Jewish, Baha’i leaders detained amid Iranian crackdown on spying

ISTANBUL (RNS) — After a 12-day war between Israel and Iran and a persisting ceasefire, more than 700 people have been arrested in Iran on accusations of spying for Israel, Iranian state media reported. Watchdog groups such as the Iran Human Rights nongovernmental organization have estimated the number is closer to 900.
Among those detained are Jewish and Baha’i leaders in Iran, including rabbis and community leaders. According to Human Rights Activists News Agency, a watchdog group focused on Iran, at least 35 Jews from Tehran and Shiraz have been interrogated by security forces since June 23. At least three Baha’is have also been arrested or disappeared since the war began, and nearly 20 Baha’i homes were raided by authorities, according to Iran Press Watch, an NGO that documents the rights of the Baha’i community in Iran.
Homayoun Sameyah Najafabadi, the sole Jewish member of Iran’s Parliament, denied the Jews detained were charged with spying for Israel. Instead, he said they were arrested for “unlicensed family celebrations” and were to be released.
However, the arrests come in the wake of a new law quickly pushed through the Iranian Parliament last week, which classifies cooperation with hostile states such as Israel and the United States as “efsad-fil-arz” or “corrupting on the earth,” leaving those convicted eligible for the death penalty. At least six people have already been executed by hanging since the June 24 ceasefire.
“The new parliamentary bill and widespread arrests under the pretext of espionage are part of efforts to intensify the repressive atmosphere in society to prevent protests,” Iran Human Rights director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam said in a statement. “Islamic Republic authorities know that the real threat to the regime’s survival is not Israeli spies, but the discontented Iranian citizens who reject an incompetent, corrupt and repressive government.”
Iran is believed to have a Jewish population of about 10,000, making it the largest Jewish center in the Middle East after Israel. Centered mostly in Tehran, Shiraz and Isfahan, the community maintains over 100 synagogues, dozens of kosher restaurants and several Jewish schools — frequently pointed to by the ayatollah’s regime to stress the state’s conflict is with the Israeli state, not Jews or Judaism. However, the Jewish population is a fraction of the nearly 100,000 Jews who lived in the country before the 1979 revolution, when it became an Islamic republic. Jews also have a history in Iran stretching back to biblical times.

Among the Iranian-Jewish diaspora, which has large communities in both the U.S. and Israel, experiences with antisemitism and antisemitic violence are a common part in many stories of emigration from Iran.
“The unfortunate reality for Iranian Jewry is that, on the surface, all appears well,” Rabbi Isaac Choua, a scholar of Jewish history in the Muslim world and a former liaison to Middle Eastern and North African Jewish communities for the World Jewish Congress, told RNS. “However, the diaspora community — based in Israel, the U.S., Europe and beyond — tells a different story. Even in conversations with family still in Iran, certain topics remain off limits.”
Iranian law is heavily based in Islamic jurisprudence and frequently distinguishes between Muslims, the recognized religious majority in the country, and unrecognized minorities such as the Baha’i. Many have argued that this dynamic has led to discrimination against Iran’s Jews, and ultimately, the execution of a Jewish man this past fall.
Expressing loyalty to Iran, Sameyah urged Jewish community members to avoid any form of private or public celebration, such as weddings and b’nai mitzvahs, in the immediate aftermath of the war.
“We are Iranians before we are Jews, and our Iranianness is more important than our Jewishness,” he told Iranian media last week.
“ … In these sensitive times, refrain from holding any kind of celebration, even in private homes or kindergartens,” he wrote, according to Israeli media. “I strongly advise you to take this final warning very seriously. We must not forget that any one of us — or our loved ones — could have been targeted.”

Sameyah also told Iranian media that in the nearly 50 years since the Islamic revolution, no member of the Jewish community had been arrested on espionage charges.
“Since the beginning of the revolution, not a single person from the Iranian Jewish community has been arrested for spying for any foreign country,” he said. “Since the beginning of the revolution, the position of the Jewish community has been to condemn the crimes of the Zionist regime.”
However, he ignored the 1999 arrest and imprisonment of 13 Jews in Shiraz, including a rabbi, Hebrew school teachers and a kosher butcher, on accusations of espionage.
Sameyah went on to equate Zionism’s relationship to Judaism with that of the Taliban or the Islamic State group to Islam.
Citing sources close to the Jewish community in Iran, Israeli media reported that those arrested were detained over interactions with family in Israel and online activities. Religious members of the Iranian Jewish diaspora have called for a prayer campaign on their behalf.
“We call on all Jews around the world to pray for our brothers and sisters in Iran,” read a message relayed by the Israeli ultra-Orthodox outlet Behadrei Haredim. “In the midst of the arrests, the Jewish community there needs much mercy from God.
“The detainees are being held in difficult conditions, completely cut off from their families, and are not allowed to make contact,” Iranian Jews reportedly told the outlet.
Iranian Jews aren’t the only minority group feeling the pressure. Another human rights group, Hengaw, reported last week that in Isfahan, neighbors and acquaintances of Baha’is were facing pressure to launch legal complaints against them — a tactic that Iran security forces began in 2023.
Unlike Iranian Jews, who have some official status under Iranian law, Baha’is — whose religion was founded in Iran in the 19th century — have no such protections. The community’s leadership has consistently been the target of repression, with successive Baha’i national council members arrested, executed or exiled.
Last year, Human Rights Watch released a report on the state of the Baha’i community in Iran, declaring the religious group’s repression and persecution a crime against humanity.
“The Islamic Republic’s repression of Baha’is, particularly after 1979, is enshrined in Iranian law and is official government policy. The country’s repressive laws and policies are zealously enforced by the country’s notorious security forces and judicial authorities,” the HRW report stated. “Human Rights Watch believes that the cumulative impact of authorities’ decades-long systematic repression is an intentional and severe deprivation of Baha’is’ fundamental rights and amounts to the crime against humanity of persecution.”