Muslims’ means of sustenance in Baha’is hands
Ali Muhammad Khan Movaqqeruddoleh
Republished by: Bahaismiran
Written by: Late Ahmad Allahyari
Abdul Hussein Naeemi who was working with spy department of English embassy became the chairman of secret committee of this embassy. He had an affective role in the internal and external political affairs of Iran along with Alen Charls the first secretary of English embassy in Tehran directed by Miss Ann Lambton- the famous English spy in Tehran who later on became master of university in England.
Earlier the second half of 1320s, Abdul Hussein Naeemi quit cooperating with the English embassy and started trading specially purchasing and selling land in Tehran city. However, he continued his cooperation with the English embassy and intelligent service to the end of his life. Because of cooperating with the English, he earned an enormous wealth. He bought a remarkable parts of the lands of Keshavarz street, North Kargar street, Vali Asr Ave, and Yusuf Abad region- belonged to trustee company (the center Baha’i endowments). He doubled his wealth by the increase in land price.
Naeemi had two daughters called Mahboubeh and Maliheh. Maliheh was the major general Parviz Khosravani’s wife –the owner of Taj sport club- who was the commander of the gendarmerie of the country for a while and was the vice prime minister and the chairman of Physical education organization. Mahboubeh got married with Mohsen Naeemi. Mahboubeh and her husband emigrated to Johannesburg sent by Akka universal house of justice to proselytize for the deviant cult of Baha’ism. Now, they are in charge of new-turned Baha’i elements in central and the South Africa.
Maliheh Naeemi got married with Parviz Khosravani with whom she fell in love without her father’s agreement; so Abdul Hussein Naeemi threatened her to be deprived of heritage. However, Khsravani pretended to be interested in Baha’ism and joined it in a formal ceremony in the presence of Muhammad Ali Varqa (Shoqi Rabbani’s delegation and one of supreme Baha’i people). Nevertheless because he was Baha’i, he had asked his wife’s relatives not to reveal the secret of being Baha’i.
Because Baha’is had an important role in the victory of Reza Khan’s coup, thy received their awards after Reza Kahn ruled by occupying sensitive governmental posts. In Seyyed Ziauddin Tabatabaee’s cabinet, one of the Iranian Baha’i heads called Movaqqeruddule became of distributing Muslim’s means of sustenance during World War I years. Those years, Baha’is were in charge of distributing Sugar and clothes coupon.