@Odin
Je pense que vous oubliez le zoroastrisme
Vous faites bien d’en parler .... mais vous oubliez de dire que eux aussi sont persécutés en Iran, hier comme aujourd’hui :
After the Muslim conquest of Persia, Zoroastrians were given dhimmi status and subjected to persecutions ; discrimination and harassment began in the form of sparse violence.[11] Those paying Jizya were subjected to insults and humiliation by the tax collectors.[12][13][14] Zoroastrians who were captured as slaves in wars were given their freedom if they converted to Islam.
(...)
The 1979 Islamic Revolution was equally traumatic for the remaining Zoroastrians, and their numbers reduced drastically.[79][80] Immediately after the revolution, during Bazargan’s premiership, Muslim revolutionaries « walked into the main Zoroastrian fire temple in Tehran and removed the portrait of the Prophet Zoroaster and replaced it with one of [Ayatollah] Khomeini ».[81]
Iran is regarded by the United Nations and other non-governmental organizations as among the world’s worst offenders against freedom of religion — alongside Saudi Arabia and Sudan.
Members of religious minorities are, by law and practice, barred from
being elected to a representative body (except to the seats in the
Majles reserved for minorities, as provided for in the Constitution) and
from holding senior government or military positions. They also suffer
discrimination in the legal system, receiving lower awards in injury and
death lawsuits, and incurring heavier punishments, than Muslims.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_Zoroastrians