Part
One - Part
Two
The
Present (last segment)
The man who
slashed his throat because of Tahereh's unveiling, along with the
men who silenced and strangled Tahereh, are back: they are the
fundamentalists attempting to lead the Islamic Republic of
Iran. The main targets of these new rulers are minorities,
intellectuals, and, of course, women. From the very start, the
Islamic regime, under the guise of attacking the West's
"cultural invasion," focused on cultural issues.
They found that the most obvious manifestations of "decadent
Western Culture" were women - the way they looked and the
public spaces they occupied.
When the Islamic
revolution triumphed, women had been involved in all aspects of
Iranian life. During the first half of the seventies "the
number of girls attending elementary school rose from 80, 020 to
1,508, 387; the number of girls attending vocational training
schools rose tenfold; the number of women candidates for r the
universities rose seven times. By 1978, 33 percent of all
university students were women and they had begun to choose fields
other than traditionally female occupations.
In employment,
before the Islamic Revolution, priority had been given to training
women for semiskilled and skilled work. "All laws and
regulations were revised to eliminate sex discrimination, and equal
pay for equal work was incorporated into the body of all government
rules. All regulations regarding housing, loans, and other job
benefits were adjusted to eliminate discrimination. Women were
active in all walks of life; they worked in universities, the police
force, and as judges, pilots, and engineers - in every field except
religious activities. In 1978, 333 of 1660 candidates to local
councils were women. "Twenty-two were elected to Parliament,
two served in the Senate. There were one cabinet minister,
three sub-cabinet under secretaries (including the second highest
position in the Ministries of Labor and Mines and Industries), one
governor, an ambassador and five mayors.
These figures are
important not only to judge women's losses and gains after the
Islamic Revolution, but to understand why women took such an active
part in Revolution. They saw themselves as part of the
society, as a force with a voice, and a choice. They' like the
majority of those who supported the Revolution, were asking for more
rights, more political participation, and greater freedom of
expression because they had reached a state of maturity where these
rights and freedoms seemed to be inalienable. So, women "
marched and shouted their will That it was in support of a
destructive force came from political naiveté which only time and experience
can correct.
Although reactionary
clergy during the Constitutional Revolution tried to force Iranian
women to leave the scene, it was impossible to do so because women
were so much part of Iranian society. The same was true in the
Islamic Revolution. This explains why the new rulers in the
Islamic Republic picked women as their main target. They
annulled progressive laws, including the Family Protection Law, and
brought back the old laws that had dominated society in Tahereh's
times: polygamy; the age of consent for girls was lowered from 18 to
9; women were barred from many public offices, from 140 academic
disciplines, and from many jobs in engineering, medicine, and fields
deemed to be masculine territory, and women wren expelled from many
secretarial jobs because their presence was regarded as a temptation
to their bosses. One by one women's rights were taken away
from them. Universities, schools, and even buses became
segregated, and women had to obtain their husbands' permission to
work. In passing these laws, the new rulers not only made a
statement against women, but against a century-long struggle for
modernity.
The most
obvious symbol of the new regime was the "veil," defined
as a black, body-length garment that covered women's hair and head
down to there toes. The regime claimed that the unveiling of
Iranian women had been solely the work of Imperialists and their
domestic agents. In 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini ordered the
reveiling of women. Unlike what has been claimed by some in
the West, the imposition of the veil was
met with protest. One hundred Thousand
women poured into the streets protesting Khomeini's edict. The
regime had to back down temporarily. Its vigilantes, however,
continued attaching and harassing unveiled women in public. In
1980, the regime made the veil mandatory in government buildings and
public places. Many women resisted and protested this act, and
were, as in former times, attached and beaten by vigilantes
supported by the government and denounced by the
"progressive" forces. After all it was not only a
"backward" Ayatollah who had claimed that women's hair had
to b e covered, but the Islamic Republic's French-educated, first president,
Bani Sadr. It was Leftist intellectuals who condemned women
who protested against veiling as "a handful of fashion models
and painted dolls" who "are turning this insignificant
issue (of veiling) into a major affair as if it is as important as
democracy and the country's independence.
Three years later
the veil became mandatory for all women regardless of their
religion, creed, or nationality. It took four years and use of
coercion and force to impose the veil on women. The punishment
for deviating from the dress code was jail, monetary fines, and a
flogging of up to 76 lashes. In order to implement the
"law," the regime created vice squads, special
courts, and jails for "moral offenses."
These courts and their guards had permission to raid public places
or private homes, in search of alcoholic drinks,
"decadent" music, video film, playing cards, sexually
mixed parties, or unveiled women. Bazaars and shopping malls
were surrounded and raided. Young girls were arrested for not
wearing the proper clothing and /or for walking together with boys
in the streets. Lipsticks, nail polish, and Reebok shoes were
treated as lethal weapons. Young girls were subjected to
virginity tests, to flogging, and jail sentences.
The fact that the
Islamic Republic had to use so much energy and violence to insist on
segregation and veiling to such an extent demonstrates that the
issue of veiling belied its claim that it was merely acting in
accordance with time-honored traditions of the society. Could
the Islamic regime literally turn the clock back? Could it regain
the ground that was lost at the turn of the century? This was
a test both for the regime and for the forces that believed in a modern
Iran.
