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A Friend Stopped By | 07/10/2008 12:00 am

Iranian Women Declare War Against the Mullahs, by Manda Zand-Ervin and Banafsheh Zand-Bonazzi

By Manda Zand-Ervin and Banafsheh Zand-Bonazzi
© AP

Editor’s Note: Manda Zand-Ervin and Banafsheh Zand-Bonazzi, mother and daughter, are Iranian activists and president and co-founder of Alliance of Iranian Women.

Artemesia was a woman who commanded the Iranian naval forces when Cyrus the Great attacked Greece in 563 BCE. The women of Iran were equal members of their society in ancient Iran and joined their men in the affairs of State — until 623AD, when Iran was invaded by the military forces of Islamic Arabs who imposed their rule upon Iranians.

During the 15th century, the Ottomans invaded Iran making the Mullahs partners of the crown in order to control Iranians and, worse yet, oppress women.

In 1888, the women of Iran joined the revolutionary forces to fight for modernity, constitutional monarchy and separation of the religion and state.

According to historians, alongside the dead revolutionaries in the battlefields lay the bodies of women who valiantly fought shoulder to shoulder with the men. The constitutional revolution succeeded in 1906, but in their negotiations with the plutocratic Mullahs, the revolutionary leadership left the family laws under the cleric-controlled Sharia. The women of Iran were betrayed but their war against the Mullahs had just begun. In 1907, with the establishment of their nationwide, underground organization, “The Secret Society of the Ladies,” a war was declared on the clergy; they would not stop until they had their equal rights.

Iranian women had total equal rights and had fought a valiant battle to once again become partners of their men ... But it did not last long.

By 1971, Iranian women had total equal rights and had fought a valiant battle to once again become partners of their men in running the affairs of the country. But it did not last long. Although Khomeini had, in an interview, announced to the Guardian and other media that women’s rights will not change under his Islamic government, one of his first acts was repealing the laws that guaranteed the women’s rights, re-imposing the Sharia laws.

Since the establishment of the Islamic government in Iran in 1979, women have counted as one-half of a man. They do not get the custody of their children. They do not have the choice in their clothing, residence, leaving the house, working, education or traveling without the permission of their husband. The age at which girls are allowed to marry is nine. Men can divorce the women at any time they wish and can marry several wives in addition to them. Girls inherit one-half of that which boys do and so on.

State-owned press reports that in Tehran, 120 women have been hung in public in the first five months of the Iranian year; that suicide among the women of Iran has been the highest in world history.

The young generation of Iranian women has again declared war against the Mullahs of Iran, but this time the power of government is against them. The paramilitary forces of the Islamic regime make it impossible for the women to protest against their inhumane laws. There are home invasions and early morning arrests of the women activists at all times. Zahra Kazemi, a photojournalist, was one of the many women who was beaten, tortured and finally killed under torture in Tehran’s Evin prison, all because she was taking photos of the families of political prisoners who had gathered for their loved ones in front of that very prison. Sixteen-year-old Atefeh Rajabi was hung in public because she was falsely accused by a Mullah of having “relations” with a man. And these are just a tiny account of the plight of women in Iran.

A group of women attempted to establish a political party. They have been in the 209 — solitary — section of the dreaded Evin prison for the last nine months.

Last year another group of women attempted to collect one million signatures against the unjust Mullah laws. Hundreds of women joined them nationwide in less than 48 hours to collect signatures, but they were all arrested, beaten and imprisoned. One year later on June 12th, 2008, nine more women were arrested from the crowd that had gathered in the town square commemorating the last year’s arrests.

