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Iranian
Women Take On the Constitution
Mahsa Shekarloo
July 21, 2005
(Mahsa Shekarloo
is a member of the non-governmental Women's Cultural Center in Tehran,
which helped to organize the unauthorized June 12 sit-in for women's
rights. She maintains a website at www.badjens.com.)
Activists for
women's rights are prominent among the many Iranians who fear a
reinvigorated crackdown on personal and social freedoms in the wake
of the surprise election of the ultra-conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
to the presidency of the Islamic Republic. Though Ahmadinejad sought
to soften his image on gender issues during the week before the
runoff on June 24, 2005, even speaking against "sexist attitudes,"
his electoral base on the far right continually agitates for a harder
line. His base is particularly offended by the looser standards
of "Islamic dress" for women and the freer mixing of the
sexes in public places that have slowly developed over the two terms
of President Mohammad Khatami, who will vacate his office on August
4. In one taste of the pressure the new president might face, the
parliamentarian Mohammad Taqi-Rahbar was quoted by the official
IRNA news agency as complaining: "Even if women remove the
small handkerchiefs they wear instead of a proper veil, nobody says
anything." That, Taqi-Rahbar implied, must change.
Women's rights activists do indeed anticipate increased
restrictions on dress, as well as other personal and political freedoms,
after Ahmadinejad is sworn in. During both stages of the presidential
campaign, the women's movement in Iran nevertheless chose to move
beyond the vagaries of electoral politics to tackle more systemic
problems. The obstacles to the progress of women's rights in Iran,
these activists have concluded, are not embodied in individual politicians
so much as they are inherent in the constitution of the Islamic
Republic itself.
THREE DECADES OF STRUGGLE
The women involved in what is generally known as
the women's movement are mostly middle-class and university-educated,
but otherwise span a broad political and religious spectrum. The
movement is an informal grouping of individuals and organizations
that includes secular women as well as pious Muslims, university
students and the middle-aged, women affiliated with the parliamentary
reformists who tried to change the regime from within in the late
1990s and women aligned with the "religious-nationalists"
who have stayed resolutely outside the regime since the 1979 revolution.
Hence, one can find within the movement's ranks religious women
who shy away from the term feminist, "Islamic feminists"
who argue that women's rights can be provided for by Islamic law,
"Muslim feminists" who come from religious backgrounds
but do not use Islamic law as their point of reference, and feminists
who would prefer that the republic in Iran not be "Islamic"
at all.
The diverse base of the movement was evident in
front of the University of Tehran on June 12, five days before the
first round of the presidential election, when approximately 2,000
Iranian women participated in a sit-in to protest the constitution's
denial of women's rights. Over 90 women's groups signed the declaration
prepared in advance of the sit-in. Hailing not just from the capital
and the major cities of Isfahan, Tabriz and Kermanshah but also
from the provinces of Kordestan, Lorestan, Sistan and Baluchestan,
and Khorasan, together these groups formed the largest independent
women's coalition to appear since the fall of the Shah.
In addition to its breadth, the movement is remarkable
for how it emerged from three decades of struggle within and against
the state by women loyal to the ideals of the Islamic Revolution.
Women who participated in the revolution were dismayed at the absence
of women from the initial post-revolutionary ruling structures,
and were particularly galled by the new regime's suspension of the
1967 Family Protection Law, which was won on the strength of great
efforts by women's rights activists in the era of the Shah. That
law, among its other provisions, required men to go to family court
in order to take a second wife, obtain a divorce or gain custody
of children. The fledgling Islamic Republic suspended those requirements.
In addition, women found that the new regime would not allow women
to run for the presidency of the new government many of them had
fought to empower. The constitution defines eligibility for that
office with recourse to the Arabic term rijal, which, in its most
common usage, means "men." Though this term, in both Arabic
and Persian, can also mean "dignitaries" or "well-known
personages," the regime has always chosen to interpret it literally.
Accordingly, the Guardian Council, the appointed clerical body authorized
to ensure the conformity of all legislation to Islamic law and the
constitution, has on several occasions blocked the candidacy of
women.
Angry at these developments, women bombarded the
four female deputies elected in 1980 to the first legislature (or
Majles) of the Islamic Republic with demands for redress, especially
restoration of the Family Protection Law. Due to these persistent
complaints and the advocacy of women parliamentarians, the Third
Majles (1988-1992) enacted some modest improvements for women in
matters like child custody and divorce, but nothing like the statute
that was in place before the revolution.
