Women in Iran: Difference between revisions
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[[Amazons|Amazon]] warrior women were known to have been of North Iranian stock( [[Scythia]], northern Persian empire, peoples who lived in Central Asia, the [[Caucasus]] and eastern Europe). These Iranians were replaced by the [[Turks]] and [[Mongols]] and some [[Arabs]]. They are known as Tats and live in the region of Daghestan in the Caucasus. It is little known that the armies of Sassanian Persia included women as fighters who (according to Roman sources) gave an excellent account of themselves. |
[[Amazons|Amazon]] warrior women were known to have been of North Iranian stock( [[Scythia]], northern Persian empire, peoples who lived in Central Asia, the [[Caucasus]] and eastern Europe). These Iranians were replaced by the [[Turks]] and [[Mongols]] and some [[Arabs]]. They are known as Tats and live in the region of Daghestan in the Caucasus. It is little known that the armies of Sassanian Persia included women as fighters who (according to Roman sources) gave an excellent account of themselves. |
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See this image: [http://www.u.arizona.edu/~memcinto/archery/images/LXXXV_85_a_sm.jpg] |
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Some historians in fact argue that it was [[Cyrus the Great]] who, ten centuries before [[Islam]], established the custom of covering women to protect their chastity. According to their theory, the veil passed from the [[Achaemenid]]s to the [[Seleucid]]s. They, in turn, handed it to the [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantines]], from whom the Arab conquerors inherited it, transmitting it over the vast reaches of the Arab world.[{{fn|1}}] But even if one were to accept this theory, it wouldn't change the fact that the view toward women in Iran changed significantly with the arrival of Islam in Iran. |
Some historians in fact argue that it was [[Cyrus the Great]] who, ten centuries before [[Islam]], established the custom of covering women to protect their chastity. According to their theory, the veil passed from the [[Achaemenid]]s to the [[Seleucid]]s. They, in turn, handed it to the [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantines]], from whom the Arab conquerors inherited it, transmitting it over the vast reaches of the Arab world.[{{fn|1}}] But even if one were to accept this theory, it wouldn't change the fact that the view toward women in Iran changed significantly with the arrival of Islam in Iran. |
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[[image:Zan-sassani.jpg|thumb|left|<center>The perspective on women in Iranian society has not always been the same: A nude [[Sassanid]] woman undulates on this silver-gilt ewer.</center>]] |
[[image:Zan-sassani.jpg|thumb|left|<center>The perspective on women in Iranian society has not always been the same: A nude [[Sassanid]] woman undulates on this silver-gilt ewer.</center>]] |
Revision as of 10:33, 1 September 2005
A Persian Woman or Iranian woman usually refers to a woman of or from the traditional Persia culture.
Although she is seen as Iranian, the Persian woman need not be from any specific nationality or ethnicity, and can be thought to be associated with any of the peoples sharing the Persian culture.
Persian women in history
Amazon warrior women were known to have been of North Iranian stock( Scythia, northern Persian empire, peoples who lived in Central Asia, the Caucasus and eastern Europe). These Iranians were replaced by the Turks and Mongols and some Arabs. They are known as Tats and live in the region of Daghestan in the Caucasus. It is little known that the armies of Sassanian Persia included women as fighters who (according to Roman sources) gave an excellent account of themselves. See this image: [1] Some historians in fact argue that it was Cyrus the Great who, ten centuries before Islam, established the custom of covering women to protect their chastity. According to their theory, the veil passed from the Achaemenids to the Seleucids. They, in turn, handed it to the Byzantines, from whom the Arab conquerors inherited it, transmitting it over the vast reaches of the Arab world.[[[:Template:Fn]]] But even if one were to accept this theory, it wouldn't change the fact that the view toward women in Iran changed significantly with the arrival of Islam in Iran.
At the dawn of the 20th century, many Iranian modernists who had traveled to Europe for higher education, came back to view the Islamic veil as a symbol of backwardness. Its removal, in their view, was essential to the advancement of Iran and its dissociation from Arab-Islamic culture. For the counter-modernists who wanted to uphold the Islamic social and gender orders, the European woman became a scapegoat and a symbol of corruption, immorality, and Westernization. In the Iranian body-politic the imagined European woman provided the subtext for political maneuvers over women's rights and appearance in the public space.
Iran's Constitutional Revolution of 1905-11 became a turning point in the lives of Iranian women. Women participated in huge numbers and gained important positions for expressing their views, including journals, schools, and associations that flourished in the following period (1911-24).[[[:Template:Fn]]]
But the defeat of the constitutionalists (1921-5) and the consolidation of power by Reza Shah (1925-41) had two contradictory impacts. Independent women's journals and groups were destroyed, while the state implemented social reforms such as mass education and paid employment for women. Reza Shah also initiated his controversial policy of Kashf-e-Hijab, banning the wearing of the Islamic Hijab in public. But like other sectors of the society in those years under Reza Shah's rule, women lost the right to express themselves and dissent was repressed.
