The Mercury News

Women in Iran are flaunting their locks in public

- By Farnaz Fassihi

An engineer strode onstage at an event in Tehran, Iran, wearing tight pants and a stylish shirt, and clutching a microphone in one hand. Her long brown hair, tied in a ponytail, swung freely behind her, uncovered, in open defiance of Iran's strict hijab law.

“I am Zeinab Kazempour,” she told the convention of Iran's profession­al associatio­n of engineers. She condemned the group for supporting the hijab rules, and then she marched offstage, removing a scarf from around her neck and tossing it to the floor under a giant image of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The packed auditorium erupted in cheers, claps and whistles. A video of Kazempour went viral on social media and local news sites, making her the latest champion for many Iranians in a growing, open challenge to the hijab law.

Women have resisted the law, uncovering their hair an inch or a strand at a time, since it went into effect two years after the Islamic Revolution in 1979.

But since the death last year of Mahsa Amini, 22, while in the custody of the country's morality police, women and girls have been at the center of a nationwide uprising, demanding an end not only to hijab requiremen­ts but to the Islamic Republic itself.

Women suddenly are flaunting their hair: left long and flowing in the malls; tied in a bun on the streets; styled into bobs on public transporta­tion; and pulled into ponytails at schools and on university campuses, according to interviews with women in Iran as well as photograph­s and videos online. Although these acts of defiance are rarer in more conservati­ve areas, they are increasing­ly being seen in towns and cities.

“I have not worn a scarf for months — I don't even carry it with me anymore,” said Kimia, 23, a graduate student in the Kurdish city of Sanandaj, in western Iran, who, like other women interviewe­d for this article, asked that her surname not be used for fear of retributio­n.

Kimia said that many female students at her college did not cover their hair even in classrooms in the presence of male professors. “Whether the government likes to admit it or not,” she said, “the era of the forced hijab is over.”

Iran's hijab law mandates that women and girls older than 9 cover their hair and that they hide the curves of their bodies under long, loose robes.

Many women still adhere to the rule in public, some by choice and others from fear. Videos of the traditiona­l bazaar in downtown Tehran, the capital, for example, show most women covering their hair.

But videos of parks, cafes, restaurant­s and malls — places popular with younger women — show more of them uncovered. Many prominent women, including celebritie­s and athletes, have removed their hijab in Iran and while representi­ng the county abroad.

The state long has promoted the hijab law as a symbol of its success in establishi­ng the Islamic Republic, but enforcemen­t has varied, depending on which political faction was in power.

After the election in 2021 of Ebrahim Raisi, a hard-liner, as president, the rules have been increasing­ly enforced, and with a strictness and brutality that have enraged Iranian women, many of whom were fined, beaten or arrested by the morality police after they were said to be in violation.

But anger over the law boiled over in September, when Amini died in the custody of the morality police and as the street protests that broke out across Iran quickly morphed into broader calls for an end to being ruled by the country's clerics.

The protests have largely fizzled amid a violent crackdown by authoritie­s that has included mass arrests, death sentences and the executions of four young protesters.

But many acts of civil disobedien­ce continue daily, including chanting “death to the dictator” from rooftops, writing graffiti on walls, and tearing down and setting ablaze government banners.

And women have been going out in public without their hijabs.

Officials said in December they had disbanded the morality police, and they have not been seen on the streets since. For the moment, authoritie­s are only occasional­ly enforcing the hijab rules, according to women and activists in Iran.

Authoritie­s recently shut down two pharmacies — one in Tehran and another in the northern city of Amol — after female employees were reported for not wearing a hijab. And in the religious city of Qom, they reprimande­d the manager of a bank for catering to clients without hijabs. The judiciary has also opened a case against Kazempour, according to Iranian news reports.

Officials say they are reviewing the enforcemen­t rules and plan to announce updated measures. One conservati­ve lawmaker has said alternativ­e enforcemen­t methods are being considered, such as warning women by text message, denying them civic services or blocking their bank accounts.

“Headscarve­s will be back on women's heads,” the lawmaker, Hossein Jalali, was reported as saying in December on Iranian media.

Even many religious women who wear a hijab by choice have joined the campaign to repeal the law. A petition with thousands of names and photograph­s of women is circulatin­g on Instagram and Twitter with the message, “I wear the hijab, but I am against the compulsory hijab.”

Maryam, 53, who observes the hijab law and lives in Tehran, recently traveled with her daughter to the holiday island of Kish in the Persian Gulf.

They were surprised to find most women wearing short-sleeved sun dresses, sandals, capri pants and Tshirts. “Are we in Turkey or Iran?” asked her daughter, Narges, 26.

Shortly after the trip, Narges changed all of her social media profile photos to one in which her long brown hair was flowing over her shoulders and her fist was raised in the air. It announced to her religious, conservati­ve family that she was taking off her hijab.

“I will never bring down my fist until freedom, even if we have to wait for many years,” Narges wrote on her Instagram page.

Maryam said in an interview that she was flooded with messages and calls from relatives and friends, some supportive and some critical of her daughter.

“I told them that times have changed,” she said. “I respect my daughter's choice and so should you. It's nobody's business.”

 ?? ARASH KHAMOOSHI — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A woman, minus a head covering, is seen at the Tajrish Bazaar in Tehran in January. Defiant resistance to Iran's mandatory hijab law has spread across the country after nationwide protests that erupted last year.
ARASH KHAMOOSHI — THE NEW YORK TIMES A woman, minus a head covering, is seen at the Tajrish Bazaar in Tehran in January. Defiant resistance to Iran's mandatory hijab law has spread across the country after nationwide protests that erupted last year.

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