International Women’s Day: The day the “battle of women in Iran with the Ayatollahs” began

news/240/cpsprodpb/27DE/production/_128860201_formarina_gettycredit.jpg 240w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/320/cpsprodpb/27DE/production/_128860201_formarina_gettycredit.jpg 320w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/27DE/production/_128860201_formarina_gettycredit.jpg 480w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/27DE/production/_128860201_formarina_gettycredit.jpg 624w, https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/800/cpsprodpb/27DE/production/_128860201_formarina_gettycredit.jpg 800w" alt="Montage of Women's protests in Iran in 2022 and in 1979" attribution="Getty Images" layout="responsive" src="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/640/cpsprodpb/27DE/production/_128860201_formarina_gettycredit.jpg" height="1152" width="2048" data-hero="true"/>

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Following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini while in police custody, thousands of women and girls took to the streets to demonstrate. Mahsa had been arrested for allegedly not wearing a headscarf “properly”. But this was not the first time that crowds of women and men in the country had come out to protest the authorities’ orders on what women should wear and how they should behave.

It was meant to be a small gathering to celebrate International Women’s Day, a day that the then newly appointed Supreme Leader considered a Western invention.

But what was supposed to be a small celebration turned into a massive demonstration.

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Tehran, March 8, 1979

Just twenty-four hours earlier, the architect of Iran’s Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, had issued a new decree requiring all women to wear the hijab in the workplace. In a speech to thousands of his supporters in the city of Qom, Khomeini said that without the veil, women are considered “naked” according to Islamic law.

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