Farah
Kenyan-born Canadian global mental health policy researcher and Free the Hikers campaign co-founder (for my beloved brother Josh)
Homepage: http://www.freethehikers.org
Posts by Farah

A Thousand Thanks ~ Your Friends, Josh, Sarah and Shane
Nov 24th
Dear Friends and Supporters,Recently, the three of us sat down in Shane’s Mom’s living room and read through some of the boxes of letters that you all have been sending us over the last two years. Although it was painful to have had to wait so long to read your words, it was also overwhelmingly beautiful to have them at last.
We realize that it also must be hard for all of you who wrote, many of you who have never even met us, to know that your letters were barred from getting though. We want you to know that the few bits and scraps that did get in gave us a taste of the vast support we had on the outside. The Iranian authorities responsible for holding us hostage were too cruel to give us most of your letters, but we felt connected to all of you despite that. That connection gave us incredible strength and faith that we would get though the pain of our detention and arrive at this day.
Every effort, no matter how seemingly small, added up. This campaign was somehow able to reach to the other side of the earth, to effect a government that prides itself on resisting pressure and eventually to open the doors of our prison cells and give us our lives back. The fact that such a diverse body of people around the world have found common ground in fighting the injustice done to us shows just how much we can achieve together. What we can do seems so much bigger now.
Sometimes it doesn’t seem long ago that the three of us were huddled together in the prison’s open air room, talking about the gratitude we felt for the lives we lived before prison and our hopes for a good life that still lay ahead. Now that it is here, we hope that the vibrant community that has formed around our imprisonment will stay together in some form. We hope that we all can support each other as we heal and use what we’ve learned to have an even bigger impact.
Know that this holiday season the three of us are beginning our lives again, the lives we’ve long been dreaming of. Tonight, when we sit down to share Thanksgiving dinner with our loved ones, we’ll be sending out a thousand thanks to all of you for helping make this happen.
Your Friends,
Josh, Sarah and Shane

Jason Puracal Marks One Year Held Captive in a Nicaraguan Prison: American Hikers Freed From Iran Urge Action
Nov 9th
Reposted from www.marketwatch.com
SEATTLE, Nov 09, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Friday, November 11, 2011, marks the one year anniversary of American Jason Puracal’s imprisonment in Nicaragua.
According to attorney Anna Tolin of the Tolin Law Firm, “Jason has endured filth, disease, and on-going violations of his human rights.” Adding, and “Despite a complete lack of evidence against him, Puracal was sentenced to 22 years on charges of drug trafficking, money laundering, and organized crime.”
Jason’s sisters, Janis and Jaime Puracal, have traveled to Nicaragua to remind Jason that his family, friends, and supporters have not given up in their tireless fight for his release.
Awareness of Jason’s case continues to spread. A powerful video chronicling Jason’s plight is now available at www.freejasonp.com and on YouTube. Sarah Shourd, Josh Fattal, and Shane Bauer, the American hikers recently freed from prison in Iran, also urge fellow Americans to support Jason’s release: http://youtu.be/kDwTZm6fpro
In addition, the “Friends of Amanda Knox” website has officially chosen their next case focus to be that of Jason Puracal: http://www.friendsofamanda.org/
Puracal had been living in the coastal community of San Juan del Sur with his wife, Scarleth Flores Puracal, a Nicaraguan citizen, and their four-year-old son, Jabu, born with Down Syndrome. He ran a successful RE/MAX Realty brokerage with three other American partners and starred on the HGTV series “House Hunters International.”
To learn how to help FREE JASON PURACAL, see video and more, visit www.FreeJasonP.com .
SOURCE: Tolin Law Firm
Lobeline Communications
Chris Kingry, 310-271-1551
chris@lobeline.com
phil@lobeline.comCopyright Business Wire 2011