COLD COMFORT
Women who had been involved in the revolution, or
who came of age at the high point of revolutionary fervor in the
early 1980s, went on to play a central role in the popular reform
movement that swept the country after the election of Khatami as
president in 1997. Their emergence as a formidable voting bloc served
as a precursor to their rapid and often politically charged entry
into the public sphere. During the reformist era of 1997-2004, the
government's declared commitment to nurture civil society allowed
many of these women to establish advocacy organizations independent
of official bodies. Secular women, marginalized for 20 years by
the sweeping Islamicization of politics, culture and society, also
found a new opening for their gatherings and activities, even at
government-owned cultural centers. Some religious women, whose organizations
were sometimes sarcastically referred to as "gongos,"
shorthand for governmental NGOs, became increasingly concerned with
gender-based inequality and discrimination and gradually developed
an autonomous feminist identity. The result was a burgeoning number
of independent women's associations who advanced their agendas through
seminars, workshops, print publications and the Internet. Although
political and religious divisions prevented the different women
activists from establishing a larger umbrella organization, periodic
collaboration contributed to a growing mutual respect.
Much recent women's activism has revolved around
the pursuit of two goals: increasing women's collective social participation
and achieving equal legal rights. While the June 12 sit-in attests
to the success of the former, the civil and penal codes have proven
largely impervious to women's efforts. The Sixth Majles (2000-2004),
which took office at the peak of the reformist movement's power,
boasted 13 women members. The previous Parliament had 14, but unlike
their predecessors, the new female deputies entered office boldly
declaring their intention to change the law in favor of women. Along
with male reformist allies, they formed a Women's Bloc to push their
agenda. The government Office for Women's Participation lobbied
officials and high-ranking clerics to support their goals, such
as ratification of the UN Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW) of 1979, which Iran has never signed. Ultimately,
the CEDAW bill and numerous other reformist-sponsored measures aimed
at expanding women's rights in marriage, divorce, inheritance and
other areas were rejected or severely curtailed by the Guardian
Council.
In December 2002, 11 of the women parliamentarians
submitted a bill to the Majles that would impose a moratorium on
executions by stoning of women accused of engaging in extra-marital
or premarital sex. Stoning and other forms of "Islamic punishment"
are written into the 1995 penal code, and although their practice
has not been routine, they have stood as a powerful emblem of the
backwardness and violence of the Islamic Republic's legal system
both inside and outside Iran. The bill was not approved, but shortly
after the government held trade talks with the European Union later
in the month, Hojjatoleslam Mohsen Gharavian, a leading figure in
the conservative-controlled judiciary, told the IRNA news agency
that "stoning has been provisionally suspended due to its negative
effects." The apparent moratorium (a few stoning sentences
have since been handed down, but none have been implemented) was
widely heralded as an important victory for human rights and women's
rights. However, the judicial action also highlighted the limitations
upon women's activism as it had been practiced to date. First, Iranian
activists thought, years of work with the parliamentary reformists
to expand women's rights in other areas had been rendered moot by
Guardian Council fiat. Then, efforts by women to end an especially
egregious form of violence against women were stonewalled until
the state was spurred into action by international realpolitik.
All told, women's rights activists felt, they could take only cold
comfort in the record of the reformist era. This feeling intensified
over the course of 2003, as the Guardian Council blocked or gutted
more and more of the record 33 legislative measures introduced by
women deputies.
BACKLASH
In February 2004, Iran's reformist moment ended
as conservatives regained control of Parliament. Confronted with
a Seventh Majles hostile to civil society and women's rights, activist
women braced for the backlash. It came in September 2004 in the
form of a lengthy article in the right-wing newspaper Jomhuri-yeh
Eslami assailing women's NGOs as agents of the West. The article's
publication was followed on November 1 by the arrest of Mahboubeh
Abbasqolizadeh, a prominent NGO activist, the editor of the women's
studies journal Farzaneh and a Muslim feminist who had contributed
articles to websites associated with the reformist movement. No
charges were ever specified. Though domestic and international pressure
secured her release 30 days later, Abbasqolizadeh's arrest served
as a warning to her fellow activists. With the Tehran City Council
and Parliament in the hands of conservatives, civil society actors
were feeling the tightening of restrictions and women's activists
were losing the little access they had secured to the public sphere.
In terms of advancing their legal rights, women's rights activists
knew they had not achieved any real gains. As the 2005 presidential
contest neared, it was time to assess past activities and future
prospects.
