Iran’s regime is executing its own people at a horrifying pace—yet the world remains largely silent. Iranians in Canada are raising their voices, not for politics, but for humanity. They are pleading: see us, hear us, help us. The Iranian people are not the regime. They are victims of it.
🕯️ A Cry from the Shadows: The Tyranny of Khamenei and the Courage of Iranians Abroad
In the heart of Iran, a brutal campaign unfolds daily—quietly, relentlessly, and with terrifying precision. Ali Khamenei’s regime has executed over 1,471 people in 2025 alone, including juveniles and women, with 285 executions in October alone. That’s nearly one execution every hour, a staggering assault on life and dignity.
These are not isolated cases. The regime has expanded its execution sites across nearly every province. The goal is not justice—it is fear. It is control. It is the silencing of dissent through death.
And yet, the Iranian people endure.
They are not the regime. They are not the cruelty. They are not the violence. They are the ones who suffer it.
🇨🇦 Voices from Canada: Iranians Who Refuse to Be Silent
Across Canada, Iranian immigrants and citizens are mobilizing. In Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, and beyond, they gather in protest, in vigil, in solidarity. They carry signs not of hatred, but of heartbreak. They speak not of revenge, but of remembrance.
They are engineers, artists, students, mothers. They are survivors of a system that punishes truth and rewards silence. And they are calling on Canadians—and the world—to see what is happening.
- “We are not the regime,” they say.
- “We are the people it kills.”
- “We are the ones who fled, not to forget, but to fight.”
🛡️ The Truth Canadians Must Know
- Iran’s regime is executing people at record-breaking levels.
- These executions target the poor, the dissenters, the forgotten.
- Iranians in Canada are risking their safety to speak out.
- They need allies, not apathy.
🌱 Hope in the Face of Horror
The Iranian people are good people. They are resilient, compassionate, and courageous. They are not defined by the tyranny that rules over them. They are defined by their refusal to surrender to it.
And those who stand with them—whether in Canada or anywhere—are part of a growing chorus of conscience.
Because silence is complicity.
And solidarity is survival.



