About Ghollam Arash Nikbin

Ghollam Arash Nikbin came to the United States in 1975 on a scholarship from the Shah of Iran.  He learned to speak English at Columbia University and earned an M.B.A. from Long Island University in February 1979.

That same year saw the overthrow of the Iranian government by supporters of the Ayatollah Khomeini.  Now American-educated, Mr. Nikbin knew he would not be welcomed by his homeland’s new fundamentalist regime and decided to remain in the United States, accepting a position with Merrill-Lynch in March 1979.

He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1991.

In 1993, he decided to return to his family in Iran, having not seen them in 18 years.  He was married there in 1994.  Near the end of his wedding celebration, someone observed (through a window) boys dancing with their mothers – a violation of Islamic law which resulted in the immediate arrest of all in attendance.  Mr. Nikbin was sentenced to 40 lashes for this ‘crime’.

Little did he know his troubles were just beginning.  The land of his birth was certainly no longer his home.  Unable to accept the changes that had taken place since he left, he discussed with a friend the tenets of the Mormon faith (to which he had converted in 1982), not realizing the extent of this crime under Islamic law.  A neighbor learned of the conversion, and reported it.  When other neighbors informed him and his wife that the authorities were asking questions about him, the couple knew it was time for him to leave.

When he tried to return to the United States he was arrested at the airport.  The penalty this time: death by decapitation.

But first, the Revolutionary Guard wanted to find out if more such hardened criminals might be in their midst, so he was imprisoned and subjected to various forms of ‘enhanced interrogation techniques’, never knowing when they came for him if it was for more torture or finally his execution.

In November 1995 his family managed to bribe doctors to declare him insane at the time of his baptism, sparing him the death sentence but subjecting him to forced medication in a mental hospital.  From there, it was back to prison to be re-educated – along with weekly ‘medication’. Finally in December 1998, the combination of serious illness and more bribes finally secured his release and eventual permission to seek treatment in the United States.

His wife and daughter, however, would not be granted permission to leave.  They were the government’s insurance against him speaking out about his ordeal.

Thanks to the support of friends, his Church, and many others, most notably U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch and a foreign Embassy in Iran, the Nikbin family was finally reunited in the summer of 1999.

In a most appropriate irony, they arrived together in New York City on July 4th.  His little girl, now 3 1/2 and understandably frightened by the fireworks display, asked what was happening.  ”Those,” her father explained, “are the fires of freedom.”

The Nikbin Family, reunited in Germany, 1999

The Nikbin Family, reunited Spring 1999, Frankfurt Airport, Germany

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After many years of struggle (both in court and with many serious health issues resulting from his beatings and forced medication) Mr. Nikbin, in a landmark ruling, was granted judgments in U.S. Federal Court against the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Republican Guard, and others.  Never before has a sovereign state, as opposed to individuals or government agencies, been held accountable in this manner for torture.  He has vowed to use any money he is able to collect to fight for the ouster of the oppressive regime in Iran.  But to collect, he will have to have the judgment enforced outside of the United States.  (See Letter from Dr. William F. Pepper). 

Ghollam Arash Nikbin
E-Mail: info@nikbin.org

G. Nikbin in Lafayette Park, Washington, D.C., May 15, 2005

G. Nikbin in Lafayette Park, Washington, D.C., May 15, 2005

Outside United Nations, New York City, June 12, 2005

In front of United Nations, New York City, June 12, 2005

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In front of CNN Center, New York, NY, June 8, 2008

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