Statement from Shane, Josh, Sarah and their families regarding restriction of Mr. Shafii’s Freedom
Oct 13th
We are deeply disturbed that Mr. Masoud Shafii, the Iranian lawyer who defended us, was briefly detained in Tehran last week and has now been prevented from leaving Iran. Throughout the case, Mr. Shafii always acted in accordance with Iranian law and in the interests of justice, to the extent that he was permitted to represent his clients. We feel very close to Mr. Shafii and consider him part of our families. He has sacrificed a great deal to defend us. This included not being present when his dear sister Shahla passed away, and he was stopped from leaving Iran to visit her grave. We urge the Iranian authorities not to restrict Mr. Shafii’s freedoms and to stop bringing grief to him and his family for no good reason.
— Shane Bauer, Josh Fattal, Sarah Shourd, and the Bauer, Fattal and Shourd Families

New York Homecoming Statements by Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal – Sept 25, 2011
Oct 7th

Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal leaving Oman for the United States
Media update from www.freethehikers.org – September 25, 2011
Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, the two Americans released by Iran after more than two years in detention, returned to the United States today after a three-day layover in Muscat, Oman with their families. They made the following statements in New York.
CONTACT: Samantha Topping
samantha@toppingmedia.com
Office: +1 646 340 1709
Cell: +1 212 810 9753
JOSH FATTAL:
Good afternoon and thank you for coming here today. My name is Josh Fattal.
After 781 days of prison, Shane and I are now free men.
Last Wednesday, we had just finished our brief daily exercise in the open air room of Evin Prison when something totally unexpected happened. On any other day, we would have been blindfolded and led down the hallway to our eight foot by 13 foot cell. But on that day, the guards took us downstairs. They finger printed us and gave us street clothes. They did not tell us where we were going. Instead, they took us to another part of the prison where we saw Dr. Salem Al Ismaily, the envoy of His Majesty, Sultan Qaboos of Oman. The first thing Salem said to us was, “Let’s go home.”
What followed was the most incredible experience of our lives. We were held in captivity in almost complete isolation for more than two years. But for the past few, precious days we have been experiencing free life anew with our families in Muscat.
In all the time we spent in detention, we had a total of 15 minutes of telephone calls with our families and one, short visit from our mothers. We had to go on hunger strike repeatedly just to receive letters from our loved ones. Many times, too many times, we heard the screams of other prisoners being beaten and there was nothing we could do to help them. Solitary confinement was the worst experience of our lives and it was a nightmare that Sarah had to endure for 14 months. Sarah’s strength during the one-hour meetings we were allowed with her lifted our spirits daily. One year ago, when Sarah was released, our world shrank.
We lived in a world of lies and false hope. The investigators lied that Ambassador Leu from the Swiss Embassy in Tehran did not want to see us. They told us, again falsely, that we would be given due process and access to our lawyer, the courageous and persistent Mr. Masoud Shafii. Most infuriatingly, they even told us that our families had stopped writing us letters.
Releasing us is a good gesture, and no positive step should go unnoticed. We applaud the Iranian authorities for finally making the right decision regarding our case. But we want to be clear that they do not deserve undue credit for ending what they had no right and no justification to start in the first place. From the very start, the only reason we have been held hostage is because we are American. Sarah was held for 410 days. The two of us were held for 781 days. That is far longer than the American hostages at the U.S. embassy in Tehran in 1979.
It was clear to us from the very beginning that we were hostages. This is the most accurate term because, despite certain knowledge of our innocence, Iran has always tied our case to its political disputes with the US. Thank you. I would like to hand over now to Shane. He helped me through the worst days of my life. I cannot imagine how I would have made it through these two years without him.
SHANE BAUER:
Thank you, Josh, and thank you everyone for being here.
We will always regret the grief and anxiety that our fateful hiking trip led to, above all for our families. But we would like to be very clear. This was never about crossing the unmarked border between Iran and Iraq. We were held because of our nationality. Indeed, there are many other cases of unauthorized entry to Iran in which people were simply fined or deported after a short time. We do not know if we crossed the border. We will probably never know. But even if we did enter Iran, that has never been the reason why the Iranian authorities kept us in prison for so long.
The only explanation for our prolonged detention is the 32 years of mutual hostility between America and Iran. The irony is that Sarah, Josh and I oppose U.S. policies towards Iran which perpetuate this hostility. We were convicted of espionage because we are American. It’s that simple. No evidence was ever presented against us. That is because there is no evidence and because we are completely innocent. The two court sessions we attended were a total sham. They were made up of ridiculous lies that depicted us as being involved in an elaborate American-Israeli conspiracy to undermine Iran.
