other’s concerns, and sufferings.
Mrs. Rajavi,
I have not seen and necked my sister Zainab for more than thirty years now, and I have not heard any news about her safety also, especially after the terrorist attacks on camp Ashraf and camp Al-Hurriye (Liberty) in Iraq, and I do not have information about her conditions. I ask your Excellency as the leadership of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran, to order her to contact me so that at least I hear her voice to be sure about her safety and health, or allow us to see and embrace each other for the first time in our lives so that I smell odor of our martyr mother because she has grown and nurtured for many years in the bosom of my mother. I do not know if the relentless struggle against the government established in Iran may have kept something in the heart of the emotions of motherhood and the love that binds sisters or not. If there had remained something of it you can understand my feelings and my sense. I traveled to Baghdad a year ago and asked officials in People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran through the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, the United Nations and the Iraqi Human Rights Ministry to meet my sister Zainab, or at least I see her, even remotely, so I went for this purpose to the gate of Camp Al-Hurriye (Liberty) before the plane at Baghdad airport adjacent to the camp takes-off to return to Iran, but officials in the organization did not allow us to meet and see each other so I went back to my homeland with tearful eyes.
Mrs. Rajavi,
I would like to ask you the followings:
1 – to give my sister Zainab Hussein Nejad who lives in Camp Al-Hurriye (Liberty) the opportunity to contact me even if it is a short call to be sure about her safety.
2 – Do not let my waiting to see and hug my sister goes ,God forbid, such as my waiting to see my late mother.
3 – Lift the restrictions from the residents of the camp and let them contact their families to end their concerns about the safety of their relatives there.
I thank your Excellency in advance.
Mona Hussein Nejad
2 February 2014