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Voice of the Revolutionary Communist Revolution
#128, May 1, 2008 Revolutionary
Communist Woman from Introduction Earlier this
year Michael Slate interviewed S., an Iranian woman who traveled to M.S.: Let's start
by you telling me a little about your background, where you're from, what
your family was, what you did when you were in S.: My life
story is one of the stories of many women who have lived under the
woman-hating Islamic regime. Despite my awareness of the essence of the
fundamentalist system, which is united with the imperialist world, I have
been under oppression, and gone through what one experiences under such
regimes, and I have experienced this oppression along with other women who
also have experienced oppression such as this. About 32
years ago, I—with my family who have been a political family and have fought
against the Shah's regime, which was an ally with the I was a high
school student when I came and I started in M.S.: How did you
become politically active? S.: In 1976 when
I came here, we enrolled in language classes, English language classes. It
was called 'ISC,' I believe. And there, a lot of representatives from the
student confederation came into these classes and talked about their views,
and that's how we were introduced to them and to what they were doing, and
that's how we got involved with them. M.S.: That's very
good. That's very cool, actually. So, what happened when you got involved
with them? What did you start doing? S.: The first
meeting I attended, the topic was what to think, how to think about Tudeh
Party of Iran, and the Fedayi Party of Iran [other left Iranian
organizations], and also opinions and views about armed fighting, armed
struggle. I was interested in these topics and I attended the meeting and I
was very for the views that were represented at this meeting, and that's how
I became interested in the whole group. M.S.: The Iranian
Students Association, the Confederation of Iranian Students, was a very
powerful group, in terms of what it brought to people, the way it organized
Iranians, but also the impact that it had on people in the S.: The first
thing that really got me interested in the group, in the confederation, was
the revolutionary ethics, and how they carried themselves as revolutionaries.
Also, the first formal course that I attended that was conducted by the
confederation, the topic was 'Materialism and Dialectics,' which got me very
interested in the whole group and the ideas. M.S.: So your
family was here, and you had this revolutionary activity, and for all intents
and purposes you were living in the S.: The first
thing that got me wanting to go back was that I felt responsible toward this
change that was happening in Iran and I felt responsible toward the people
who were in Iran and who initiated the whole process of bringing about the
change. That's one of the main reasons that I thought I should go back. Another
thing is that I believed in the leadership of the proletariat, and I believed
that if we do go back we could participate in directing or guiding the masses
there, and somehow contribute to the change that was happening. M.S.: What did you
find when you went back? What was it like in S.: When I went
back, I faced a very open environment. Politically, it was very progressive. People
were having discussions all over the city. There were debates going on. It
was a very lively and open atmosphere at the time when I returned. M.S.: Was that in S.: The progress
that was going on was very prevalent in M.S.: And where
did you fit in? What did you do when you were there? S.: From what I
had learned here in the fields of philosophy, politics, and economy, when I went
back, I tried to relate my knowledge to the people. I tried to get lively
discussions, and with those going on in the universities to talk about what I
had learned and try to teach others as much as I knew. M.S.: How long
did that go on, and when did it start to change? S.: Within ten
days after the revolution there was an uprising of women against the idea of
the hijab. And then afterwards there was the oppression started against the
Kurds in Kurdistan, north of We had daily
contact with the Hezbollah, the religious people at the time—it's the
Hezbollah people in They would
either beat us or grab our newspapers and materials that we had, our tables,
and would get into a fight, a physical fight. What we saw
was that they didn't have any uniforms. They were normal people but it was
known to everyone that they were organized groups from the government. M.S.: How long did
that go on, that you had these kinds of confrontations? When did it become
clear to you that Khomeini was beginning to consolidate his regime? S.: First there
was a huge protest by everyone who had started to see the things that were
going to happen, and mostly the groups that had contributed to the
revolution, they had a huge protest that turned into a confrontation. There
were even shootings going on by the military, who shot some people from the
protest. And it turned into a very gloomy protest. It wasn't a peaceful
protest because of the confrontations that happened during the protest. That
was in mid-June. And right after that protest there was repression of all the
