OP-ED: Iran's Second Sex, By ROGER COHEN, New York Times, June 26, 2009
Nice piece from Cohen again, underscoring the role of women in the protest movement in Iran.
Women marched in 1979, too. But when the revolution was won, women were pushed out. Their subjugation became a pillar of the Islamic state. One woman told me that she had been 20 when she fought to oust the shah. "It's simple," she said. "We wanted freedom then, and we don't have it now."
In a way it is simple: laws that can force a girl into marriage at 13; discriminatory laws on inheritance; the segregated beaches on the Caspian; the humiliation of arrest for a neck revealed or an ankle-length skirt (a gust of wind might show a forbidden flash of leg); the suffocation that leads one artist I know to raise her hands to her neck.
Basic angry stuff.
More subtly:
I don't want to suggest that Iran is a nation of women thirsting to cast off their chadors. As Saeed Leylaz told me before he was thrown in jail along with most of Iran's reformist brain trust, "Our feet are in traditionalism and our heads in modernism." Zahra Rahnavard, the strong-willed wife of Mir Hussein Moussavi, the opposition leader, troubled as she inspired.
When a friend asked one Ahmadinejad supporter his reasons, the reply was brusque: because "all the whores are with Moussavi." Cultural battle lines of great clarity have been drawn since June 12.
The oft-noted bit about 60% of college students being women. That, my friends, is one ticking social time bomb, of which Iran has so many.
Yet another reason why I choose not to freak out over the Iranian bomb.