Regalo Press

Passport to Freedom: From Tehran to Triumph

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Born an American citizen but raised under Iran’s theocracy, a teenage boy risks everything to escape religious persecution and reclaim the freedom—and responsibility—of choosing America.

When freedom is denied by governments, can it still be carried—hand to hand, heart to heart—by people?

Nizam Missaghi was seven years old when he was expelled from school for the first time in Tehran—not for misbehavior or poor grades, but for belonging to a faith the Islamic Republic refused to recognize. In post-revolutionary Iran, being Baha’i meant fractured futures: no university, no profession, no way to support a family.

Yet hidden in a dresser drawer was a golden ticket: a United States passport quietly renewed every five years in secret.

Born in the United States and taken back to Iran as an infant, Nizam grew up free on paper and trapped in practice, watching his possibilities shrink with each passing year.

As adolescence gave way to urgency, Nizam had to decide whether hope was worth the risk of escape. With surveillance closing in and many doors slammed shut, he faced an unthinkable choice: remain invisible or gamble everything on a document that could save or destroy him.

Passport to Freedom is a gripping memoir of faith, identity, and the fragile line between belonging and exile—where freedom is never guaranteed, and survival depends on who dares to help you carry it. At a time when authoritarian regimes cloak oppression in the language of culture and faith, Nizam’s unbelievable journey reminds us what is lost when conscience is outlawed—and why America remains a refuge worth choosing.