Awareness | Posted by Becka W on 07/8/2009

A Persepolis Reality

The hot, sunny days of summer always remind me of what it was like to be a kid – scrapes on my knees, no school, that familiar sound of the ice cream truck, sand in between my toes, shorts, tank tops, flip-flops and lemonade stands.

 It’s hard to imagine what life would be like if that fun and wonderment of being a kid mixed with something more dark and complex – like what Marjane “Marji” Satrapi has to deal with as a young girl in her auto-biographical graphic novel Persepolis

Persepolis

Persepolis

Set in Iran in 1979, Persepolis explores what it’s like to grow up and be a child of the Iranian Revolution. Marji marches around her house pretending to be a revolutionary, loses her uncle to the secret police, and still struggles to deal with the things all of us do – like listening to rock music, liking and flirting with boys, trying to be cool, and overall striving to be a normal teenager.

 The Iranian Revolution, or the Islamic Revolution as it’s sometimes called, occurred when the Iranian people overthrew the monarchy of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and replaced it with an Islamic Republic lead by the leader of the Revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

This revolution is what made Islamic fundamentalism; or the political movement famous for pushing against the idea of a truly secular, democratic state and the international Universal Declaration of Human rights, which includes freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and equality between men and women (kinda uncool, if you ask me – I’m a firm believer in separating church and state). Although the Iranian people gave Khomeini the power to lead their government, he used it to create an Islamic state – specifically, one where women are not seen as being entitled to the same rights as men.

Thirty years after the Iranian Revolution, the people of Iran are again experiencing difficulty with their leaders and struggling to make their voices heard. On June 12 of this year, the Iranian people voted to elect a president, the highest official elected by direct popular vote. In the 2005 election, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was elected to be President of Iran. Khomeini, the same man who lead the Iranian Revolution and supported Islamic Fundamentalism, is a huge Ahmadinejad supporter. When the Iranian people voted last month, the majority of the votes went to the two top contenders (much like the American system) – incumbent Ahmadinejad, affiliated with the Abadgaran political party, and Mir-Houssein Moussavi, of the Independent Reformist party.

 

Ahmadinejad

Ahmadinejad

On June 12, Iran’s official news agency announced that with two-thirds of the votes counted, Ahmadinejad had won the election with 63% of the vote, and that Moussavi had received 33% of the vote. The European Union, United Kington, and several other Western countries expressed concern over alleged irregularities during the vote, and doubt was voiced over the authenticity of the results.

 

 

Moussavi

Moussavi

 Moussavi issued a statement saying he wouldn’t “surrender to this charade”, and urged supporters to fight the decision “without committing acts of violence.” Protests in favor of Moussavi and against the alleged fraudulent election broke out in Tehran, the capital of Iran. Khomeini, now the Supreme Leader of Iran, urged the nation to unite behind Ahmadinejad, but Moussavi lodged an official appeal against the result to the Guardian Council on June 14, claiming that 14 million unused ballots were missing, which gave the Iranian government a chance to manipulate the results.

 Although on June 29, Iran’s electoral board completed the partial recount and concluded that Ahmadinejad won the election, there is still continued protest from Moussavi and his supporters that the results are fraudulent; and rallies have broken out across the world asking the Iranian government to release political protestors taken prisoner during marches in Tehran against the election results. Moussavi is even planning to create a new political party in Iran aimed at reigning in the power of the Islamic Republic’s Leadership; and he aims to file the papers before Ahmadinejad is sworn in for a new term.

While I was struggling to begin to understand the complex situation in Iran – who voted for who? How exactly do they tally votes again? How can we tell who really won? Why wear green? – I remembered how much I enjoyed this novel, and how much it taught me about Iranian history – and it helped me understand the struggle not only Iranian citizens, but Iranian women have gone through to make an impact and be heard.

During the Iranian Revolution, women all over Iran fought to oust the Shah and start a new nation. After the revolution, they simply didn’t get the freedom they fought for – a girl can be forced into marriage at 13 (can you imagine – going through middle school and having to come home and not only clean your room, but cook dinner for your husband?), men and women are still kept apart from each other as much as possible until marriage, and a girl or woman can be arrested for simply having an ankle length skirt (wind might blow the skirt up) or having a little neck showing.

Iran Protests

Iran Protests

 

 

Their struggle is a reminder why we should all stand behind them in whatever way they need us – because imagine: what your American summer would be without shorts and a tank top?

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  • Harrow1212 @ at 11:15 pm, July 8th, 2009

    Good blog! Have you seen Persepolis version 2.0? Updated for the new revolution-in-progress
    Find it @ http://www.spreadpersepolis.com/

  • Charlotte @ at 7:10 pm, July 14th, 2009

    “Khomeini, the same man who lead the Iranian Revolution and supported Islamic Fundamentalism, is a huge Ahmadinejad supporter.”

    Khomeini has been dead for quite a while. He is not a supporter of Ahmadinejad, because there was no Ahmadinejad to support when Khomeini was alive and being the figurehead for the Islamic (which is only sometimes referred to as the Iranian) Revolution.

    You also spew many stereotypes about how hard it is to be Iranian. I have friends and family there, and in most areas people are no arrested for showing their ankles (or their arms, actually), plenty of women attend college, and marriage at such a young age rarely happens- families want their children educated. This type of marriage takes place in more rural areas.

    The current Supreme Leader is Khamenei.

    Also, who’s to say a theocracy is bad? Sure, there are some negative aspects, but every government has something wrong with it.

  • BeckaW @ at 8:12 pm, July 14th, 2009

    Charlotte –

    all great points. I had remembered the Khomeini bit from a discussion in one of my classes this past December, and the fact checking I tried to do on various websites seemed to confirm that, but it is more than possible that I got this wrong or mixed up names somewhere – I’m a student with an interest in Iran and the situation there, but by no means an expert.

    I didn’t mean to stereotype in anyway that it is difficult to be Iranian. I’m sure it is no more diffcult to identify as Iranian than it is to identify as American, English, French, you name it.

    What I meant to imply was that the fact that there are any areas where women have to worry about being arrested for dressing in the way they wish is an injustice. And in Iran, there are quite a few of those areas.

    For the facts about women marrying young, I consulted an article from Women’s eNews, that I remember – I’ll try to dig up the link and post it on here.

    And agreed – no government is perfect. But we can all strive to make every government a hospitable environment for women of all ages, I think we can agree on that!

    :) Becka

  • Rabbit White @ at 8:56 am, July 15th, 2009

    Love Persepolis! Thanks.

  • miranda @ at 9:21 am, July 16th, 2009

    hi, i liked persepolis too. I would like to say that in my opinion a theocracy is very bad as you n o longer have diversity and intolerance rules. You think it would be cool to have a theocracy with catholicism as the religion? you would no longer be alowed to be a protestant or a muslim, a jew or a hindu. And it can often be noticed that theocracy usually atack women’s rights.

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