The Challenged
to the present
In the first year
after the Islamic Revolution's victory there wren many sit-ins,
demonstrations, and protest against the reactionary measures taken
by the regime against women. As a result, the new regime
learned to impose its laws gradually as it consolidated its power
and repressed the democratic forces in the country. The
Revolutionary Guards and "Islamic" vigilantes aided
repression by attaching women in the streets, beating them up, and
throwing acid in their faces if they were not veiled or dressed
according to the "Islamic" dress code.
Despite Ayatollah
Khomeini's earlier opposition to women's enfranchisement, he decided
that women's voting power was politically necessary - even if
religiously unacceptable. rather than denying women the right
to vote, he made the passage of new restrictive laws possible by
crating new rifts or exploring old ones among the ranks of women.
Women were divided
into the good and the bad; the good were "women of Islam"
and the bad were "agents of Satan." It was in the
interest of the good to destroy the bad. This created a rift
between women who were characterized as either agents of the West or
emissaries of the regime. This rift was further encouraged by
Leftist organizations that, in the name of fighting Western
decadence, resisted women's attempts to defend their freedoms.
An authoritarian attitude became the norm not only for the more
reactionary elements of the regime, but for "progressive"
groups as well. The main struggle now, as in the past, was not
against an outside enemy, but against the enemy within.
The regime's
approach was to replace modern women with "Islamic"
ones. Many of the "good " women were placed in high
positions not because of their merit but because they were related
to the men in power. As such they became mouthpieces for their
fathers, husbands, or male relatives. Some of these women used
their position to attach the rights of women, and to advocate what
the religious leaders prescribed.
But gradually some
women in public office became more sensitized to the plight of women
in general, and they began working for change. Secular women
had the most important role in crating this change in the political
and social climate. The majority of secular women could not be
easily dispensed with because they had information and skills that
were needed in various fields. This situation in itself put
women from different caps side by side. As time went by, both
sides realized that they had more in common with each other than
they had differences. Many of the women who were in power
gradually took on the same role as those whom they had previously
criticized as Westernized.
One area that
solidified the bond between women was that of the law. The
Islamic Republic had changed the laws, claiming that they were
unjust and products of alien rule and exploitation. Once the
"alien rulers" were gone and the new laws were
implemented, the truth or falsity of these claims were tested in
actuality. The Islamic laws inevitably led to women making a
critical reappraisal of the basic tenets that had created
them. For example, the imposition of the veil raised
discussion concerning the right to freedom of choice. Some
Islamic women considered that they had the right to practice their
religion according to their own interpretations. If some chose
to wear the veil, that was also their privilege. In imposing
the veil, the Iranian government not only infringed the rights of
Muslim women, but of secular women, and of women from other
religions and denominations. With this realization, it became
clear to many that the law did not protect women, but violated their
basic right of freedom of choice and expression. Iranian women
from all walks of life discovered that the hardest obstacle to their
lives was the rule of law itself.
And women's
protest continues. Of-course, once the veil was made
mandatory, conventional form of protest became impossible.
Yet, Iranian women, especially young girls, have turned the veil
into an instrument of protest they wear it in attractive and
provoking ways; they leave part of their hair showing from under
their scarves; they allow their colorful clothing to show from
underneath their uniforms; and they walk in a provoking
manner. Their defiant way of searing the veil is a constant
reminder to the ruling elite that this is one battle that will never
be won.
It is not
surprising therefore that, in 1997, after the victory of the Iranian
football team in Australia, millions of Iranians - against the government's
repeated warnings - poured into the streets celebrating with dancing
and loud music. This was called the "Football
Revolution." The most striking feature of this
"revolution" was the thousands of women who, by breaking
the p9olice barricades, entered the football stadium banned to women
by the government. Some celebrated by taking their veils off.
The Iranian
regime's efforts at "Islamization" has taken a heavy toll
on society, especially on women, who were its main targets.
But it did not l3ave the regime unscathed. The government has
claimed that only a handful of "Westernized" women have
opposed its laws, but now years after the Revolution its most
outspoken and daring opponents are the youth, the children of
Revolution. In July 1993, vice squads detained 802 men and
women in Tehran for violating the dress code. The officials
reported that 80 percent of the detainees were under the age of 20.
Those who were,
and are, not part of Iranian society should not be deceived by its
portrayal of Iranian women ad docile and satisfied with the
regime. The fact of the matter is that for the past 20 years
both the public and private arena has been the scene of a protracted
struggle about women's rights and freedoms.
As in Tahereh's
times, women in today's Iran have become an essential part of the
larger movement for the creation of democracy and civil
society. The women's movement continues its century-and-a-half
struggle for rights and freedoms with the aid of secular
women. Muslim women, and women from other religions, and a
large portion of society who have now come to question the very laws
they had taken for granted for so long. It is in this way that
Tahereh has come back. Her murderers were the ones to
resurrect her and give her a special place in the hearts and minds
of her great granddaughters, and their daughters' daughters.
Those men have come back, but again they will have to slash their
own throats.
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