Protests against the regime are intensifying in Iran. At several colleges and high schools in Tehran, young Iranian women are taking off their veils and demanding more freedom. In particular, a picture circulated on social networks.
In Iran, the rebellion is taking a big place. After the students, it is the turn of the high school students to counterattack and challenge the authorities. The illustration has been on social networks for several days. We see young women with their hair undone pointing the finger of honor at Ali Khamenei (the current supreme leader of the Islamic Revolution) and Ruhollah Khomeini (the former leader of the 1979 revolution that toppled the Shah of Iran). .
“These high school girls are the future of Iran. They will not give up. When you think that they have had to cover their hair for over 40 years…” commented Farid Wahid, director of the Jean Jores Observatory for North Africa and the Middle East. in a tweet.
High school girls slingshot
Sequences on social networks reveal the backstage of the uprising of Iranian women in schools. When some don’t hesitate to buzz Well- Musician Sherwin Hajipour’s song, which contains messages from rebel Iranians posted on Twitter, has become a symbol of the protesters’ freedom; On Tuesday, October 4, students at a high school in Tehran carried out a slingshot, despite an order from the principal of the institution. Faced with the protest of high school girls, the man eventually chose to run away. A video that has already gone around the world.
“Unlike mine, I know that this new generation will not stop. they are ready to die to restore their freedoms,” confided Figaro student Navidi, a postdoctoral fellow in France.
In the video, French artists cut their hair in solidarity with Iranian women
“Women, life, freedom”.
On September 13, the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who was arrested by Tehran’s morality police for “wearing an inappropriate veil”, has raised an unprecedented wave of protests in the country. Initially directed against the compulsory wearing of the veil, the uprising has since evolved into an anti-regime struggle supported by a generation of freedom-seeking students. And gave birth to the “Women, Life, Freedom” slogan chanted by Iranian women demanding an end to the regime’s control over their bodies. A cry of rage that echoes around the world.
Source: Le Figaro