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Influential Women's Magazine
Silenced in Iran
By Maura J. Casey -
February 10, 2008 - (WOMENSENEWS) Iran's most influential
women's magazine, Zanan, has become the latest victim of a government
intent on censoring, harassing and imprisoning opponents, journalists
in particular. Officials accused the monthly journal of damaging
society by being too negative toward Iran and closed the publication
Jan. 28.
Zanan is hardly alone, of course. Iranian courts have used similar
rationale to close many scores of newspapers and magazines in the
last 10 years, particularly those that called for free speech and
greater civil liberties. But Zanan, which means "women"
in Farsi, was one of a kind; it was the only serious women's magazine
in Iran and had a wide following, both in Iran and around the world.
Zanan's crusading editor, Shahla Sherkat, who lives in Tehran, founded
the magazine 16 years ago to explore serious topics that affect
women in the Islamic Republic: politics, women in prison, international
issues affecting women and the impact Islamic law has on women's
lives. Sherkat also ran book reviews, stories about women in sports
and health issues, among other topics.
I met Sherkat while I was working on an exchange program between
New England and Iranian journalists. Sherkat, a member of the delegation,
wound up staying in my house in rural Connecticut.
She was interested in everything. She interviewed female lawyers
here and toured a domestic violence shelter. She even asked to tour
my neighbor's dairy farm, and climbed over fences to examine newborn
calves, being careful to lift the flowing robes of the manteau,
a loose, ankle-length coat, that she always wore.
No matter how busy we got, Sherkat always paused several times a
day to pray, bowing east in the direction of Mecca.
She is very serious about her work and her magazine. There was never
a chocolate cake on the cover; no recipes; no "kitchen tips,"
as she once told me, smiling.
She published a feminist magazine in a country where women must
wear the veil in public on pain of imprisonment and where courts
view women to be only half of a man in the eyes of the law.
Survival Story
Both Zanan and Sherkat were survivors. Many journalists were amazed
that Sherkat managed to keep her magazine open so long, especially
since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power in 2005. In the
last 18 months alone the government has closed 42 magazines and
newspapers, according to Fariba Amini, the editor of the Persian
version of IJNet, a Web page for the International Center for Journalists,
based in Washington.
"Shekat knew how to walk the red line," Camelia Entekhabi-Fard,
an Iranian journalist, said on Feb. 6.
The "red line" is code for the boundary in Iran between
writing the truth in acceptable and unacceptable ways. "Walking
that line is an art form," Entekhabi-Fard said, one that Sherkat
understood better than anyone.
Entekhabi-Fard moved to New York City in 2001 after she suffered
imprisonment for her stories in the women's daily newspaper, Zan.
Before that, Islamic courts shut down Zan in 1999 for publishing
a cartoon ridiculing Islamic law that values women's lives as being
worth less than the lives of men.
Sherkat combined her own unique qualities of fearlessness with a
sophisticated sense of what to say and when to say it. Her devout
belief in Islam gave her a sixth sense of what words and phrases
would prove acceptable, and which would invite retaliation.
Superb Navigator
"She has gotten warned several times, she has gone to the court
several times," said Dr. Nayereh Tohidi, chair of women's studies
at California State University at Northridge. "But she knew
how to navigate."
Until now.
Only time will tell whether the shutdown is temporary or permanent.
If it's temporary it could be because the press advisory board that
shut down Zanan doesn't have the legal authority to take such a
step, Tohidi said.
But the political atmosphere is becoming increasingly tense as Iran,
burdened with high unemployment, inflation and food shortages, faces
nationwide elections March 14.
The dozen right-wing clerics and lawyers who run the Council of
Guardians--the powerful wing of the government that has veto power
over parliament--and their ally, Ahmadinejad, want to ensure a conservative
mandate. To make sure that happens, the council has blocked thousands
of reformist candidates from running for parliament.
But Sherkat's magazine was a voice of reform particularly around
elections. She was never shy about publishing the sexist rants of
politicians campaigning for re-election. She wanted her readership
to understand which lawmakers were most likely to support women's
issues and greater freedom, precisely the kind of candidates the
conservatives want to ban from office.
Intimidation Tactic
The closure of Zanan could also be designed to intimidate a women's
movement that has been increasingly confrontational with the government
in recent years.
Shirin Ebadi, the human rights lawyer who won the 2003 Nobel Peace
Prize--a recipient of one of Women's eNews annual 21 Leaders awards
in 2004--launched a campaign two years ago to gather 1 million signatures
of Iranian women on petitions protesting their lack of rights under
the country's legal system, which is based on an extremely conservative
interpretation of Islamic law.
The women's movement has trained hundreds of women to educate others
on their limited rights. Whether women agree to sign or not, they
get a pamphlet about their second-class status. Zanan ran stories
about the petition, as well as how the law discriminates against
women.
Iranian women frequently disapprove of U.S. government actions,
even as they express warmth toward the American people. They denounce
the policies of George Bush, comparing him, in his stubbornness,
to their own president, and fear that his bellicose rhetoric against
Iran will lead to a U.S. invasion.
For its part, the Iranian government has gotten increasingly angry
about the million signature campaign and the international attention
the Iranian feminist movement has garnered, imprisoning female activists
and arresting and beating women engaged in peaceful protest.
Sherkat, in the face of constant intimidation, always found a way
to write about the truth of what was happening.
It will be a tragedy for Iran, journalism and women everywhere if
her voice is silenced for long.
From:http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm?aid=3489
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