Naghmeh Abedini Tells Children “Daddy's Coming Home!”
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com )
BOISE, IDAHO (ANS-Jan. 17, 2016)
-- Naghmeh Abedini says she knew something dramatic was in the works
when she received news that her husband, Saeed Abedini, was being moved
from prison.
“We
heard Saeed was being moved out of his cell by the intelligence police
and we felt like that was indication of his release,” Naghmeh told
George Thomas of CBN News in an exclusive interview from her home in
Boise, Idaho.
Then, on Saturday morning at around 7:30 a.m. (Mountain Time), Naghmeh said the phone began ringing off the hook.
“I got calls from people in Iran saying that the Iranian government had announced that they had released four Americans.”
Shortly
after those calls from Iran, CBN News said Naghmeh was contacted by the
U.S. State Department confirming that her husband was indeed being
released.
“I woke up my kids at 7:30 in the morning our time and told them that ‘Daddy was coming home!’” she told CBN's George Thomas.
Saeed
Abedini is among the four Americans Iran released on Saturday. The
35-year-old convert from Islam to Christianity had been in prison since
July 2012 for conducting Christian activity.
Naghmeh said she and her kids were in total shock.
“They
got out of bed and just started jumping up and down, rejoicing. It was
very loud, very joyful and I could see a heavy weight lifted off their
little shoulders.”
The couple's two children, Rebekka and Jacob, have spent almost four years wondering if their father was ever coming home.
In
a 2013 interview with CBN's Wendy Griffith, Naghmeh said no matter how
much faith she has in her husband and her God, she said was difficult to
watch her children suffer.
As
a woman, God's given me the grace to go to Him for comfort, but as a
Mom it's a stab in my heart to see them struggling, Naghmeh said in
2013.
She
added, “My son's character has changed. He's not as talkative. My
daughter, as a girl, cries a lot, ‘Daddy, daddy...where are you?’ They
draw pictures of sad children crying, missing their daddy.”
In
late Nov. 2015, Naghmeh shared with supporters that she was stopping
all public efforts to gain her husband's release following revelations
about some very serious personal challenges inside her family, including
“abuse” issues.
Now
with her husband finally heading home, Naghmeh admits there will be
difficult days ahead as the family seeks a time of healing.
“The
reality is that we are not heroes, Jesus is the only hero, He is our
only example and we are broken people with issues,” Naghmeh told CBN
News hours after her husband's release.
Naghmeh said since revealing those marital challenges, she has gained a new understanding of what it means to suffer abuse.
“My
brokenness has allowed me to understand other people who have gone
through similar struggles and abuse in their own relationships so we are
both broken people.”
Naghmeh
said she regretted making those marital challenges public but insisted
“there needs to be change” and healing going forward.
“I love him, but there are serious issues that we need to deal with once he's home.”
Since
his imprisonment on Sept. 24, 2012, millions of people around the world
have prayed for Saeed's release. Naghmeh says those prayers sustained
her and her family throughout the ordeal.
“Outside
my faith in Jesus Christ, I'm so thankful for the millions who prayed,
who trusted God with me, who did not give up, who sent me messages and
letters saying, 'We are not giving up, we have not forgotten him.’”
Naghmeh told CBN News there were many times she wanted to “give up and throw in the towel,” but didn't because of those prayers.
“Those messages and prayers is what kept me going and kept the hope alive both for me and for Saeed also,” she said.
Photo
captions: 1) Naghmeh Abedini speaking with CBN's George Thomas.
2) Rebekka and Jacob with inset of their father. 3) Jeremy and Elma
Reynalds.
About
the writer: Jeremy Reynalds is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News
Service, a freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy
Junction, New Mexico's largest emergency homeless shelter,
www.joyjunction.org, He has a master's degree in communication from the
University of New Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from
Biola University in Los Angeles. His newest book is “From Destitute to
Ph.D.” Additional details on “From Destitute to Ph.D.” are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife, Elma. For more information, please contact: Jeremy Reynalds at jeremyreynalds@gmail.com .
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