On a chilly Wednesday morning right before the wind down for winter break, onlookers began to gather outside the Yale School of Medicine (YSM) rotunda where several white coat wearing members of the community quietly stood in a line with blindfolds in their hands. Susan Kashaf, MD, MPH, spoke into a microphone, addressing the growing crowd.
“We are gathered here to raise awareness about the Iranian protestors who are at imminent risk of execution by sharing with you the story of one of them, a colleague, a physician, a radiologist, Dr. Hamid Ghare Hassanlou,” she began.
A few months prior, Kashaf and her colleagues had shared vivid protest stories to a packed auditorium on the ongoing uprisings in Iran. With the attack on universities continuing in Iran, and peaceful protests being met with live ammunition and mass arrests, Kashaf and her colleagues, several of who are Iranian-American, felt compelled to speak out once again.
“Hospitals and medical personnel, including doctors, nurses, pharmacists and medical technicians have been targeted for doing their jobs: threatened, arrested, imprisoned,” said Kashaf.