March 7, 2014 | 9:47pm
Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the NationalCouncil of Resistance of Iran. Photo: Reuters
International Women’s Day, celebrated Saturday
for the 106th year, marks continued progress for women across the world, but
that progress has been reversed in countries where Islamic fundamentalism has
taken hold.And nowhere is women’s freedom more under official assault than in
Iran.
Prior to the Islamic Revolution in 1979, women
in Iran had significant personal freedom and protection under the law. One of
the first changes Ayatollah Khomeini made after taking power was to revoke the
1967 Family Protection Law, which governed marriage, divorce and family
custody.
Today, women have less than second-class
status in Iran. Their husbands may divorce them at will and take as many as
four concurrent wives; divorced women have no custody rights to their own
children once the child reaches age 2. Women are denied the right to study what
they choose and are forbidden from entering certain professions and from
studying abroad unless accompanied by their husbands. Their testimony in court
is devalued: Two women must testify to carry the same weight as one man.
The court system is an arm of fundamentalist
Islam. Female victims of crime receive less justice than male victims.
Punishment for harming or even killing a woman is less harsh than if the victim
is a man.
What we in the West might consider moral
transgressions, such as adultery, incur the severest criminal penalties,
including the stoning to death of female adulterers. Even minor transgressions,
such as failing to wear the hijab, can result in beatings and imprisonment.
Last week in Paris, I joined a group of
prominent women gathered to draw attention to the plight of women in Iran and
under other Islamic extremist governments. The conference theme, “Women Leading
the Fight Against Islamic Fundamentalism,” drew speakers including former
Canadian Prime Minister Kim Campbell, former president of the German Bundestag
Rita Sussmuth, South African activist Nontombi Naomi Tutu and Mariane Pearl,
journalist and widow of reporter Daniel Pearl, whose videotaped execution by Khalid
Sheik Mohammed became a symbol of the barbarity of al Qaeda.
Maryam Rajavi, the conference organizer and
president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, described the
outrageous misogyny that the mullahs inflict on Iran: an acid attack against a
woman and her daughter in the streets of Tehran, forced marriages for girls
under 15 and new laws (unopposed by “moderate” President Hassan Rouhani) that
allow men to marry their adopted daughters at age 13.
But Rajavi’s message was not one of despair.
“Iranian women and all women in the region must move from being hopeless to
being hopeful. They have to move from simply being angry to becoming inspired
to change and to bring about change.”
It was the same message Tutu invoked.
Recalling her famous father, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, she described a visit he
made to Alaska during the apartheid era where he met a woman who told him that
she woke every morning at 3 o’clock to pray for the liberation of South Africa.
“And he said, ‘What chance does the apartheid regime have when we were being
prayed for at 3 o’clock in the morning in Alaska?’ . . . What chance
does the regime stand when there are young women inside Iran leading protests
on college campuses? What chance does the regime stand when the opposition
is lead by a woman named Mrs. Rajavi? No chance! No chance!”
Pearl spoke of resistance in personal terms.
“The women that we talked about today are those ordinary women with a mighty
heart — and they can defeat terrorism,” she said. “They also know that we have
no choice but to win that fight.”

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