groups that had all the discussions going on, and the debates going on from
different neighborhoods. They shut everything down and the atmosphere just
got very closed afterwards. M.S.: So what did
you do then? S.: We tried to
organize ourselves as an underground group, an underground organization, and
we weren't public anymore. We always had to hide when we had discussions or
any kind of activity we had, we couldn't do it out in the public anymore. The
organization divided into two groups. One group was in charge of organizing the
struggle that went on in Amol. The group was called Sarbedaran. That's the
group that organized that and actually made it happen. I was one of the
people sort of helping out with the whole thing, as someone helping out in
the background. M.S.: Can you explain
the impact of the Amol uprising? S.: The people
in that region where the uprising occurred were influenced a lot by what
happened in the way that they saw. They were familiar with the revolutionary
ethics and the revolutionary way that they took on. It made people more aware
of Maoist theories and the way that they took on this struggle. The North was
isolated from other parts and there wasn’t much going on. But when that
happened it got people very interested in such political activism. It made
them more connected to what was going on in other parts of the country. M.S.: So the
regime defeated the uprising. What did they do afterwards to the
revolutionaries and the people? S.: The
organization had failed deeply in their plan and everyone who took part in
the uprising was executed. But then the impact that it had on the people was
that people always remembered them as heroes. It was something that was one
of its kind. They'd never seen such courage, and they just remembered them
and the whole uprising always remained in the people's memories. They always
remembered the revolutionaries who took part in it as heroes. M.S.: Did the
repression increase? What happened to you? S.: The
repression did increase as you said. People tried to stay underground and tried
to do any kind of political activity underground, to hide and not be open to
the public. At that time, I had a baby two months old. There wasn't much that
I could actually get involved with. All I could do was sit at home and wait
for news, wait to know what had happened. M.S.: Your
husband survived the Amol uprising? S.: Yes..... M.S.: After the
uprising, you were at home. Did you have more than one kid? S.: Yes, after
the Amol uprising, my daughter was one and a half years, and my son was two
months old. M.S.: How did you
get arrested? How long after the Amol uprising did you get arrested? S.: Eight
months after. I was at home. They broke into the house and took the kids from
me, took them away from me and just yelled at me and told me that I had to go
for an investigation. M.S.: And your
husband was arrested too? S.: He was
arrested four months before I was. M.S.: What did
they charge him with? S.: Because he
was a theoretician, and he was very educated in the theories that led to the
uprising. And they said that because he had all the theories and he did the
educational part of it, he was charged with more, with a bigger of a crime
than the people who took part in it were. And his sentence was death. M.S.: Then four
months later they came into your house. Tell me again what happened. S.: I was taken
to the jail where my husband was being kept, and as I was taken there, I just
heard the voice of my husband for a minute and at that moment I was just so
happy to hear him, to find out that he's alive, and right after that I was
taken into a cell and kept there for eight months. It was solitary, the cell. M.S.: What did
they charge you with? S.: They assumed
that, because my husband was one of the leaders of the organization, I must
have also had a very high position in the organization, and had contributed
in many ways. They told me that because of that, there was going to be a
death sentence for me, too. They had charts at the time, to figure out the
hierarchy of each organization, who was the leader, and which people were
operating under which group, under which leader. And in their charts, because
I had been staying at home with my kids for about eight months before I was
arrested, they couldn't find any actual documentation as to my status, and
that's why I didn't get the death sentence that they told me about. M.S.: What
sentence did you get? S.: The main
sentence that they first gave me, they asked if I had a religion, and I said
I had none, and they gave me 10 years imprisonment for that. M.S.: What was
done to you in prison by the regime? S.: When I was
in solitary confinement, there was no sanitation, there was no nutrition that
we could actually live off of, and we were constantly hearing the pleas of
the people who were being tortured. Every
morning they would take us for interrogation with our eyes closed up and as
we went into the offices of interrogation, they would kick us and hit us and
beat us to get us to say what they wanted to hear. And as we were there they
would make people who had gone through tortures crawl by our feet to make us
fear what was going to happen to us. Because I
refused to do the prayers, and I had told them that I didn't have a religion,
