Update: Iran’s grief through the eyes of a pastor
Pastor Peyman partners with Open Doors to support believers within Iran through an online ministry. In even just one short call, he paints a picture of the heavy suffering borne by our brothers and sisters in Iran at this time. Please continue to pray for this nation.

As the internet continues to be restored in patches, more of the current situation in Iran has been revealed to the world beyond its borders. Pastor Peyman* is a local partner of Open Doors who disciples Iranian Christian refugees through an online ministry. He was able to share a short update concerning the experience of Christians and the suffering that is now commonplace since the crackdown on protests earlier in the year.
A nation in mourning
“This is no longer about one isolated incident; it is deep and ongoing pain.”
Pastor Peyman
“We are receiving calls from inside Iran, and everyone is crying,” Peyman begins. “This is no longer about one isolated incident; it is deep and ongoing pain. Many have lost close friends and family members. Even among believers we personally knew and discipled, several have been killed. In one city alone, five believers lost their lives.”
“Many others are deeply broken emotionally and spiritually.”
Pastor Peyman
When information does eventually come through, it only reaches community leaders through trusted sources. Direct contact with grieving families is often impossible. “We cannot even reach some families to comfort them or pray with them. People are afraid to speak openly. We only know that some have died, and many others are deeply broken emotionally and spiritually,” Peyman says.
Deep wounds
The burden on leaders is great as they struggle to wisely guide believers in their care. “Anything we say is misunderstood by someone. If we speak about hope, people get angry. If we speak about love, they say it is unrealistic. Leaders are under intense pressure, caught between the truth of God’s Word and the deep wounds people are carrying.”
“We must speak truth, but we also need God’s wisdom.”
Pastor Peyman
He emphasises the urgent need for prayer for church leaders in Iran: “Pastors and leaders are standing in an extremely sensitive place. We must speak truth, but we also need God’s wisdom, timing and protection over our hearts and minds.”
A point of no return
Despite the despair and darkness many feel, Peyman believes that Iran has passed a point of no return – and this is a good thing. “Everything has changed. Iran will not remain the same. Each person, and the church, must understand their role in this moment: standing against injustice without being consumed by destructive anger.”
He and all Iranian believers call for your prayers. “Please pray for those who are grieving, for those who are traumatised, for safe ways to help, and especially for pastors and leaders. Silence in the face of injustice is wrong, but we must also walk wisely. We need God’s guidance today more than ever.”
*Name changed for security reasons
29 January 2026
Cries for justice from Iran
With connectivity slowly returning, the gap between Iran and the rest of the world is being bridged with flickers of insight into what has been the bloodiest suppression of unrest in the nation since 1979. However, with patches of restored connection has come horror rather than relief as the true picture of suffering and injustice is revealed.
“What they have seen with their own eyes and heard with their own ears has deeply affected them.”
Maryam
Maryam* is a believer serving the secret church in Iran. She shares, “Please pray for our people. What they have seen with their own eyes and heard with their own ears has deeply affected them. One sister locked herself inside her home out of fear. She cannot sleep at night, is highly traumatised and cannot stop crying. ‘I wish we could pray over phone’ is what she quietly shared.”
According to Iran International, over 36,500 people have been killed since the start of the protests. The HRANA has confirmed 6,373 deaths with a further 17,091 under review, and other sources estimate a minimum death toll of 25,000. Countless bodies are believed to have been hidden and purposefully kept out of public record to obfuscate the scale of the killings.
Recently, the European Union formally declared Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organisation, reflecting the brutality that has been experienced by citizens across the country. In the past few years, the IRGC has increasingly targeted Christians with home invasions and pressure in courts to induce harsher sentences. The violence of the past few weeks has demonstrated a concentration of such injustice.
With greater exposure on the sheer number of lives lost and arrests carried out by security forces, the effects on life for those hiding from the unrest are myriad. People are dissuaded from using social media and interacting with content about the protests; phone calls are monitored; silence and fear dominate.
