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Solutions

A Day of Peace | For 24 Hours, Give Peace a Chance

Wangari Maathai, 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Winner | Be A Hummingbird

Eve Ensler on Global Sexual Asssaults | Kristoff in Brothel Raid

Tostan Breakthrough | Empowering Women for 20 Years

Vagina Lady Eve Ensler Opens City of Joy Academy in Congo

World War Against Women

Femen, SlutWalks, Lysistrata | Body Politics Is On the Move

SlutGirl Marches Sweeping the World | Have Women Had Enough?

Hindu Shiv Sena Protests Swimsuits; How About Bride Burning?

India’s Sex Ratio Problem Deepens | Technology & Patriarchy

Bride Burning & Violence Aagainst Women in Kerala, India

Drawing a Line in Lubna’s Sand, Saying ‘No More’ to the Growing, Global Erosion of Women’s Rights in the Name of Any Man’s Religion

Beyond the Veil: The Intersection of Sensuality, Culturally Appropriate & Women’s Rights

Story by Opiyo OloyaFace the Facts: Men in Every Country Are Afraid of Liberated Women

Lubna Hussein, Chansa Kabwela, 20 Women Stripped to Their Underwear in Uganda: Are the World’s Male Morality Squads Coming Unhinged?

Controlling Women’s Bodies Is a Fight to the Finish

If Only We Could Have Lubna Hussein, Dr. Catherine Lim & My Dear Pixie for Tea

Jimmy Carter on Religion as Agent of Women’s Oppression

While the World Debates Burqas, Fashion Designers Show Beautiful Abayas at Paris’s George V Hotel

A Somewhat Decadent but Fundamentally Good Group of Lubna Hussein Lovers Hear Her Calm, Steady Voice: ‘I Want to Change This Law’

Key Lubna Hussein Posts

Mum’s the Word from American Women, in Supporting Lubna Hussein & Intl Women’s Rights

Original Lubna Dares the Tyrants of a False Islam’ to Flog Her, Leaving Me Confused About the Truth

Original Translated Lubna Ahmed Hussein Interview with New Details of Her Arrest

« Is Baby Trafficking For Real in China? | Main | If Only We Could Have Lubna Hussein, Dr. Catherine Lim & My Dear Pixie for Tea »
Sunday
Sep202009

In Iran: A Different Green Fashion Revolution Takes Shape

A sketch of one of the late-’20s fashion designer’s collections, which used Iranian and nomadic motifs. The current Newsweek flashes a soft light on a fashion show in Iran.

While Iran’s strict Islamic dress code requires women to wear the form—hiding manteau overcoat and a hijab that covers the hair, there is a quietly growing demand for homegrown haute couture. Despite an unprecedented security crackdown following the summer’s disputed presidential election, a network of high-end underground fashion designers, photographers, and models continue their subversive work, sketching, cutting patterns, conducting fittings, and strutting the catwalk in secret locations.

More independent-minded Iranian women remind us that showing of female skin — even modestly —  is threatening to Iran’s theocracy.

While the government demands complaince, there aren’t sufficient resources in the Internet age to keep determined Iranian women dressed according to the style-dictates of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. And so they take risks in the name of fashion independence and self-determination.

I want to flush out more of this story and will post over in Smart Sensuality. See Newsweek: Iranian Fashion Thrives Underground.

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