I was kept in solitary as the others were taken into the public cells. I was
kept in solitary, but because I had no new information to give them, I wasn't
interrogated anymore. I wasn't tortured, because really they knew I didn't
have anything new to tell them. I was just kept in solitary, though. Yet they
would constantly put me in a situation where I would hear my dad's pleas as
he was getting whipped. My father was kept in the same place. He had
contributed to the Amol uprising. He had helped them a lot in many different
ways. He was kept there also, and he was being whipped every day. He was
going under a lot of torture. And I was constantly put in a situation as to
make me hear him. And how they treated my mother, they would shout at her and
curse her every day from somewhere nearby where I was kept so that I would
hear and be mentally tortured in that way. M.S.: What
happened to your mother and father? Did they survive? S.: Because all
the people with whom my parents had been working and all the leaders with
whom they had been cooperating, because none of them had given in to the
torture, and had not said anything about anyone who was within those groups,
the government did not have anything against them, did not have anything
solid in their hands against my parents and so after three years they were
both released. M.S.: You said
you heard your husband's voice when you first came in. How long did your
husband live in jail, and did you ever see him again? S.: Eight months
after I was taken into jail, they gave us an appointment for me to meet my
husband before he was going to be executed. That's the last time I saw him. M.S.: How long
did you spend in jail? S.: Three
years. M.S.: Eight
months, and then your husband was executed, and then they put you in the
public cell. Did they keep coming at you to get you to capitulate? Did they
keep trying to make you say prayers? S.: There were
many women who refused to do the prayers. When we refused to do the prayers,
we were taken into an isolated room. It was room number 6, that was an
isolated room from the rest of the whole prison. It was sort of like a
quarantine, and we were kept there. We were treated as non-humans. It was
like we were some sort of other animal like a dog because even like when we
wanted to wash our hands, there is a concept in Islam, that when you are an
atheist, when you don't have their religion, you are considered filthy. M.S.: You were
released from jail after 3 years. Where
did you go when you were freed from prison? S.: My mother-
and father-in-law, who were taking care of the kids at that time, they were
waiting for me outside the prison. Because of cultural issues and atmosphere
that was prevalent at the time, what really happened to me was I was released
from the prison of the Islamic regime, to only go to another metaphorical
prison of where I was living with my mother- and father-in-law. M.S.: Explain to
people what that was like. How did the country change between the time you
were arrested and when you were released? What was that like? S.: After
repressing all revolutionary forces, Khomeini's regime had infused people
with such fear, and such contempt against any revolutionary force, that we
weren't even welcome in society anymore. We didn't feel welcomed by the
people, because there was just so much fear going on that they feared any
group that had anything to do with revolutionaries or any revolutionary
ideas. People showed much contempt for them. And as
I was faced with so much contempt and this repressed atmosphere, I constantly
kept trying to bring about a more lively atmosphere at home for my kids as I
continuously tried to sing revolutionary songs to them and just show the joy
of such struggle. But unfortunately because of patriarchal culture that
people had at the time, I was repressed even at home by my husband's family. And
I couldn't do much to bring about another change even in that little society
that I was living in. M.S.: When you
talk about it being a patriarchal atmosphere, what did that look like? What
did it mean for a woman like you to be living in this patriarchal society? S.: An example
of what I mean was, because I was a widow, I was condemned to wear black for
10 years. I was condemned to not express any opinions of myself, and I was
condemned not to have any friends around, anyone to talk to, anyone who would
sympathize with me. I was condemned to stay at home, and help out with
housework. I did not
even have the right to take care of my children. I could not have any kind of
relationship with them that was independent of my husband's family. Within
the ten years that I was living there, what I thought I should do was to read
books about psychology, to figure out what I could do with myself, my mental
situation, my mental state at the time, how I could gain back my autonomy, my
self-confidence. I tried to work on these ideas to rebuild my strength, to
rebuild my character. After I successfully did that, I left their house,
after ten years. M.S.: Where did
you go after you left their house? S.: My father
had a property that wasn't really inhabitable. There was a cellar at the
place, and I went to the place and I was living in the cellar, and one of our