Sarah, Josh and I have experienced a taste of the Iranian regime’s brutality. We have been held in almost total isolation from the world and everything we love, stripped of our rights and freedom. You may ask us, “Now that you are free can you forgive the Iranian government for what it has done to you?”
Our answer is this. How can we forgive the Iranian government when it continues to imprison so many other innocent people and prisoners of conscience? It is the Iranian people who bear the brunt of this government’s cruelty and disregard for human rights. There are people in Iran who are imprisoned for years for simply attending a protest, for writing a pro-democracy blog or for worshipping an unpopular faith.
Journalists remain behind bars and innocent people have been executed. If the Iranian government wants to change its image in the world, and ease international pressure, it should release all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience immediately. They deserve their freedom just as much as we do.
In prison, every time we complained about our conditions, the guards would immediately remind us of comparable conditions at Guantanamo Bay. They would remind of us CIA prisons in other parts of the world, and the conditions that Iranians and others experience in prisons in the U.S. We do not believe that such human rights violations on the part of our government justify what has been done to us. Not for a moment. However, we do believe that these actions on the part of the U.S. provide an excuse for other governments, including the government of Iran, to act in kind. Thank you. Josh and I now want to express our thanks to everyone who helped make today happen.
JOSH FATTAL:
When our mothers were allowed to visit us in May of 2010, they told us about the campaign to win our freedom. We owe a lifelong debt of gratitude to so many people. Their efforts mean we are free and we will never be able to thank them enough.
Our thanks go first and foremost to our wonderful families, who have done more for us than we can ever repay. They have sacrificed so much for us to be here today. That includes Sarah, who joined them as soon as she was free in their tireless work to help achieve our freedom. We owe all of you a great debt and our love for you is unqualified and eternal.
They include all of our friends, here at home and overseas. You are true friends and always will be. And they include tens of thousands of people in America and all over the world, including in Iran. They have expressed their support for us, donated to the Free the Hikers campaign, and prayed for us, each in his or her own way.
We will never know most of those people but we want them to know that we love them and always will. Thank you all for the energy and comfort that you sent to us in our hours of darkness.
Our lawyer Mr.Masoud Shafii took on our case at the end of 2009 and has been a determined and brave advocate ever since. He was never allowed to represent us properly, but he never gave up. We will always stand by him, as he stood by us for so long.
His Majesty, Sultan Qaboos of Oman and his envoy Dr. Salem Al Ismaily worked ceaselessly to bring us home. We are humbled by their humanity and their unswerving commitment to justice. We are eternally grateful for the kindness and hospitality they and the people of Oman have shown to us and our families.
The Swiss Ambassador to Iran, Livia Leu Agosti, and her colleagues never stopped trying to gain consular access to us and to resolve our case. We were denied our rights to their visits but we know that Livia and her colleagues would show up time and again at Evin Prison to try to see us. Thank you for your unstinting dedication to us.
SHANE BAUER:
We also want to express our great thanks to the many world leaders and individuals who championed our cause. They include the U.N. Secretary General Ban ki-Moon, President Jalal Talabani of Iraq and President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and the governments of Turkey and Brazil. They were certain of our innocence and their certainty made a difference.
They include the actor Sean Penn, the great Muhammad Ali, Noam Chomsky, the singer Yusuf Islam, Cindy Sheehan and the Nobel Laureates Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mairead Maguire. We will always remember that you stood by us.
There were also U.S. government officials who worked for our release, and some of them found creative ways to try and lessen the tension between the US and Iran. Consular officials at the State Department supported our families throughout. Our Members of Congress spoke up for us, publicly and privately. Ambassador Richard Schmierer, his wife Sandy and the staff of the U.S. embassy in Oman were most gracious with their time and hospitality twice now. They have our gratitude for their support and kindness.
The sympathy and support of many Muslim and other religious leaders in America, the Iranian people and the elements within the Iranian government that worked for our freedom were also all invaluable. Thank you.
Finally, we want to thank the media, in the United States and around the world, for keeping our case in the public eye. It means a lot to us. And now that we are home, we know you will give us the time we need to reconnect with our families and rebuild our lives.
When Sarah was about to walk out of Evin Prison last year, we vowed to each other than none of us would be entirely free until all of us were free. That moment has now thankfully come. Sarah, Josh and I can now finally leave prison behind us. We want more than anything to begin our lives anew and with a new appreciation for the sweet taste of freedom.
Thank you everyone.
# # #