“Please pray for our people”
Amid the chaos stands the underground church. Most believers are unable to meet and online ministries are under intense monitoring. Christians are among those who become a governmental scapegoat, being painted as Western collaborators or ‘acting against national security’. This is evident in the new wave of arrests targeting house churches and Christians.
Maryam asks: “Please pray for us who serve Christians inside Iran. Ask the Lord to give us discernment and wisdom to know how to pray, how to guide and how to comfort. We are affected too by what we hear and carry.”
“Even their voices are different”
Videos and photos have pushed through the blackout revealing families waiting in long lines for hours, even days, outside courthouses to find out whether their children are dead or alive. They move from hospital to hospital, prison to prison, and many are forced to look through hundreds of body bags to find a familiar face. It has been reported that when families have asked for the body of their loved one, authorities have demanded them to sign false statements declaring that the deceased was part of security forces and was killed by protesters.
If relatives are arrested, a severe bail is demanded for their release – in some cases, the money is given but the detainee never freed. There are rumours of those imprisoned being executed in secret and later declared as having died in protests.
Even the hospitals have become unsafe. One doctor has described patients being taken by security forces to be executed or denied medical care, left instead to die because of their injuries. Nurses, doctors and firefighters are also being arrested or executed for aiding injured protesters, with such acts of compassion being perceived as anti-regime.
One among them was named Yohanna Mirpadyab, a Christian firefighter who was reportedly shot and killed by security forces as he was attempting to extinguish a fire during the protests. He is only one of a dozen Christians, and likely many more, who are being imprisoned, denied contact with their families or executed.
Another Christian is a convert called Ghazal Marzban, who was previously arrested and sent to Evin Prison after being convicted of ‘propaganda against the regime’. Since her conversion, she has faced endless harassment. On 14 January, she was once again arrested by intelligence agents, her Bible and Christian books confiscated. Two hours later, she was able to contact her husband to say that she was being held in a Ministry of Intelligence detention centre. She has not been heard from since.
“I heard that my brother was kept in prison for ten days and beaten.”
Majid
In the brief moments of contact between families, news like this is hard to hear. Majid* shares his experience: “I managed to speak with my family after two weeks. Praise God they are alive, but they are not well. Even their voices are different. I heard that my brother was kept in prison for ten days and beaten almost to death. They were afraid to share more details because of monitoring. There are rumours that the internet may be cut off again, cutting people off from the world completely.”
“We want to bring truth and hope”
Even beyond the borders, Iranian Christians living outside the country face the threat of being sent back. An Open Doors partner shares that a refugee Christian couple known for their online ministry were summoned for questioning by immigration authorities. They were then taken to a detention camp and told they were a ‘threat to national security’. Though the couple have hired lawyers, deportation back to Iran is being considered by the authorities.
Should Christians like this couple be forced to return to Iran, the repercussions they would face would be immediate and severe.
“Please keep them in your prayers,” the partner asks. “Pray for this couple and for all those in the detention camp who may be sent back, especially in the current situation.”
“We want to bring truth and hope to our nation.”
Ziba
As the darkness deepens over Iran, your prayers are urgently needed for our brothers and sisters and all those suffering because of grave injustice. Ziba*, another sister, pleads, “The church in Iran wants to be salt and light in this moment. We want to bring truth and hope to our nation. But after years of oppression done in the name of God, we fear how people will respond to the gospel. Please pray that God shows us how to love our community with the hope of Jesus.”
“Please pray that God shows us how to love our community with the hope of Jesus.”
Ziba
Please continue to stand with the church in Iran, praying that they would trust in the Lord and the promise of His Word: “For the Lord is righteous, he loves justice; the upright will see his face.” (Psalm 11:7)
*Names changed for security reasons
- That the God of justice would expose evil, end injustice and bring accountability where there has been silence
- For the protection and wisdom of believers, that the Lord would help them discern how to be salt and light in dark times
- That God would reveal Himself as the God of truth and resurrection life, bringing hope to His people.
You can find out more about persecution in Iran and the other countries on the Open Doors World Watch List top 50 with free resources – you’ll find detailed information, ways to pray and how you can be part of God’s impossible plan around the world.