family friends helped to find me a job, that was a very, very low-paying job,
that paid very low at the time. M.S.: How long
did you live like that? S.: I met a
comrade who wasn't politically active any more but he helped me take some
psychology classes, and some self-realization groups. I became involved with
them and a woman in one of these groups was very sympathetic with me and she
helped me get a job that did not require a background check, because if they
did there was no way I could get a job. But she helped me get that job, and
that's how I could move out of the cellar. M.S.: How long
did you stay in S.: For almost
a year I worked at that job, because I was not allowed to leave the country
for about 10 to 11 years after I was released from prison. I had no passport
and I just couldn't leave the country. I kept working there. After a while I
applied for a passport and they gave me a one-time passport. I could only use
it one time to leave the country, and when I came back I was supposed to turn
it in to them. And that's how I actually left after 12 years after I was
released. The only
thing that made it possible for me to get a visa to leave the country was
that I had a job, I had documentation that I could provide for them, and I
had two children that were living in Iran, and that provided for some
background based on which I could get the visa. I got the visa for a month
only. When I went
to My only
belief that always gave me hope was that I always knew, and I always was sure
that such ideology was the only way to emancipation. And now it's been five
years that I have found the right group again, the Communist Party of Iran
[MLM] and have been involved with them, have been politically active again. M.S.: You left S.: I think
that, in the first place, I have to say that there is a characteristic that
all Iranian women share, be it religious women, or political women, and I
think it applies to all Iranian women. They have some sort of resentment
toward oppression and toward anything that puts them down. They deeply have
this resentment, even the women who are religious, who have religious
sympathies. The main problems that they're facing is one, that the laws of
society are against women, are anti-women laws that are enforced by the
government, and second is that a lot of women do not see an alternative to
the way they are living now. They don't have an alternative to their current
situation. M.S.: What are
the laws you're talking about? S.: Laws such
as women not being allowed the custody of their children. They cannot go on
vacation without the permission of their husbands. They cannot leave the country
without the permission of their husbands. The whole system is designed in a
way to treat women as means to patriarchism. M.S.: What about
things like 'honor killings'? Are they common in S.: In the more
modern cities it is not seen as much but of course in small villages it is
very common, and it's even broadcast on the news. And on the news they either
call it honor killings or they say that a woman has committed suicide. M.S.: Would honor
killings include things like punishing women for having affairs, or being in
sexual relations when they aren't married? What happens to women in
situations like this? Are they killed? S.: For someone
to commit these killings, it suffices for them being a father or a brother to
be suspicious of either their sisters or their wives or their mothers. It
suffices for them just to be suspicious. And it might be on no grounds, but
as long as they are suspicious, they can go ahead and commit the murder, and
there is no lawful process that this thing goes through. They just do it
themselves and it's done. It doesn’t go through a process. M.S.: Does the
state play a role in any of this? S.: Indirectly,
the state encourages such behavior by promoting concepts from Islam that they
preach about, or laws that make it possible for the men to commit such
murders. M.S.: Is this
what's meant by Sharia law? S.: What that
amounts to, the Sharia law, is how women should consider the Islamic
leadership of Iran, or the laws that they pass, as the holy laws of god, and
also the promotion of the idea that, if women are not abiding by the
restrictions set for them by their husbands, but most women do fight, even on
a personal level, with such restrictions of such laws, from within their
families, within the scope of the private life, or in the society in a
broader picture. But there's a very, very small group of women who are
submissive to such laws, and those are women who share the same
fundamentalist ideas that the government promotes. And those women, because
they have the full hijab and do abide with such Sharia laws, have no reason
to get punished. M.S.: You describe
the regime as a woman-hating regime. What do you mean when you say that? S.: What I mean
is that the laws that they have passed and the ones that they're enforcing in
the country right now are those that are to the advantage of men in the
society, and the laws make it absolutely the case that women have to abide by
all restrictions set for them by men in this society. They have to abide, and
be obedient to men at their work or in their private lives, at their home or
society in general, wherever they are, whatever they're doing, these laws