STATEMENT from Families of Shane Bauer, Josh Fattal and Sarah Shourd following news of their release
Sep 22nd
THE FAMILIES OF SHANE BAUER, JOSH FATTAL AND SARAH SHOURD RELEASED THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT TODAY FOLLOWING NEWS OF THEIR RELEASE:
“Today can only be described as the best day of our lives. We have waited for nearly 26 months for this moment and the joy and relief we feel at Shane and Josh’s long-awaited freedom knows no bounds. We now all want nothing more than to wrap Shane and Josh in our arms, catch up on two lost years and make a new beginning, for them and for all of us. For now, we especially would like to thank His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin Said Al Said of Oman and his envoy Dr. Salem Al Ismaily; our lawyer, Mr. Masoud Shafii; and the Swiss Ambassador to Iran, Livia Leu Agosti, and her colleagues, for working to make today a reality. At the same time, our deep gratitude extends to many, many others, from governments, institutions and noted campaigners to tens of thousands of people around the world. Their support for Shane, Josh, Sarah and our families has sustained us and comforted us throughout this time. Our appreciation for the warmth and love of our fellow human beings is unending and we know that Shane and Josh will always be grateful.”
NOTE TO MEDIA: The following family members were in Muscat, Oman, to welcome Shane and Josh: Al Bauer (father of Shane Bauer), Cindy Hickey (mother), Nicole Lindstrom and Shannon Bauer (sisters) Jacob Fattal (father of Josh Fattal), Laura Fattal (mother), Alex Fattal (brother) Sarah Shourd (fiancée of Shane Bauer and good friend of Josh Fattal, detained with them and released in September 2010)
CONTACT:
Samantha Topping
samantha@toppingmedia.com
Office: +1 646 340 1709
Cell: +1 212 810 9753

CALL TO ACTION: Will President Ahmadinejad Travel To New York Yet Again Without Releasing Shane and Josh?
Sep 9th
Dear Supporters,
Later this month, the annual United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) will take place in New York for the third time since Shane, Josh and Sarah were detained by the Iranian government in July 2009. Last year, Sarah was released just days before President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad flew to New York to address the meeting – and he plans to attend again this year with Shane and Josh still in prison for no reason.
When Sarah and her mother Nora met with President Ahmadinejad in New York one year ago, he told Sarah, “I hope you and Shane will be married very soon.” He also said that Josh and Shane are “good kids” and promised to ask the judiciary to show “leniency and expediency” in resolving their case. Even two years ago he used the same language!
Where are the results? Another horrible, anguished year has passed for Josh, Shane and everyone who loves them. Expectations for Shane and Josh’s release ran high during the Islamic month of Ramadan when Iranian Foreign Minister Salehi stated that he “hoped” that their July 31 trial would “result in their freedom.” The Iranian Ambassador to Iraq said he “expected a release very soon.” Instead, Shane and Josh remain locked away for no crime and a ridiculously unjust sentence has been imposed.
IF Shane and Josh are not released before the UNGA we are going to need your help. Free the Hikers will be protesting peacefully near the UN in New York during the week of September 19th. The theme is “None of Us are Free Until Josh and Shane Are Free.” We plan to build a large cell as a visual prop for the rally. In solidarity with Shane and Josh, family and supporters will stand inside the cell, with other supporters will stand in front of it holding up signs and banners.
If you can’t join us in New York in late September, we want to ask you to organize SOLIDARITY ACTIONS in your city or town:
WHAT: Build your own cell and display it in a public place along with a sign that says: “We are Not Free Until Josh and Shane are Free,” then get inside!
WHEN: The week of September 19th.
WHERE: Central Action: The United Nations’ Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza,
East 47th Street, between 1st and 2nd Ave, NYC.
Solidarity Actions: In your city, town or neighborhood!
HOW: You can build your cell out of something as simple as a cardboard box, or you can use four bodies and string like in previous actions in the streets of San Francisco and New York City.
Use your imagination and skill to create a visual reminder of the conditions that Josh and Shane have been forced to live in for more then two years. Please take photographs of your cell and send them to: Farah at Free the Hikers so we can post them on our site.
Connect with us and thousands of other supporters on our facebook page to coordinate an event in your locale!
Downloadable postcards also available there!
Thank you all for standing by Josh, Shane and all of us. Your participation is crucial for the success of this campaign; we couldn’t do it without you!
Until Freedom,
The Families of Josh Fattal, Shane Bauer and Sarah Shourd

