My Stealthy Freedom

My Stealthy Freedom is an online movement that was commenced by a London-based journalist Masih Alinejad.[1] This movement started from a Facebook page My Stealthy Freedom where women from Iran post their photos without scarfs,[2] as Iranian women have to cover their hair in public according to local Islamic dress code.[3] This rule was forced after the Iranian revolution in 1979.[4]

The campaign's Facebook page has received 500,000 likes in less than one month.[5]

Alinejad's view

Alinejad said she is not leading a battle against the headscarf. She affirmed that she wants to support the right for individual women to be able to choose whether they want to wear the Hijab.[6]

"It's a place where male and female Iranians with different opinions can meet and talk about how they feel, think and what they do in private. They don't have to be afraid of censorship, like in the Iranian public sphere. It makes them brave to see that they are not alone with their thoughts and actions", she described her page.[7]

Conservatives' reaction

State TV

Iranian state broadcaster (IRIB) reported[8][9] that Alinejad, who left Iran after the 2009 Presidential election, was assaulted, stripped naked, and gang-raped[10] in London in the presence of her son. The claim was denied by Alinejad.[11]

Clerics

Kazem Sedighi, a prominent cleric who delivers Friday prayer in Tehran, criticized “corrupt messages circulating on the internet and getting through to Iranian families” and “instances in which headscarves had been taken off”.[12]

Websites

Vahid Yaminpour, an Iranian commentator and TV personality, shared a critical message in his Google Plus. “Masih Alinejad is a whore, and not a heretic as some people claim her to be,” Yaminpour wrote also on his Facebook page. “We shouldn’t elevate her to the level of a heretic. She’s just trying to compensate her psychological (and probably financial) needs by recruiting young women and sharing her notoriety with younger women who are still not prostitutes.” [13] A conservative website Raja news called the movement as an obvious insulation against Islam and Marja'. The author concluded that because of these kinds of contents, Facebook must remain banned.[14] Another website, Nedaye Enghelab (Call of the Revolution), published a cartoon which depicted two pigs wearing flags of United States and Great Britain. The cartoon was titled "Members of Stealthy Freedom Campaign".[15]

Women's rights award

In 2015 the Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy gave Alinejad its women's rights award for "giving a voice to the voiceless and stirring the conscience of humanity to support the struggle of Iranian women for basic human rights, freedom and equality."[16]

Many Iranian men have also supported My Stealthy Freedom, appearing in photos with women who are not wearing a hijab.[16]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.