With the advent of Iran's revolution in 1979, women's rights took yet another wild swing toward religious conservatism. Despite the decree of many of Iran's top clerics such as Ayatollah Taleghani, the state, under the rule of Ayatollah Khomeini made wearing the Hijab mandatory for all women, implementing strict religious codes for women in society.
In May 1997, a large number of women participated in presidential elections and overwhelmingly voted for Hojatolislam Mohammad Khatami, a reformist cleric who had promised reduction of repression and toleration of civil society institutions. His election opened a period when women could voice their ideas one again, with many becoming increasingly bolder in their demands and in their criticisms. The awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Shirin Ebadi, an Iranian human rights and feminist activist, further emboldened Iranian feminists inside Iran and cemented their relationships with Iranian feminist activists abroad.
The Sixth Majles saw the emergence of some of Iran's most strongest advocates of women's rights. Almost all of the 11 female lawmakers of The 190-seat Majles took on the challenge of trying to change some of Irans more conservative laws amidst a male dominated culture. However, during the elections for the Seventh Majles, all of those representatives were banned to run for office by the all male Council of Guardians, only allowing conservative females to run for election. The new representatives, as expected, upon their arrival into office began reversing many of the laws passed by the reformist 6th Majles.
Famous Iranian women and female entities
- Seyyedeh Khatun,ruler.
- Rabe'e Ghazdari, poetess.
- Táhirih
- Nassim Sahar, vegan activist.
- Shermine Shahrivar, Miss Europe 2005.[2]
- Shirin Ebadi, 2003 Nobel Laureate.
- Shahrazad of 1001 Nights
- Parvin E'tesami, poetess.
- Lily Afshar, world class guitarist.
- Forough Farrokhzad, poetess.
- Shahr-banu, princess.
- Farah Pahlavi, empress.
- Anahita, Goddess.
- Parisa Khosravi
- Nazanin Afshin-Jam, Miss Canada 2004.
- Shohreh Aghdashloo, Actress.
- Goli Ameri, Republican politician.
- Anousheh Ansari: X Prize named after her.
- Ladan and Laleh Bijani, conjoined twins.
- Zahra Kazemi, slain photographer.
- Simin Behbahani
- Azar Nafisi
- Marjane Satrapi
- Mansoureh Hosseini
- Aidin Aghdashloo
- Samira Makhmalbaf, director.
- Christiane Amanpour, CNN news anchor.
- Rudi Bakhtiar, CNN news anchor.
- Shadi Sadr
- Masoumeh Ebtekar, Iranian Vice President.
- Nafiseh Fayyazbakhsh
- Fatemeh Haghighatjou, former Member of Parliament.
- Faezeh Hashemi Rafsanjani, daughter of Hashemi Rafsanjani.
- Elaheh Koulai, former Member of Parliament.
- Maryam Rajavi, opposition leader, alleged president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
- Azam Taleghani
- Leila Arab
- Delkash
- Googoosh, singer.
- Leila Forouhar, singer.
- Sima Bina
- Marzieh, singer.
- Foozieh of Egypt, former Queen.
- Soraya Esfandiary Bakhtiari, former Queen.
- Leila Pahlavi, princess.
- Zahra Eshraghi
- Mumtaz Mahal, Wife of Mughal Emperor Shah Jehan and inspiration for the Taj Mahal.
- Mehrangiz Kar, lawyer.
- Farrokh Karimi, Iranian female Dutch Member of Parliament.[3]
- Mandana Naderian, German TV hostess.[4]
- Mina Borati, wife of Joschka Fischer, the German Foreign Minister.[5]
- Mina Bissel, Director of UC Berkeley Life Sciences Division. [6]
- Fariba Adelkhah, Director of Research at Centre for International Studies and Research, France. [7]
- Simin Nikbin Meydani, Senior Scientist and Director at Tufts University. [8]
- Nahid Shahmehri, Director of the Laboratory for Intelligent Information, Linköpings Universitet, Sweden. [9]
- Tamara Stronach, star of the blockbuster movie The Neverending Story.
- Mariam Kamkar, Head of the Department of Computer and Information Science, Linköpings Universitet, Sweden. [10]
- Azadeh Tabazadeh, Stanford University scientist from NASA. [11] Article about her in TIME magazine
- Manijeh Razeghi, Director, Center for Quantum Devices, Northwestern University. [12]
- Patricia L. Mokhtarian, Associate Director, Institute of Transportation Studies, UC Davis. [13]
- Benazir Bhutto, Former Prime Minister of Pakistan.
Further Info
- Zan
- Iran-Dokht
- Iran Women's Study Foundation
- Article: Women against Women, in the 7th Majles
- Iranian Female MP is arrested.
Sources
- Template:Fnb The Iranians: Persia, Islam and the Soul of a Nation, by Sandra Mackey. (Penguin Group, 1996).
- Template:Fnb J. Afary, The Iranian constitutional revolution, 1906-11. Grassroots democracy, social democracy, and the origins of feminism, New York 1996.