To Our Fearless Leader, Josh ~ With love, Your IHP students
Sep 1st
To Our Fearless Leader,

Josh and some of his IHP Health & Community Study Abroad students in India.
It has been over two years since we all strapped pink pieces of rope around our wrists and ankles, over two years since we stood in a line to hug you good bye on your travels, and two long years since the world has been blessed by your freedom.
Despite the bracelets falling off, being removed for various ceremonies and a few strong bracelets surviving – we have all kept our promise, to stay in touch and to update each other on our lives past the 4 months of our world adventure. Much of our discussion over the past few years has been of you, missing you, remembering the joy you brought to our family, and focusing our efforts to send you our love, thoughts, prayers, and strength. Many of us attended various days and nights of peaceful protests and vigil on the first and second anniversaries of your detainment, among other days, and many of us have gone on hikes all over this country and others in your honor. We hold you in our hearts.
We hold you in our hearts all over the world. Post IHP we have found ourselves in a wide variety of places and jobs, each of which has been a result of your impact and our time together on IHP.
In the world of academia: Eric L, Komal, Katie, Mariam, Pooja, Anita and Shannon are off studying to become truly amazing doctors and have even found time to travel to Cambodia and Ecuador. Holly, Emily C and Sarah chose to pursue a Masters in Public Health. Lauren, with her love of naturopathy, is receiving a Masters in Food Policy and Applied Nutrition. Serg finished his Masters degree and has returned home to Singapore. Ben is working for Brigham and Women’s Hospital as a research assistant, where there is truly never a dull moment. Prior to his work, he found some time to travel back to India, where much of our journey together began.
A large contingent of us stayed in the public health sector, Victoria is very appropriately working for the Humane Society, focusing on religious outreach, Emily K is working for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, Bridget is advocating for children’s right to healthcare, Sami is working for the Avon Breast Cancer Walk, Barbara is loving her job at a community mental health center, Heather just got a job with the American Diabetes Association, focusing on minority populations, and Abby just started a job in Boston working with children with behavioral issues.
A few of us ventured outside our IHP experience to wonderful and truly appropriate jobs. Eric K is putting his excellent penmanship to work for an advertising agency and the ever-motherly Kate is a nursery school teacher.
The nature-lovers of us have found a home as well, Helena is living in Maine working on experimental education for middle school children, and Kyle just recently moved to Ohio to do outdoor education.
Lastly, a handful of us have spent most of our post-graduate life outside of the country. Nora has been in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, Yogeeta moved back home to Mumbai starting a research fellowship at a strategic philanthropy foundation, Leah moved to England to get a dual Masters of Philosophy in Public Health and Zoology, Walker spent a year in China finishing her studies and immersing herself in a culture she truly loves, and finally, though not surprisingly, Sasha has been living in Rwanda and co-founded Spark MicroGrants, a wonderful organization that supports local social sector projects in East Africa.
Josh, you would be so proud of all of us and we know you would be celebrating in our successes and with us. Just as you took care of us with your tea and calming Tai Chi moves on that cold day in China, when we were all sick and a little homesick, we are taking care of you now. We send you our strength, our love, and our constant and unfaltering support. We will continue to focus the power of our family to you, until you are safely home.
We love you, we miss you, and we will stand in solidarity until the day you come home.
With love,
Your IHP students

