Since the 1910-era Constitutional Revolution, women in Iran have
struggled to achieve gender equality, to no avail. In the 1930s, women
had 14 magazines discussing their rights, and by the 1970s had gained
some freedom of education and occupation.
But these small achievements were taken away when Ruhollah Khomeini usurped power in Iran in 1979.
After
a century-old movement, women are still officially subhuman in the eyes
of the state. They are denied the right to divorce their husbands and
gain custody of their children.
They are also unable to work or leave the country without their husband’s permission.
Throughout
history, Iranian rulers have established power over Iran by subjugating
the female body. Reza Shah, the Pahlevi Dynasty’s first Shah, ruled
Iran from 1925 to 1941. He forcibly removed the hijab from women in an
attempt to westernize the country.
Since 1979, the Islamic
Republic has forced the hijab back onto women in order to Islamicize the
country. At the micro-level, individual males in Iran have also exerted
control over women’s bodies to prove their authority.
The
failure of the Iranian women’s movement is due to many pressing
obstacles, including life under a theocratic government that severely
suppresses any challenge to its “divine” rules. Thus any activity must
be undertaken with extreme caution.
The contradictory
perspectives of religious women activists vs. secular ones has also been
a major reason for the failure of the Iranian women’s movement.
While
one group believes “genuine” Islam can be emancipating for women, the
other considers secularism as the first step out of male domination.
Urban
and rural women are also divided. Middle and upper-middle class women
seek occupational and educational rights, while for poorer women, health
issues and welfare are women’s primary needs.
However, an unacknowledged source of division among feminists in Iran is the ethnocentrism of the dominant group.
Most
women activists are either unaware that ethnicity and feminism
intersect or are simply too afraid to discuss this important subject,
which has become taboo.
Iran has long strived to assimilate
ethnic and religious minorities within its borders, including Kurds,
Baluch, Aazeris, Turkmans, Baha’is and Jews. Discussing the
individuality of these groups frightens Iranians, who believe that
diversity would endanger their land by instigating separatist outlooks.
In their denial of diversity, women activists have turned into agents of
patriarchy and reproduce national chauvinism.
Since they are
under extensive pressure to assimilate, the majority of feminists have
tied their cause to their centrist views. This is true even of some
feminists born and raised outside of the capital.
They strive to
help the mainstream voice become the only voice addressing women’s
plight. Moreover, since they feel it is the only powerful voice
acknowledging the plight of women, they feel they should give the
mainstream their allegiance and attention. Thus they fail to observe or
acknowledge the simultaneous oppression that women outside of the center
experience.
This blind spot is as common among Iranians abroad
as it is among those in Iran. Shortly before International Women’s Day
2015, I was approached by a board member of a Toronto-based Iranian
women’s organization. She wanted me to join the group. Her call came as a
pleasant surprise and I expressed my appreciation of her group’s
attempts to invite the voice of a minority into their organization. But
it turned out that she was not aware of my Kurdish roots.
“We will contact you later,” she said, and hung up, never to call me again.
While
conducting research and interviews for this article, I approached the
same board member to comment on ethnicity and feminism in Iran. I asked
her to offer common grounds that activists could/should find to
strengthen their fight. She responded that she had guests over and
therefore had no time to answer my question. Two other Persian feminists
also refused to comment because of time constraints and one never
responded.
An eminent Iranian feminist based in Europe, however,
did respond. “I am so sorry,” she wrote, “but I am not interested to
waste my time and energy to promote something that does not show minimum
respect to what I believe in as feminist ethics.” She ignored requests
to clarify what she meant by “something” and did not explain why
discussing ethnicity and feminism would go against feminist ethics.
However,
not all the feminists I approached were hostile to discussing the
intersection of race/ethnicity and feminism. Activist Torkaman Gamichi
was more interested in facilitating a discussion about the situation of
Turkish women in Azerbaijan Province than in pretending that only women
in Tehran have the right to gender equality.
