Defiant Women in Iran Break Free from Hijab Law, Flaunt Their Hair in Bold Acts of Resistance
Iranian women have been flaunting their hair in open
defiance of Iran's mandatory hijab law that requires women and girls over nine
years old to cover their hair in public. The law has been in effect since two
years after the Islamic Revolution in 1979, but since last year's nationwide
protests, women have been at the forefront of a growing open challenge to the
hijab law. Women have been resisting the law by uncovering their hair an inch
or a strand at a time, but now they are suddenly flaunting their hair openly in
malls, on streets, on public transportation, and on university campuses.
The death of Mahsa Amini, 22, while in the custody of the
country's morality police last year, triggered nationwide protests by women and
girls who demanded an end to the hijab requirements and to the Islamic Republic
itself. Women are now openly defying the hijab law by leaving their hair
uncovered, left long and flowing, tied in a bun, styled into bobs, and pulled
into ponytails. Although such acts of defiance are rarer in more conservative
areas, they are increasingly being seen in towns and cities.
The state has long promoted the hijab law as a symbol of its
success in establishing the Islamic Republic, but enforcement has varied
depending on which political faction was in power. After the election of
Ebrahim Raisi, a hard-liner, as president in 2021, the rules have been
increasingly enforced, leading to fines, beatings, or arrests by the morality
police. However, acts of civil disobedience continue daily, including chanting
"death to the dictator" from rooftops, writing graffiti on walls, and
tearing down and setting ablaze government banners.
Although the authorities have shut down two pharmacies in
Tehran and Amol and reprimanded the manager of a bank in the religious city of
Qum for catering to clients without hijabs, the defiance remains too widespread
to contain and too pervasive to reverse, according to women's rights activists.
Some officials have suggested alternative enforcement methods such as warning
women by text message, denying them civic services, or blocking their bank
accounts. Women's rights activists have applauded the defiance of Iranian
women, with one activist describing the movement as the revolutionary act of
women turning their headscarves into the most effective and powerful weapon
against religious dictatorship and misogyny.