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iran
on the verge



Like many of my comrades of western feminismo, I went to Iran obsessed with the veil, and a month later — a month of 100-plus degree days draped under black polyester — I left, still obsessed with the veil. Hejab truly is annoying — but it is not everything. Iran is a country with democratic elections and ruling clerics; poetry and pedicures. It is a place where life's nectar — love and spirits, humor and irony — exist en force, but only bloom behind closed doors. If Eskimos have 20 words for snow, Iranians should have 20 words for privacy. Making this program took great diplomacy and the trust of many people in Iran. We thank them for their openness, and thank Tara Bahrampour for writing the following intro to her homeland…
Holly



 


click picture for timeline

iran collage

photos by Steve Marts



By Tara Bahrampour
In 1979, Iran captured the world's attention when it overthrew its shah and embarked upon an untested road toward Islamic rule. Many who took part in the popular revolution hoped for freedom of speech and a democracy that had long been denied them. But as the new republic slipped into a costly eight-year war with Iraq, virulent political infighting, and isolation from the west, many Iranians despaired of seeing their country pull itself out of its political and economic woes, let alone approach the high hopes of the revolution.

During much of the last two decades, Iran was a dangerous place to voice dissent or push for human rights — in some ways, it still is. But in recent years, especially since 1997, when the country elected Mohammad Khatami, a moderate cleric, as president, the revolution has matured. Conservatives and reformers continue to battle for political power, free speech is by no means protected, and Iran still has no official diplomatic relations with its ally-turned-enemy, the United States. But Iran today is a society in the midst of transformation. A generation has passed since the revolution, and social and political debate flourishes, offering unique perspectives on everything from dress to democracy to radicalism to rock and roll.

Contradictions Rule
Iranian women in particular feel the rumblings as the country's political and cultural landscape shifts. Their lives are racked with contradictions. They must hide their bodies, yet their voices are starting to be heard. By law, women must cover themselves in scarves and long coats — an outfit many would not choose. While more traditional women opt for the all-encompassing chador, many modern women wear the latest Western fashions underneath their coats. Women have to cover their hair, it's true, but they also drive cars, own companies, run newspapers, direct films, teach yoga classes and compete in sports. For many, the hejab is a necessary inconvenience, one they hope will fade with the mellowing of the regime.

Iranian law does not always offer parity to women — men enjoy more rights in certain areas, like custody and inheritance. But women play an active, often pivotal role in social and political life; they were key, for instance, in the election and recent reelection of President Khatami. Female lawyers and journalists are vocal advocates of women's rights and more women hold high political posts and places in the university than at any time in Iran's history, including the Shah's era. Interestingly, one reason for women's advances in education is the Islamification of schools that took place after the revolution. Traditional families who might not have sent their daughters to co-ed classrooms now send them to sex-segregated schools where an Islamic curriculum is emphasized. The result: well over half of university students are now women.

Revolution Revised
Contrasts like these abound across the country. In remote villages, life is centered around the farm and the mosque, young people are married by parental decree, and modern luxuries are few. In Tehran, students demonstrate for more freedoms, artists test cultural and political boundaries, families ski on the nearby slopes, and teenagers flock to malls and Internet cafes. (A number of these were closed recently, after the government-run telephone company realized people were using the Internet to make cheap long-distance calls. However, the cafes seem to open as fast as they are shut, and for many Iranians, the Internet is an invaluable link to the outside world.) Tehran is the heartbeat of Iran's social consciousness, artistic creativity and political and economic power. Here, intellectuals discuss politics in coffee shops (but not in bars; alcohol is strictly forbidden), mullahs lead thousands in weekly prayers, and men and women gather in apartments for clandestine dance parties.

Many of Iran's recent reforms have been bolstered by the large percentage of Iranians born since the revolution. With more than half of the population under age 25 and the voting age set at 15, the youth have a powerful voice, one that helped give President Khatami his unexpected landslide victory in 1997 and his sweeping reelection this year. Less scarred than their parents by the traumatic — and polarizing — war and revolution, the new generation seems more interested in normalizing their lives than engaging in "radical" politics. Indeed, in the context of the Islamic republic's history, many consider lobbying for more openness to the West or pushing for more relaxed social laws (e.g., the right to have coffee with a member of the opposite sex) as more radical than the threadbare "Death to America!" demonstrations promoted by the religious right.

One Step Forward?
As reformers and conservatives continue their political tug-of-war, the outcome of Iran's experiment in religious democracy remains unclear. One year there might be scores of outspoken independent newspapers for sale; the next year most of them may be banned. In one week you might hear of young people jailed for listening to Western music but allowed to hold pro-reform campus rallies (the following week, the protesters might be arrested.) Views of the nation's progress are rarely simple; it's common to hear people praise the revolution while disparaging the current regime. Some worry the reformers are leading Iran away from its revolutionary ideals; others complain that Khatami's government has not gone far enough with its reforms. Debate will continue as the country works to solve its economic problems and define its domestic mandate and its place in the world. But despite the hurdles ahead, the fact that so many people are engaged in this debate is a positive sign, an inching toward the goals of a revolution that, from its inception, sought to lay more power in the hands of the people.

Tara Bahrampour Tara Bahrampour is the author of To See and See Again: A Life in Iran and America. She has written about Iran for The New York Times, The New Republic and Travel and Leisure. She lived in Iran until she was 11 and has been back several times since leaving in 1979. Her father is Iranian and her mother is American.

 



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