She pointed out the difference in priorities between the dominant feminists and the marginalized ones.
“While
the center-oriented activists are fighting to get Iranian women into
sport stadiums, I am fighting to stop the virginity examination for new
brides,” said Gamichi. It is still a common expectation in Azerbaijan
Province that a young woman acquire a certificate of chastity from a
gynecologist who examines her hymen.
But of course, such a
campaign is not marketable. Women in the capital no longer have to deal
with the humiliation of hymen examination and so it is not a pressing
matter for them. Also, this is more of a cultural problem than a
political one because the government does not require the examination.
Moreover, giving this issue a voice would mean airing the dirty laundry
of an already demonized nation that tries too hard to show the world it
is westernized despite its fanatical government.
“I have nothing
against a woman’s right to watch sports in stadiums,” Gamichi added. “I
only want the center-oriented feminists to understand that Turkish women
are under chronic, discriminatory cultural mandates to be obedient and
to be chaste.”
Kurdish villages in Iran have one of the highest
ranks of women’s self-immolation in the world. For these women, who
struggle with strict patriarchy, poverty and geo-political and domestic
violence, the dramatic use of fire becomes their loudest cry for help
and their only act of control over their bodies. Yet Iranian feminists
never acknowledge this tragedy by speaking about it in the media.
Soraya
Fallah, a Los Angeles-based activist who was incarcerated in Iran, said
that even in Iranian prison, Kurdish women suffer more severely than
their Persian counterparts.
“I was not allowed to address my
visitors in Kurdish, my mother tongue,” Fallah said. “I could not
communicate to my mother, whose Farsi is limited. I was not allowed to
tell my husband – in my own language – that I loved him.”
Farsi
is the only official language in Iran. It is the language of Persians,
who constitute half of Iran’s population of 70 million citizens.
Prisoners are not allowed to speak in any other language.
“I was
allowed a five-minute cold shower every week,” Fallah said. “Most
prisoners in Tehran were allowed more frequent showers, even those who
were held in solitary. There was no toilet inside the cells where I was
held. There was no TV or access to newspapers. Prison memoirs of my
fellow activists reveal that the prisoners in Tehran were given these
basic amenities. The prison facilities in Kurdistan were old and run
down.”
Dr. Roya Toloui, cofounder of the Kurdistan Feminist
Party, believes that ethnic and gender discriminations are
interconnected and cannot be separated.
“I often wonder if I am a
feminist first and then a Kurd, or vice versa?” Toloui mused. “A major
difference between me and a Persian feminist is that she can have the
freedom to separate gender issues from ethnic oppression.”
Marginalized women share ethnic subjugation with their men.
“Men
who are oppressed themselves tend to be more violent with their female
family members,” Touloui said. “Kurdish women in Iran suffer from a
tangled knot, a combination of ethnic, political, economic and gender
oppression. A Persian feminist doesn’t have to worry about lacking the
right to education in mother tongue.”
Provinces such as
Baluchestan, Khuzestan, Lorestan and Kurdistan – which are located near
the borders of Iran and are home to non-Persian ethnic groups –
flounder. For the children in these regions, the first grade of
elementary school is often a traumatic experience, since they have to
learn literacy along with a new language.
While marginalized
activists acknowledge that all women in Iran are subject to
discrimination, they believe that focusing only on the situation of the
dominant group means turning a blind eye to the realities of life for
millions of women who live outside of Tehran or in its slums.
Bell
hook’s Feminist Theory: From Margin to Centre and Wini Breines’ The
Trouble Between Us: An Uneasy History of White and Black Women in the
Feminist Movement examine in detail the gap between privileged and
underprivileged women activists. Some of the points raised in these
books and others like them can be eye-opening for Iranian feminists.
But,
as long as dominant Iranian feminists fail to see the ethnocentrism in
their own backyard and the simultaneity of oppression for the
underprivileged, the century-old struggle for women’s rights is bound
for failure.
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