make it the case that they have to abide by what is told to them by the men
in society. M.S.: Are many
women still arrested and thrown in jail? S.: Yes. it
happens daily and for any kind of accusation, they keep them 24 hours, 48
hours, which usually ends up in the women being raped or somehow wounded or
whipped, and also some of them are just kept for longer, without their
families knowing anything about where they are or how they're doing. M.S.: You said
that women resist, sometimes in small ways at home, sometimes in big. Tell us
what the resistance looks like. S.: The main
group who resist in a more active way are the groups of students who go to
the main parts of cities, and organize protests along with the male students
at universities. They also plan many peaceful protests, as well as protests
that end up in confrontations. And many of those students are arrested and
put into jail without any kind of sentence or news for their families about
when they're going to get released, or why they're even being kept in jail. An example
of resistance by the students is just about a week ago, before the beginning
of the Persian New Year, students were passing out, in the main part of the
city, they were passing out—there's a tradition that for the new year, people
set up a table filled with different symbols, different plants or seeds that
symbolize something about their lives, or life in general. And one of the
symbols is fish. They purchase little fish and they put it in a jar and they
put it on the table. And one thing the students were doing, they were passing
out black fish throughout the city, along with a very revolutionary poem to
bypassers. There is a story called “Little Black Fish” by a revolutionary
writer in M.S.: You're
involved in this campaign around the oppression of women, opposing both the
regime in S.: Over the
years after the revolution, women have come to know that change is not going
to happen without them directly intervening and taking initiative to directly
cooperate with any kind of change that is promised or that they see coming. And
we have come to know that even socialism will not happen without women
playing a very important role in the process of bringing about this change. We
believe that socialism and the women's movement are complements of each
other. M.S.: People are
told there are only two ways to go here—do you want to be part of the Islamic
fundamentalist revolution or the S.: We try to
show the real face of both of these outmoded regimes and we try to convey the
picture of a third pole, and alternative that is available to people, and
alternative that does not take the side of either of these outmoded regimes
and it determines its own—a third pole that is against war, that is anti-war
and that no matter how small it is we have to promote it among people and we
have to develop it into a bigger alternative that includes more people and we
have to show that this is the only way—we have to promote our anti-war belief
before a war happens against Iran. We want to show this alternative to the
people of I just want
to say that in the past month when I have been here, and I have gone to many
universities, many high schools, I have really enjoyed what I have witnessed,
the passion that young people have shown—how many young people I have met
have shown passion for learning about revolution—for bringing about change,
how to make a new world—and it has encouraged me so much to continue this
way. I have gained so much strength and I have learned so many lessons that I
know I will return to Germany much more stronger than when I came, with much
hope of a better world. M.S.: Tell us
some stories about your experiences here, going to the high school classes,
and what happened. S.: These are
some examples of questions that high school students in Watts had for 'us,
about M.S.: [reading]
What does the typical family consist of? What are the duties of the house? What
level of education are girls allowed to have? Did people
ask you questions about what it's like to be a revolutionary woman in S.: There were
three students at this high school in M.S.: When you
told your story to the students, how did they respond? Because you have a
very powerful story, and I'm sure it's something they haven't heard before. S.: They really
sympathized with me and had a belief in what I was telling them, especially
the African American students, because of their own struggle and what they
have witnessed in their own society and the way they've been treated in their
own society. They really sympathized with me, just wanted to know more and
showed a lot of interest and sympathy. M.S.: Give me an
example of the experiences you'll remember the most. S.: The march
itself on the 8th of March, was great to see the combination of so many
different people, and the diversity of the group that was present there. So
many native-born Americans, so many African Americans and just many different
people who were present and who showed support and who took the initiative to
come to this event, although it wasn't a huge crowd, it was of great quality
and I really enjoyed that day. What I concluded from that day, from what I
saw, is that we cannot achieve our goal if we do not unite with each other,
stand side by side, next to each other. |