Their collective conclusion was that the Islamic
Republic's constitution itself has been the main obstacle to the
concerted efforts of secular, religious and government-affiliated
women to improve women's legal status. The constitution does not
explicitly provide for equality of rights between men and women,
as does CEDAW. Rather, Article 20 of the constitution says that
men and women "enjoy equal protection of the law...in conformity
with Islamic criteria" while Article 21 stipulates that "the
government must ensure the rights of women in all respects, in conformity
with Islamic criteria." Most of the personal status laws that
discriminate against women in marriage, divorce, inheritance and
child custody derive their legitimacy from the clause effectively
subordinating women's rights to the state's interpretation of Islamic
law. As such, one major focus of women's rights proponents has been
to offer interpretations of Islamic jurisprudence that encourage
gender equality. However, the Guardian Council and other appointed
bodies endowed with the power of official legal interpretation have
consistently propagated the concept of equity or "balance"
of rights. Following this reasoning, they rejected or eviscerated
all of the reformist-sponsored bills aimed at expanding women's
rights. Disheartened by the parliamentary reformists' failures to
achieve legal reform, activist women decided not to support a reformist
or any other candidate in the 2005 presidential elections -- and
instead to advance a gendered critique of the constitution.
"EQUAL RIGHTS IS OUR MINIMUM DEMAND"
The signal event expressing this critique was the
unauthorized June 12 sit-in. Capitalizing on the state's relaxation
of restrictions before the election, the informal network of women's
non-governmental organizations and independent associations decided
to assert their grievances and demands through civil disobedience.
Members of environmental and educational NGOs, staffers at university
student publications and members of the Islamic Students' Association
added their signatures to the protest declaration. Webloggers and
male supporters circulated separate petitions of support that attracted
hundreds of signatures. Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi, who
was traveling abroad at the time of the protest, signed a strongly
worded statement against "unequal treatment of half of the
Iranian population" and in favor of the sit-in. The petition
bearing Ebadi's name also featured the signatures of four other
Nobel Peace Prize recipients, including Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
On the day of the protest, the organizers released their third and
final declaration, demanding that the nation's laws secure women's
"fundamental and equal rights" and comply with international
conventions such as CEDAW. Until the government meets their demands,
the women announced, they will continue a campaign of peaceful protest.
By most accounts, the June 12 protest was a great
success. Turnout was high, despite the unapproved nature of the
gathering. The incidence of violence was low, notwithstanding the
large numbers of police officers who immediately surrounded the
main entrance to the university and tried, through physical and
verbal intimidation, to scare the women into leaving. After the
first 40 protesters stood their ground and as the numbers of women
began to multiply, the police mostly tolerated the sit-in. Opting
for a strategy of containment, they simply formed a cordon around
the women and prevented male supporters who arrived from participating.
Noushin Ahmadi Khorasani, a well-known secular feminist activist,
writer and publisher, wrote a protest song set to an old Joan Baez
tune especially for the sit-in. Copies of the lyrics and protest
slogans were distributed throughout the crowd of women, who enthusiastically
chanted and sang throughout the one-hour event. The appearance of
Simin Behbahani, Iran's most famous living woman poet and long-time
supporter of women's rights, sent ripples of excitement through
the crowd, as did a personal message from Ebadi.
Acknowledging the broad diversity within the women's
movement and the multiple forms of discrimination facing ethnic-
and religious-minority women, the protest organizers declared that
women shared a common injury: the belittlement of the citizen. "The
constitution's belittlement of women as citizens and active social
participants has blocked their ability to secure their rights,"
their statement read. "The potential for reactionary movements
and political extremism has forced the women's movement to face
the reality that under the current state of affairs, seeking civil
justice from the constitution and protesting the breach of women's
rights of citizenship can be an effective step towards achieving
democracy, peace and self-determination of the citizenry."
Organizers stressed that legal reform was merely a precondition
for securing the end goal. In the words of a slogan repeatedly chanted
at the sit-in: "Equal rights is our minimum demand."
Absent from the ranks at the sit-in were the women
members of the reformist Islamic Participation Front who had served
in the Sixth Majles. Their participation would have required them
to break from their male counterparts who, for the most part, have
privately and publicly opposed the women's movement's confrontational
stance toward the constitution. These men often say that the struggle
for democracy has priority over the struggle for women's rights.
In response, the sit-in organizers' final declaration began: "Democracy
cannot be achieved without freedom and equal rights." Also
absent on June 12 was Azam Taleqani, a deputy in the First Majles
and a disqualified presidential candidate in the 2001 and 2005 elections.
She had held a much smaller sit-in protesting women's exclusion
from presidential races earlier in the month.
The reformist era provided a space for women to
study, organize, develop a gender analysis and create a vocabulary
of resistance. While political and religious differences and regime
pressures have prevented the establishment of a disciplined and
organized front, the drive for equal rights and the greater visibility
of women in the public sphere have increasingly brought elements
of the women's movement closer together. The sit-in before the University
of Tehran was a declaration that the system's fundamental legal
structure precludes the possibility of realizing women's full rights,
and by extension, meaningful democracy. With an era of increased
repression quite possibly on the horizon, it remains to be seen
if women's rights activists can broaden their alliances and consolidate
their unity to face what will surely be a contentious future.

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