Free the Hikers Jewelry Fundraiser – Sarah Taylor Designs
Aug 30th
Sarah Taylor started making necklaces for the Free the Hikers campaign almost 2 years ago. It was at a Free the HIkers fundraiser organized by Jackie Brock, the sister of a good friend of Josh Fattal’s, that Sarah Taylor first donated a necklace for the silent auction. Jackie’s Mom won the necklace and promptly mailed it to Laura Fattal. It seemed fitting that all three Moms should have a necklace so the Brock family ordered 2 more. When the 3 Moms went to Iran in May 2010 they each wore their necklace.
Knowing this, created an attachment for Sarah Taylor to the hikers’ situation and it all spiraled from there. Sarah now has a ‘Free the Hikers Fundraiser’ page on her website, it offers necklaces engraved with “Free the Hikers,” “Free All Three” and another with “Shane, Sarah and Josh.” With each new necklace the word is spreading. Sarah Taylor says she is looking forward to the day she will never have to make another necklace because they will be free. “But until then, I feel fortunate to be able to help.. every person placing an order is so grateful to be able to support Free the Hikers and to spread the word.”
To view sample necklaces and earrings, see http://www.sarahtaylordesigns.com/free_the_hikers_fundraiser
To order your own necklace, contact sarah@sarahtaylordesigns.com

3000 DAYS without FREEDOM ~ Rebecca ‘Walker’ Christoforo
Aug 25th
When hikers Joshua Fattal and Shane Bauer were tried in Iran several weeks ago, I felt a kind of quiet excitement settle into our campaign. It was obvious that they would be acquitted, having already spent two years in prison for a crime they did not commit. Their story, their passports, travel documents, and witnesses all showed the authorities what we, their family and friends, knew all along. Josh and Shane are simply the curious type, people who enjoy seeing things with their own eyes. They are not reckless, nor are they militant, and it would be even more absurd to assume they have a contract with the American government. I think a lot of us felt a sense of finality after the trial, and we began the preparations to welcome them home. But this morning, I received a call telling me that they had been charged with espionage and sentenced to 8 years of prison. 8 years. That’s almost 3000 days of waking up without fresh air, without sunshine, without games and books. 3000 days without direction and purpose, without the freedom to choose your lunch or ride your bicycle or listen to music. I don’t think most of us can comprehend the lifetimes that go by while living in confinement, or the desperation that can set in when we feel our autonomy stripped away and humanity ignored.
To fight this desperation, Josh and Shane have been ‘hunger striking’, or refusing to eat until concessions are made in their favor. It gives them leverage against their jailors, for (as terrible as it sounds) they are only valuable if alive. Shane’s fiancee Sarah Shourd, who was imprisoned with them but released for health reasons, tells us that they have already fasted several times to receive information about their case. Although she has had no contact with the two since returning home a little less than a year ago, she knows that they are continuing to fast- perhaps to receive letters, books, or more time in the courtyard.

Josh teaching IHP Health & Community 2009 students in Geneva, Switzerland
It is sad that Josh, who has studied and grown food so passionately, would be forced to take such measures. Before I knew him, he was working at the Aprovecho Sustainability Center, where he spent several weeks eating only foods that came from a 100-mile radius of the farm, which included a pilgrimage to the Oregon coast for salt. A couple of years later, in 2009, we met while traveling with a community health study abroad program. He was the teaching fellow, which placed him somewhere in between us students and our professors. Josh didn’t teach often, but when he did his lessons were always memorable and frequently beautiful. There was one class in particular that stands out to me now, those first days of the program in Switzerland. Josh began the class by asking us to think about our relationship with food, and reminding us that all good food comes from sunlight and clean water. He used the ‘power point’ program as a way to illustrate his ideas. The slides were simple, with no images and just a couple words. One looked like this:
FOOD = SUNLIGHT
It is a simple idea, and one that often gets forgotten in refrigerated aisles, but it was the beginning of a lesson that Josh would continue to impress upon us as the semester continued. Food is not something to be taken for granted, but something to cherish and consider. To know this can change how you relate to the world.
As I ate today, and thought of Josh and his hunger fasting, and of the many others who have fasted in protest, I couldn’t help but feel it is a true crime that a man who has such a connection to his food would have to use it as a means to an end. Food equals sunlight, but in Evin prison food equals power and information. With the recent verdict on his trial, and with only 20 days to appeal, we anticipate that Josh and Shane will continue to fast. It is in solidarity with them that I, and several other students who traveled with Josh in 2009, will continue to fast as well.
Rebecca ‘Walker’ Christoforo









