4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 25 November 2022
⏱️ 42 minutes
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Moj Mahdara and Dina Nasser-Khadivi speak with BoF’s Imran Amed about how creative communities from the Iranian diaspora are participating in the largest civil rights movement in Iran since the revolution in 1979.
Background:
Protests erupted across Iran in September following the death of Mahsa Amini, who was arrested in Tehran for “improperly” wearing her hijab and then killed at the hands of the so-called morality police.
Those protests have now evolved into the largest civil rights movement in Iran since the revolution in 1979 uniting Iranians at home with those in the wider diaspora and igniting outcry around the world and across social media.
Looking for a way to bring storytelling to fuel the movement, creative leaders Moj Mahdara and Dina Nasser-Khadivi utilised their network to establish The Iranian Diaspora Collective and @from____iran, an artist-led media collective that amplifies unheard Iranian voices, respectively. From Instagram to physical billboards, the collective has centred Iranian people and maintained the ongoing attention of the West by focusing on human rights.
“The only way to move culture is through storytelling,” Mahdara said.
This week on The BoF Podcast, BoF’s founder and editor-in-chief Imran Amed speaks with Mahdara and Nasser-Khadivi to learn about the work they are doing to help people understand the intersectional solidarity of this movement and activate creative communities to share their stories.
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Music credits: Baraye by Shervin Hajipour
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0:00.0 | Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. |
0:09.1 | Welcome to the BOF podcast. It's Friday, November 25th. |
0:13.6 | What is happening in Iran now is the largest civil rights movement since the revolution there in 1979. |
0:20.7 | For over two months, people have been risking their lives, taking to the streets, |
0:25.6 | following the brutal killing of Masa Amini at the hands of the so-called Morality Police. |
0:31.6 | These are the videos Iran doesn't want you to see. |
0:36.6 | Police firing in the streets, women cutting their hair, burning hijabs in rage, students' demonstrations. |
0:47.3 | People have taken to the streets across Iran angry at the government after a woman died while in police custody. |
0:55.5 | This is how UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk described the situation there |
1:01.2 | at the 35th special session of the Human Rights Council earlier this week. |
1:06.6 | It pains me to see what is happening in the country. |
1:18.6 | The images of children killed, of women beaten in the streets, of people sentenced to death. We have seen waves of protests over the past years calling for justice, equality, dignity and respect for human rights. |
1:26.6 | They have been met with violence and repression. |
1:31.2 | According to the UN, more than 300 people have been killed in the crackdown, and more than 14,000 |
1:37.9 | have been arrested. But what makes this movement different from previous uprisings is that it is |
1:43.5 | going global. Since the beginning |
1:45.8 | of the protests in September, the Iranian diaspora all around the world, connected together by |
1:51.6 | social media, are using their networks, skills, and resources to bring attention to the human |
1:57.7 | rights crisis that is unfolding. And creative communities in contemporary art |
2:02.2 | and fashion are getting behind the movement too. This week on the BOF podcast, I sit down with two |
2:08.6 | creative leaders from both sides of the Atlantic to hear their personal stories of being part of the |
2:13.8 | Iranian diaspora and to learn about the work they are doing to help people understand |
... |
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