Search This Blog

Saturday, September 6, 2025

Iran paves over mass grave of 1979 revolution victims, turning it into a parking lot

 A desert-like patch of sand and scrawny trees in the largest cemetery in Iran’s capital has been the final resting place for decades for some of the thousands killed in the mass executions that followed Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Now, Lot 41 at the sprawling Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in Tehran is becoming a parking lot, with their remains likely beneath asphalt.

Images from Planet Labs PBC show the parking lot being laid over the site, where opponents of Iran’s nascent theocracy and others were rapidly buried following their executions at gunpoint or by hanging.

This satellite photo provided by Planet Labs PBC shows how Iran officials paved over Lot 41, where some of those executed in the chaos after Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution were buried.AP

The site, long monitored by surveillance cameras searching for any sign of dissent or remembrance at what officials have referred to as the “scorched section,” has seen state-sponsored demolition in the past, with grave markers vandalized and overturned.

Iranian officials have acknowledged the recent decision to build the parking, without going into detail about those buried there.

That’s as a United Nations special rapporteur in 2024 described Iran’s destruction of graveyards as an effort to “conceal or erase data that could serve as potential evidence to avoid legal accountability” over its actions.

“Most of the graves and gravestones of dissidents were desecrated, and the trees in the section were deliberately dried out,” said Shahin Nasiri, a lecturer at the University of Amsterdam who has researched Lot 41. “The decision to convert this section into a parking lot fits into this broader pattern and represents the final phase of the destruction process.”

Last week, both a Tehran deputy mayor and the cemetery’s manager acknowledged the plans to create a parking lot on the site.

“In this place, hypocrites of the early days of the revolution were buried and it has remained without change for years,” Tehran’s deputy mayor Davood Goudarzi told journalists in footage aired by state television. “We proposed that the authorities reorganize the space. Since we needed a parking lot, the permission for the preparation of the space was received. The job is ongoing in a precise and smart way.”

Satellite images show construction

The satellite photos show the work began in earnest at the start of August. An Aug. 18 image shows about half of Lot 41 freshly paved over, with construction material still on site.

Trucks and piles of asphalt can be seen at the site, suggesting work continued.

The reformist newspaper Shargh quoted Mohammad Javad Tajik, who oversees the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery, as saying the parking lot would help people visit a neighboring lot, where authorities plan to bury those killed in the Iran-Israel war in June.

A major airstrike campaign by Israel killed prominent military generals and others, with government officials putting the death toll at more than 1,060 people killed, with an activist group putting it at over 1,190.

A general view of Tehran’s skyline on June 24, 2025.AP

The decision to repurpose the graveyard appears to clash with Iran’s own regulations, which allow for a cemetery to repurpose land where internments took place after more than 30 years — as long as families of the dead agree with the decision.

An outspoken lawyer in Iran, Mohsen Borhani, publicly criticized the decision to pave over the graveyard as neither moral nor legal in an interview with Shargh.

“The piece was not only for executed and political people. Ordinary people were buried there, too,” he reportedly said.

It remains unclear whether human remains sit beneath the layer of asphalt or if Iranian authorities moved the bones of the dead there.

However, Iran has destroyed other graveyards in recent years for those killed in its 1988 mass execution that saw thousands put to death, leaving their bones there.

Authorities have also vandalized cemeteries for the Baha’i, a religious minority in the country long targeted, and those home to protesters who have died in recent nationwide protests against Iran’s theocracy from the 2009 Green Movement to the 2022 Mahsa Amini demonstrations.

“Impunity for atrocities and crimes against humanity has been building for decades in the Islamic Republic,” said Hadi Ghaemi, the executive director of the New York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran. “There is a direct line between the massacres of the 1980s, the gunning down of demonstrators in 2009, and the mass killings of protesters in 2019 and 2022.”

Massive cemetery is the final resting place for many

Behesht-e Zahra, or the “Paradise of Zahra,” opened in 1970 on what was then the rural outskirts of Tehran.

As hundreds of thousands of Iranians flooded into the capital under the shah as the country’s oil wealth skyrocketed, pressure on Tehran’s cemeteries had grown to a point that the burgeoning metropolis needed a place for all of its dead as well.

The cemetery has long been a resting place for some of the most famous Iranians since — and a point where history turned for the country.

Iranian officials have acknowledged the recent decision to build the parking lot but did not go into detail about those buried there.ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

On his return to Iran in 1979 after years in exile, Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini traveled first to the cemetery, where some of those killed in the uprising against the shah had been buried.

Khomeini’s cleric courts later issued death sentences for those now interred at Lot 41.

After his death in 1989, Iran built a towering, golden-domed mausoleum for Khomeini connected to the cemetery. As Behesht-e Zahra grew, Lot 41 found itself surrounded by an ever-expanding number of lots for burials.

Nasiri said his research with others suggests there are 5,000 to 7,000 burial sites within Lot 41 of those Iran “considered religious outlaws,” whether communists, militants, monarchists or others.