41 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Brooklyn Gal
After reading this, I googled human rights for women and found this site http://www.hrw.org/women/. I would like to contribute to causes such as this. If anyone knows of another organization, I would be interested in that too. I have no other words to describe the anger I am feeling.
By Brooklyn Gal on 07/10/2008 12:35 am
Emcye Edwards
Manda and Banafsheh, Have you seen World Pulse? It is a global media organization founded by a young American woman, Jensine Larsen, to broadcast and network the untapped voices of women worldwide. The women connect via cell phones and email to exchange news, report dangerous events and activities, offer support and feel 100% connected to humanity for the first time in their lives. http://worldpulse.com/inthenews
By Emcye Edwards on 07/10/2008 12:55 am
Maggi D
Emcye - would these women be taking a chance of imprisonment or death for going to such a website. Sounds like they do not have the freedom to roam the web. Basically these women are slaves.
By Maggi D on 07/10/2008 1:46 am
Emcye Edwards
IF women have access to cell phones, this is a viable alternative for some. The idea is to build safety and disseminate news when and where it is possible. Many women with phone access have become the de facto cell phone company in their communities and this is an ongoing struggle - to find internet cafes and phones. Jensine’s magazine/online site is making a huge difference for women who are activists in their areas, pushing the limits of varying degrees of freedom - and hopefully their presence will ripple outward to benefit more. US women can also become involved thru the WP pipeline.
By Emcye Edwards on 07/10/2008 5:07 pm
Elisabeth S
I worked with an Iranian woman back in the late 80’s. She was among the nicest, smartest, best educated people I have ever worked with. And the things she told me about Iran, like the article above, made me sick at heart. These are lovely people with a significant cultural history. I often think of all of the truly moderate people of Iran and feel that they are battling alone for freedom and modernity. Further isolation for that nation is not the answer. We need multi-tiered diplomacy and international support for the forces of freedom there.
By Elisabeth S on 07/10/2008 7:13 am
mary lou s
you said it, elisabeth! and the drums beating for war there now (the faked up missile photos) are like the drums that beat for war in iraq. leslie, cynthia, why not put items like this in with the network news about all the saber rattling?
By mary lou s on 07/11/2008 12:13 am
Valerie Naughton
I am wondering if anyone has seen the movie “The Beauty Academy of Kabul.” The courage and triumph of women in these extraordinary repressed situations has always bowled me over.
By Valerie Naughton on 07/10/2008 7:55 am
Brooklyn Gal
Thanks Valerie, I will put that movie on my Netflix list. I did see Persepolis which showed life before and after the takeover.
By Brooklyn Gal on 07/10/2008 9:09 am
Frannie Em
Valerie I have heard of that movie, I think I will check it out. My two wonderful friends that I walk with are from Iran. They are Assyrian. They are always teaching me the History of Ancient Persia. One of them is Catholic, but she had to go to the Islam school. The Shah was in power and they were trying to get changes for the women, so she didn’t have to sit in the classroom when religion was taught. It was, of course an all girls school, she said they were taught that women were not even half of a man. The school felt it was more ‘advanced’ because most schools taught that women were lower or equal to dogs, this school told them they were just above dogs. Since they were Christian, when they took very crowded buses, Muslim men would stand behind them and (well, might get deleted but here goes) and (oh gosh it is even hard to type) play with themselves and then ‘spill’ it on the back of their clothes. They hated to ride the buses, but that was the only way they could get to private school, when they could finally attend. Her father had died and there were four girls being raised by a single woman. She said that her mother moved them to a part of the city with more Christians. It was more expensive and they also attended private school, so they only ate one meal a day (small one) so that they could afford living there. Sometimes they didn’t even have that. One of my friends was married off at age 14 to a man that was 30 years old. She knew nothing about what was happening to her before she went. They told her not long before she had to leave. She related a story to me of the same thing happening to her friend, when the friend was 12. That friend’s mother told her she had to go be married to a man to help the family out. She came home to visit her mother a couple of days later and asked her mother, “Haven’t I helped enough now? Can you give someone else a turn? I don’t think I can do that anymore.” They all escaped, usually to Europe and then here. There are so many more nightmarish stories that I wouldn’t even tell you here.
By Frannie Em on 07/10/2008 4:09 pm
kat
Val, i didn’t see the movie but had read the book. Amazing !
By kat on 07/10/2008 5:33 pm
theCHEROKEErose
