Anonymous ID: f06b9b June 28, 2018, 4:51 a.m. No.1938332   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1938155

 

Maybe that's why No Name supports the MEK/Rajavi Cult. They separate children from their parents and then undergo years of brainwashing in Mujahedeen schools in France… trafficking, sexual abuse as well (https://8ch.net/qresearch/res/1360191.html#1360396). And now they form the groups of protesters in Iran. They are shipped into the country. The good people of Iran don't want have anything to do with the MEK after all those years they terrorized the country, fought against Iran with Saddam Hussein, and killed scientists in cooperation with Mossad.

 

The Cult of Rajavi

 

"As the leaders like to boast, the Mujahedeen is a family affair. (We have three generations of martyrs: grandmothers, mothers, daughters.) Most of the girls I was meeting had grown up in Mujahedeen schools in Ashraf, where they lived separated from their parents. Family visits were allowed on Thursday nights and Fridays. When Iraq invaded Kuwait, many of these girls were transported to Jordan and then smuggled to various countries – Germany, France, Canada, Denmark, England, the United States – where they were raised by guardians who were usually Mujahedeen supporters.

 

When they were 18 or 19, many of them decided to come back to Iraq and fill the ranks of the youngest Mujahedeen generation. Though decided is probably not the right word, since from the day they were born, these girls and boys were not taught to think for themselves but to blindly follow their leaders. ''Every morning and night, the kids, beginning as young as 1 and 2, had to stand before a poster of Massoud and Maryam, salute them and shout praises to them'', Nadereh Afshari, a former Mujahedeen deep-believer, told me.

 

Afshari, who was posted in Germany and was responsible for receiving Mujahedeen children during the gulf war, said that when the German government tried to absorb Mujahedeen children into their education system, the Mujahedeen refused. Many of the children were sent to Mujahedeen schools, particularly in France.

 

The Rajavis, Afshari went on to say, ''saw these kids as the next generation's soldiers. They wanted to brainwash them and control them.'' Which may explain the pattern to their stories: a journey to self-empowerment and the enlightenment of self-sacrifice inspired by the light and wisdom of Maryam and Massoud."

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/13/magazine/the-cult-of-rajavi.html