“Many survivors and family members of the victims are still searching for the graves of their loved ones,” Nasiri said. “They seek justice and aim to hold the perpetrators accountable. The deliberate destruction of these burial sites adds an additional obstacle to efforts of truth-finding and the pursuit of historical justice.”

https://nypost.com/2025/09/06/world-news/iran-paves-over-mass-grave-of-1979-revolution-victims-turning-it-into-a-parking-lot/

Billionaire Zohran Mamdani donor bankrolling national ‘woke math’ movement

 The billionaire heiress who recently donated $250,000 to a super PAC supporting socialist Zohran Mamdani’s NYC mayoral campaign is bankrolling a national push to bring “woke math” into public schools — a twisted bid to turn kids into socialist revolutionaries, critics told The Post.

Philanthropist Liz Simons, daughter of late hedge-fund billionaire Jim Simons, oversees a foundation with a near-billion-dollar endowment trashing traditional race-neutral math in favor of race-obsessed leftist lessons inserting social justice principles into many aspects of students’ studies.

This approach, embraced in states like California but rejected in Florida, include thrusting racial and LGBTQ themes into previously straightforward lesson plans.

For instance, a lesson on how to use graphs to perform math could take a huge detour with teachers trying to drive home the point that there’s income disparity between white Americans and people of color.

Liz Simons, a billionaire heiress who recently donated $250,000 to a super PAC supporting socialist Zohran Mamdani’s NYC mayoral campaign, is also among the top advocates bankrolling a national movement to bring woke math to public schools.Getty Images

Mamdani’s education platform includes halting charter school growth, expanding universal pre-K, and eliminating selective admissions standards for middle schools to help desegregate classrooms.

Although the topic of woke math has yet to surface on the campaign trail, critics fear Simons’ support signals Mamdani will embrace it.

Yiatin Chu, of Parent Leaders for Accelerated Curriculum & Education and the Asian Wave Alliance, said she had “grave concerns” about the direction of public schools under Mamdani and that Simons’ influence is “troubling.”

An example of “woke” math, which goes well beyond straightforward arithmetic.NY Post Design

“Woke math lowers the bar without helping black students. While test results show gains among black and Hispanic students, the gap with Asian and white students hasn’t closed. We hope Mamdani doesn’t undo progress.”

“This megadonor may impact his chancellor choice or NYC’s math curriculum,” she said.

Woke lessons teach students more about “how to be political activists” than actual math, insisted Jean Hahn, a public-school parent in Queens.

“I’m already concerned as a parent that Mamdani has stated he will resume” many of former far-left Mayor Bill de Blasio’s “diversity initiatives, which were racially toxic,” said Hahn.

Mamdani’s campaign has been aided by a super PAC called “New Yorkers for Lower Costs” that had raised more than $2.1 million as of Friday — including the $250,000 gift from Simons.Robert Miller

Simons inherited a fortune after her father — a top mathematician turned hedge-fund legend — died in May 2024 with a net worth over $31 billion, and she’s not been shy about spending his money.

The Heising-Simons Foundation, co-founded by Simons and her philanthropist husband Mark Heising, has given millions to the woke math cause — including $1.7 million since 2023 to the Racial Justice in Early Mathematics Project at Chicago’s Erikson Institute.

In Chicago, less than one in five public school students can do basic math, based on recent test scores.

In March, the foundation gave RJEM $800,000 to organize seminars, toolkits, and support for teachers adding “racial justice” to math classes. Two years earlier, it gave $900,000 for $7,000 teacher grants to promote “racial justice” through early math.

Jim Simons, a top mathematician who used his skills to make a killing as a hedge fund investor, left behind a net worth of more than $31 billion when he died last year.AP

From 2022 through 2023, Heising-Simons also gave at least $4 million to other groups backing woke math, including $630,825 to San Francisco-based Tandem Partners in Early Learning and $665,000 to Arizona’s Illustrative Mathematics, according to its latest available tax filings.

It also funded a “mathematics education” program in Alexandria, Va., encouraging K–2 students at one school to count picture book characters by race and create a racial scorecard — including tracking books with few white characters.

This type of math was rejected in Florida. Pictured: A math problem set banned in the state.Florida Department of Education

It was not immediately clear Friday how these students have fared since participating in the program.

However, Virginia schools ranked last in the U.S. — 51st among the 50 states and D.C. — in math recovery between 2019 and 2024 with Alexandria public schools students reading more than a grade level behind where they were pre-pandemic, according to the Nation’s Report Card released in January.

Yiatin Chu, a co-founder of Parent Leaders for Accelerated Curriculum & Education who also heads the Asian Wave Alliance political club, said she has “grave concerns” about Simons funding the pro-Mamdani super PAC.

Simons’ foundation and the Gates Foundation have jointly given $553,750 to TODOS Mathematics for All, an Arizona group promoting DEI practices and “anti-racist activism” in math instruction, according to a report by RealClearInvestigations.

The report also found “no credible research” proving the woke math approach improves performance.

Mamdani is the presumptive frontrunner heading into the November’s NYC mayoral election.Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post

Simons made the jaw-dropping $250,000 donation last month to New Yorkers for Lower Costs, a political action committee promoting Mamdani’s campaign, despite the mayoral-race frontrunner infamously claiming earlier on the campaign trail that billionaire’s shouldn’t exist.

Reps for Mamdani and Simons did not immediately return messages.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/06/us-news/billionaire-zohran-mamdani-donor-bankrolling-national-woke-math-movement/