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Women Life Freedom
ILM

Women Life Freedom ILMWomen Life Freedom ILMWomen Life Freedom ILM

Women life freedom MOVEMENT

Iranian women have always been present in national uprisings, but this time they are leading them.

On 16 September 2022 Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman from Saqqez in  Iran’s Kurdistan Province, died in a Tehran hospital. Three days earlier  she had been arrested by Iran’s Guidance Patrol, or ‘morality police’,  for wearing her hijab ‘improperly’ and fell into a coma after she was  beaten inside the police van taking her to the Vozara Detention Centre.


Crowds gathered outside the hospital in a state of shock and  responded to her death by calling for accountability. Soon protests  spread to other cities.

During Amini’s funeral, on 17 September, crowds gathered in Saqqez  chanting the slogan ‘Women Life Freedom’, which was adopted across the  country and beyond. Civil unrest eventually spread across cities and  towns as well as on Iranian social media. The initial focus of the  protests grew to encompass the diverse grievances of Iranian women, with  many removing and ritualistically burning their hijabs in front of  cheering crowds. Across the diaspora, Iranian women are cutting their  hair in solidarity.

These protests are not unprecedented. They are the latest in a long  tradition of struggles going back more than a century to Iran’s  Constitutional Revolution which, between 1905 and 1911, established a  parliament during the Qajar dynasty. Despite their marginalisation in  the historical narrative of modern Iran, women have always been part of  the country’s transformations. Women supporting both secular and  Islamist forces formed an important segment of the uprising leading to  the Iranian Revolution of 1979, which ousted the Pahlavi monarchy and  opened the way for the establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran.


Iranian women continued demanding a role in politics and society,  even when the promise of the Islamic Republic to restore their dignity  was eventually translated in strictly patriarchal and Islamist terms.  Shortly after the establishment of the Republic in April 1980, women  took to the streets to oppose the strict dress code requiring them to  cover their body and hair.


Under the laws of the Islamic Republic women were not just subjected  to compulsory veiling but also gender segregation. City spaces were  divided along gender lines. ‘Women only’ areas were created, while other  spaces, such as football stadiums, remained off-limits. These  arrangements were considered to be the pillars of the Islamic Republic:  highly symbolic and non-negotiable.

Since 1980 Iranian women have sought to improve their situation by  initiating protests, petitioning and mounting legal challenges. After  the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88), for example, war widows lobbied for custody  of their children; the law stipulated that a father had guardianship of  a child, which passed to the next male relative in the case of his  death.


When conditions allowed, women’s organisations sought change by  working with the state, for example during the tenure of a rare  reformist administration under Iran’s fifth president, Mohammad Khatami.  Between 2000 and 2004 the women parliamentarians of the sixth Majlis  (Iran’s parliamant) adopted a policy that combined decisiveness with  moderation, aware of the rigidities of the state and the intricacies of  dealing with the clergy. Khatami’s term was marked by a plethora of  feminist publications, campaigns and NGOs, promoting causes such as  legal reform and gender equality. The One Million Signatures Campaign,  founded in 2007, was a major petition that sought to dismantle  discriminatory laws, inspiring similar campaigns in other countries.  However, in times where working with the state became untenable,  particularly with the clampdown on civil society towards the end of  Khatami’s administration, women activists had no option but to  disengage. The damage inflicted was devastating: many women activists  were arrested and many more fled the country.


The 2022 protests cannot be seen in isolation from the waves of  protest that had preceded them, such as the Green Movement (or ‘Persian  Awakening’) of 2009. The largest popular mobilisation since the Iranian  Revolution, it demanded (unsuccessfully) the annulment of the  controversial presidential election of that year and the ousting of  conservative president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. With a deteriorating economy  and rampant corruption, as well as the impact of international economic  sanctions, the cycles of protests have become more frequent since the  Green Movement. In 2018 protests arose from public disquiet over the  economic situation; in 2019 demonstrations were sparked by massive  increases in fuel prices. Earlier this year people took to the streets  against price hikes on staple foods. All share an underlying  dissatisfaction with the unresponsiveness of the Islamic Republic to the  needs and aspirations of its citizens.

Supporters of the Green Movement came from Iran’s cities and were  primarily middle-class, led by reformist politicians. In contrast, later  protests have primarily been leaderless without the underlying thrust  of a reform agenda that characterised the Green Movement. They have  mobilised poorer parts of the population, who now question the  legitimacy of the Islamic Republic. In every case, the government moved  speedily to suppress protests, sometimes with a high death toll.


The latest protests are different. The death of a young woman from  Kurdistan detained by the morality police rendered Amini a tragic figure  whom everybody could rally around. In her story grievances including  injustice, state repression and women’s rights all intersect. Her death  has brought people from across the country together – but this time the  protests are led by women.


Evidence suggests the state is poised not to show any weakness. But  the messages of the protests are hard to ignore. These are the first  protests where compulsory veiling – one of the pillars of the Islamic  Republic – has been openly defied and where demands for women’s bodily  autonomy have led to calls for the end of the Republic.


Nazanin Shahrokni is Assistant Professor of Gender and Globalisation at the London School of Economics and the author of Women in Place: The Politics of Gender Segregation in Iran (University of California Press, 2020).

Women life freedom MOVEMENT

Her Imperial Majesty Shahbanu Farah Pahlavi

  

Meeting Her Imperial Majesty Shahbanu Farah Pahlavi and discussing Women Life Freedom Movement. Farah Pahlavi is the Empress of Iran, was the first crowned female in the modern Middle East. Known for her philanthropy, she championed education, arts, and social welfare before the 1979 Iranian Revolution .

Women life freedom MOVEMENT

High School Students: Making bracelets to Raise Awareness

High school students gathered, focused and engaged as they create bracelets to support the Women Life Freedom Movement in Iran, symbolizing unity and raising awareness for women's rights. 

Rachael Ray: American Celebrity Chef

Rachael Ray advocating for the Women Life Freedom Movement in Wilmington NC by wearing the bracelet. Rachael is an American celebrity chef, TV host, and author known for her accessible, 30-minute recipes.

Dignitaries in support of "Women Life Freedom"

Bill Clinton

President of the U.S. 1993 – 2001

“Message of support to the brave women & girls of Iran”

  

Ms. Nazanin Boniadi

American/Iranian Actress & Activist 

"Women Life Freedom" activist meets with VP Harris


  

Tony Blair

Prime Minister of U.K. 1997 – 2007 

“The people of Iran have shown incredible bravery”

  

Coldplay

Chris Martin & Ms. Golshifteh Farahani

“Coldplay perform in Buenos Aires in Support of Women of Iran”

  

Ronald Reagan

President of the U.S. 1981 -1989

“Reagan on Shah of Iran”  


  

Abir Al-Sahlani

Swedish E.U. lawmaker 

“E.U. assembly in solidarity with Women Life Freedom”

Masih Alinejad

Exiled Iranian journalist and Women's Rights activist

"Why the compulsory hijab must go"



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