20 May 2024
Monday 4 February 2019 - 15:46
Story Code : 337342

Iran women see new opportunities alongside old barriers

Bourse and Bazaar | AFP: Saba was just 25 when she left her design jobin New York to work on a project renovating an art gallery back in herhometown Tehran.

Within months, she won three more contracts to do up galleries and thelobby of an apartment complex.

"I had dreamt of building my own company, but I hadn't expected it tohappen any time soon. If I had stayed in New York, I wouldn't have had thischance," said Saba, now 27.

She says the position of women in Iran has changed a lot over the pastdecade.

"People now trust women in management positions. Still it's hard,especially on a construction site. But it's hard anywhere. It's hard in NewYork," she told AFP.

As the Islamic republic marks its 40th birthday, few issues are morepolitically sensitive or full of contradictions than the status of women.

After the revolution, Islamic laws gave women a lower legal status thanmen, requiring them, for example, in many cases to gain permission from theirfather or husband to leave the country.

They are considered to have half the value of men in various legal aspectssuch as inheritance and testimony in court.

'A Path Forward'

But the Islamic republic also encouraged education for women, who nowoutnumber men at universities -- a development that has transformedexpectations and overturned centuries-old traditions.

"Going to university was a path forward for girls like us who did not wantto end up like our mothers in a traditional society," said Mina, a 25-year-oldlinguistics student in Tehran.

Mina didn't tell her father she was studying for the university entranceexam.

"He couldn't believe it when I was accepted, that I would go to some othercity to live. He actually stopped talking to me for some time," she said.

"Whatever you do, your gender is the deciding factor," said 26-year-oldarchaeology student Sara.

It makes you believe that you have to have kids, you have to be modest.You can barely believe that you can be independent, be seen as an individualwith a character," she added.

She said discrimination was rife in her field.

"Male archaeologists prefer not to work with women even if they'recompetent. They say it's just trouble. The women must keep their hijab at alltimes... they won't be taken seriously by laborers," she said.

"If a woman is successful in a line of work like this, she's fought veryhard. And not all women are capable of fighting so much."

'Tool of Male Arousal'

Iran's rulers claim that Islamic gender lawsparticularly "hijab" rulesthat require women to wear a headscarf and modest clothingare designed toprotect women.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei tweeted in 2018 that the #MeToomovement was evidence of how Western society had failed women.

"The Western model for women is symbolic of consumerism, cosmetics, showingoff for men as a tool of male sexual arousal," he wrote.

Nonetheless, clothing norms in Iran have gradually but significantlychanged in recent years.

It is now unremarkable, especially in wealthier areas, to see women intight jeans with loose, colorful headscarves.

The morality police that patrolled the streets, adjusting headscarves orbursting into cafes to make sure any couples were related, are now rarely seen.

'Nothing Lke It Was'

The authorities still draw the line at actively protesting the compulsoryhijab: several women were arrested last year for doing so, and a prominentrights lawyer, Nasrin Sotoudeh, jailed after taking on their cases.

But many also recall how much they have clawed back since the early days ofthe revolution.

"It's nothing like it was. You couldn't even get a lift with a malefriend," said a female journalist in Tehran.

"We were terrified of being stopped, because they were out there, checkingcars. Or going for lunch with a (male) friendit would never happen! Now noone even thinks twice about these things."

Many were still dismayed that "moderate" President Hassan Rouhani, who ranon promises to improve citizens' rights, again failed to appoint a femaleminister after his 2017 re-election.

"There is a glass ceiling and it will continue," said Fereshteh Sadeghi, apolitical journalist in Tehran.

"When Rouhani reached power it seems he didn't want to fall out with theayatollahs, and backed down.

"Little by little, women are getting their rights but for now there is nowomen's movement."
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