it is a hard pill to swallow, but women all over the planet are still living under the thumb of men…as long as men exist, we will never be ‘equal’ because there is no way on earth they will openly let us…in my opinion we dont need to be ‘equal’ because we are already better…and men know and resent it…
By theCHEROKEErose on 07/10/2008 8:11 am
Bella Mia
Many of the people in Iran are Persian, not Arab. I remember a news interview after the Iraq invasion with a man in Iran who said, in broken English: America, now come rescue us. I wonder what happened to THAT guy. “In Iran, terror begins at home. The clerics put their ideology into practice in the most oppressive and barbaric ways the world has seen in recent times. The first victims were women and girls. Misogynous views and laws reinforced and empowered men’s oldest sexist prejudices and anxieties. Men’s frustrations with life, their insecurities, even their sexual feelings are projected onto women. Suppressing women became the solution to men and society’s failures. Men’s anger is aimed at wives, sisters, and daughters. Women became targets for sadists. Vigilante squads roam the streets and spy on private parties looking for women violating the dress code or talking to male friends. Blaming the victim gave men freedom to commit acts of violence against women and girls. Women and girls in Iran suffer from physical and psychological effects of the restrictions and harassment. Women and girls have numerous health problems related to their limited physical activity and inadequate, segregated health care system. The suicide rate among girls is among the highest in the world. Given that mothers and future mothers are the scapegoats of the clerics’ pathology, there are biological limits to what the clerics can do to them. They can’t exterminate them all or put them in gulags as previous dictators have done to political, ethnic, and class enemies. Instead, they perpetually torment and terrorize the female population. For the tens of thousands who have been executed, from teenagers to pregnant mothers to aged grandmothers, their murders are carried out in the most torturous manner. Virgins are raped before execution. Women are stoned to death with rocks that inflict the most pain before death: small stones are not allowed because they don’t cause enough damage; large stones are not allowed because they might kill too quickly. A particularly sadistic form of execution that was used against political resistors following the revolution was one shot through the lower abdomen – the womb.” The whole article is a real eye-opener. -Defeating the Woman Haters http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=77BF7652-D7C6-412A-8…
By Bella Mia on 07/10/2008 8:20 am
Bella Mia
I forgot to mention that my one of my first playgroup mom-friends was a Persian immigrant, Sue, and her daughter who was exactly my daughter’s age. She was so funny, lively and always had interesting things to discuss. Even after we moved to another area, she managed to find a home within just a mile of our house, and our friendship continued. I do remember that her husband would only say hello to me and leave the room. I lost touch with her after we moved east.
By Bella Mia on 07/10/2008 8:26 am
Bella Mia
The same article has as list of demands to the UN that must happen to help the women of Iran including taking the Women’s resistance organizations OFF the US terror watch list!!!!! “Take the women led resistance groups off the terrorist list. There are two Iranian opposition groups that are led by women dedicated to women’s freedom and equality: The People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI, also known as the Mojahedin-e-Khalq or MEK) and the National Council of Resistance of Iran. The PMOI is a political and formerly armed resistance group that is strongly opposed to Islamic fundamentalism. The Secretary General, Mojgan Parsaie, is a U.S. educated woman, the entire Leadership Council is composed of women, and many of the experienced military commanders are women. The National Council of Resistance (NCRI) is also led by a woman, Maryam Rajavi, with a long record of supporting women’s freedom and democracy. The NCRI’s parliament-in-exile is composed of more than 50 percent women. In 1996, Maryam Rajavi made this promise to the mullahs: “You have done your utmost to humiliate, torture, and slaughter Iranian women, but rest assured that you will receive the blow from the very force you discounted, the very force whom your reactionary mindset cannot allow you to take into consideration.” “The PMOI and NCRI are on the U.S. terrorist list as an act of appeasement to the Iranian regime by the Clinton administration who sought to normalize relations with supposed “reformers” in Iran. Later the PMOI was also added to the European Union’s terrorist list, also as an act of appeasement to the Iranian regime. A recent 16 month review of the PMOI by the U.S. found that none of their personnel was linked to acts of terrorism. “The Iranian regime holds the upper hand in the power struggle with the west as long as the U.S. and Europe constrain their opponents. Removing these pro-woman, pro-democracy resistance groups from the terrorist lists and supporting their efforts to overthrow the Iranian regime provides an alternative approach to appeasement and attempts to normalize relations with terrorists or military action.”
By Bella Mia on 07/10/2008 8:29 am
mary lou s
bella, thank you for this information.
By mary lou s on 07/11/2008 12:22 am