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"At the heart of my activism is the need to give voice to millions of silenced women”

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MumsnetGuestPosts · 21/06/2018 17:16

My name is Masih Alinejad. I’m a journalist, human rights activist, and a women's rights warrior. I’m also a troublemaker, all because I started to say the word ‘no’.

Saying ‘no’ is not easy for women, and especially in the place where I grew up. Born in a small village in Northern Iran called Ghomikola, I had a simple childhood with two conservative parents, surrounded by brothers who enjoyed more freedom and greater privilege.

My inquisitiveness about why life as a girl had to be different started at a young age. Like children everywhere, growing up was riddled with small acts of defiance - with one small difference. Without knowing it, I was challenging the notions of what it meant to be a girl in the Islamic Republic. This brought shame to my family time and again - when I was expelled from high school for asking questions about the political system, for instance, and when I complained about the compulsory hijab.

Another source of embarrassment (which probably contributed to my expulsion) came when I was chosen by my high school to become a Quran reciter. As I mention in my book, this opportunity imbued my parents with pride. That day, I sat cross-legged on a futon on the stage, looking out at the students and teachers, and started reading a verse from the Quran. But I was a voracious reader of poetry, and my mind instinctively wanted to venture into reading a forbidden poem. It was written by Shamloo - one of Iran’s censored poets. So, I started reciting: “They smell your mouth, lest you've said I love you; they smell your heart. These are strange times my dear.” To my utter surprise, the students were whistling in delight. But delving into the ‘forbidden’ displeased the teachers, who hurried forwards and dragged me away. I continued to recite the poem even while they pulled me from my platform - a public manifestation of my early rebellion.

I believe that it is only by saying ‘no’ that we forge our identity.

The will to fight against injustice has guided me ever since. For more than four years now, I have campaigned against the compulsory hijab - a venture which started spontaneously on a beautiful May day, when the rain stopped and the sun came out. I lived in Kew Gardens at the time, and decided to run around amongst the cherry blossoms. I posted a picture of this on Facebook, not wearing a headscarf. In the picture, I was running through a street in London - enthralled by the sensation of the wind stroking my hair.

I hadn’t lived in Iran for a long time - forced to leave five years earlier. In 2009, there was a sweeping crackdown by the Islamic Republic authorities, and the country was gripped by large-scale protests against the electoral fraud. I settled down in the UK as a journalist, relaying the voices of families whose sons and daughters had been killed by the security forces with impunity.

After five years of covering political news, I longed for change. And, to my astonishment, this Kew Gardens photo prompted numerous women in Iran to reach out - sending me messages about how envious they were of my freedom, and expressing the sorrow they felt in being unable to share it.

Little did I know that, shortly afterwards, my Facebook feed and inbox would be inundated with photos sent from Iran by Iranian women; women who were stealthily enjoying the wind in their hair. And so a campaign named #MyStealthyFreedom was born. It was so successful that it soon morphed into related initiatives.

In May 2017, we launched #WhiteWednesdays (whereby every Wednesday, women in Iran go into public without a headscarf, or wear a white shawl to protest against compulsory hijab). Soon enough, women started walking the streets of Iran bare-headed, and sent me the videos of their rebellion.

Another groundbreaking moment took place in December, with the rise of the #GirlsOfRevolutionStreet movement. It began with Vida Movahedi, who started waving her white scarf as a flag in a busy street called Revolution Street, standing on a utility box on a hectic Wednesday morning.

Now, #WhiteWednesdays has grown so huge that women are walking unveiled in the streets of Iran on a daily basis. Our latest initiative, #MyCameraIsMyWeapon, has also garnered a huge following in Iran - as evidenced by the popularity of our Instagram videos. The campaign asks women to film the people who harass them in the street for being unveiled, which seems to have frightened the morality police officers.

At the heart of my activism is the need to give voice to the millions of silenced women in Iran - women who are continually ignored by the government. I attribute the success of my campaigns to the fact that they are utterly based on the actions of ordinary people. My role has been to give them a platform from which to relay their voices - so that they, too, can speak their forbidden words.

Masih Alinejad is the author of The Wind in My Hair: My Fight for Freedom in Modern Iran (Virago, £10.49 hardback). She joins us here on the bottom of this guest post for a webchat on Wednesday 27 June at 9pm. Post your questions here in advance if you can’t make it on the day.

OP posts:
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LegoPiecesEverywhere · 27/06/2018 21:12

Wow. I admire your courage and strength.

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MasihAlinejad · 27/06/2018 21:19

@PoodleQueen

Hi there and thank you for taking the time to chat with us this evening. I wondered how you felt about encouraging rebellion from the relative safety of the west? Please know I'm not discounting or dismissing in any way the abuse you may have experienced here in the uUK


Hi PQ,
As I wrote in my book in greater detail, in 2009 I was a political journalist working in Iran and the security forces gave me a choice: leave Iran or face arrest. For five years, I covered human rights violations, including producing a 57 part radio documentary on those killed in Iran 2009 protests. I received death threats even then. What was my supposed crime? I was just documenting human rights abuses.
Now, as I have said many times, if the Islamic Republic guarantees my safety, I will return and continue my campaign in Iran.
I am outside Iran but my campaign and all the activists are inside Iran. I am only a platform to raise the voices of Iranian women. My campaign dies without the support of Iranian women inside the country
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MasihAlinejad · 27/06/2018 21:20

@LegoPiecesEverywhere

Wow. I admire your courage and strength.


Thank you. The real courage is from the women inside Iran. Best
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MasihAlinejad · 27/06/2018 21:27

@UpstartCrow

Hello MasihAlinejad Flowers

I'd like to ask, is there anything women here can do to support you?


I'd like women everywhere to support freedom to choose for ourselves. I want to make sure politicians are aware of our brave struggle against oppression so that when they talk to Iranian government they also discuss this issue.
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MasihAlinejad · 27/06/2018 21:31

So true....

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MasihAlinejad · 27/06/2018 21:47

@YummySushi

So to clarify, those of you supporting this activist lady, are in essence speaking against the freedom of women to wear the hijab ??

In which case, no u don’t inspire me dear author. You have actually encouraged a wave that offends me. Riding on the wave of islamophobia to get recognition for your personal suffering, isn’t actaully noble.


Dear YummySushi,

I encourage you to read my book before firing away with both barrels. As I write in The Wind in My Hair, I came from a conservative and religious family where my parents had tough times making ends meet. I was chosen to be a Quran reciter at high school, though I preferred poetry. My mother and sister wear the hijab but it should not be compulsory. Compulsion is not part of Iranian culture or Islamic faith.
I am not against Islam but it is the Islamic Republic that is against me, or I should say it's against women. Compulsory hijab is a way of censoring women -- hiding them from the public sphere.
My campaign does not encourage Islamophobia but we Muslims should not shy away from discussing the not so savory parts.
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MasihAlinejad · 27/06/2018 21:51

@mistressiggi

OP, what do you think will happen next in Iran? will more freedoms be granted, or are we not near that yet?


Women will keep pushing for more rights and over time, there'll be compulsory hijab and no one will notice ...
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ClaireTMumsnet · 27/06/2018 21:57

Hi all,

Sadly we're almost at the end of our hour with Masih. Thanks so much to all who joined us, and a huge thank you to Masih for joining us this evening.

We've had a really interesting discussion tonight, and I hope Masih enjoyed taking part as much as we enjoyed reading the chat!

MNHQ

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MasihAlinejad · 27/06/2018 22:10

Dear All,

Thank you for your wonderful comments. I really enjoyed chatting with you and learnt a few things too!.

Best to you all.

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Ereshkigal · 28/06/2018 23:55

Thank you Masih Thanks

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