Fatemeh
Haqiqatjoo and the Sixth Majles: A Woman in Her Own
Right
Ziba
Mir-Hosseini
Ziba
Mir-Hosseini is a fellow at Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin
(2004-2005) and a research associate of the London Middle East
Institute at the School of Oriental and African
Studies.
Iranian
reformist MPs Akram Mosavari Manesh, left, Mohammad Jahromi,
center, and Fatemeh Haqiqatjoo, right, participate in the
sit-in for the reinstatement of candidates barred by the
Guardian Council. (Henghameh
Fahimi/AFP)
On February 23,
2004, two days after the conservative victory in the elections for
the Seventh Majles, for which the Guardian Council banned over 2,000
reformist candidates, including some 80 current deputies, the
reformist-dominated Sixth Majles accepted the resignation of Fatemeh
Haqiqatjoo.
Protesting the
mass disqualification of their candidates, reformist deputies had
staged a 26-day sit-in, asked for a postponement of the elections
and written an open letter to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
warning him of the grave consequences of undermining the
“republican” element in the Islamic Republic. Finally, 124 of them
had announced their resignations. All had been to no avail: student
groups and the general public had showed little interest in the
protesting MPs, the Guardian Council had not budged and reformist
groups in the Majles and government had failed to agree on a
complete election boycott. In an open letter of February 14, the
Office for Consolidation of Unity (Daftar-e
Tahkim-e Vahdat), the largest student organization, had
already announced an election boycott, asking for a referendum. The
Islamic Iran Participation Front and Mojahedin of the Islamic
Revolution, the two radical reformist groups that had borne the
brunt of the Guardian Council’s bans, had withdrawn from the
elections. But the clerical left, the Militant Clerics’ Association,
had engineered a last-minute coalition with two moderate reformist
groups, Hambastegi and Kargozaran-e Sazandegi, producing a list of
candidates for Tehran under the label Coalition for Iran.
When the Majles
reconvened after a two-week election recess, some
reformist deputies were determined to continue their protest
and to go ahead with their resignations, which had to be approved
individually in open session broadcast live on Majles Radio.
Haqiqatjoo was chosen to be first to have her case debated.
Anticipating a conservative attack, a group of
reformist deputies, men and women, occupied the front row, to
form a “buffer” to protect her as she read out her resignation
speech. When journalists asked why she had been chosen, a prominent
reformist deputy replied: “Ladies first!” Another commented: “The
Majles had one ‘real man,’ and we wanted ‘him’ to go and leave us
all mahram to each other!”[1] Of the 200 deputies present, 168 voted, 124 of
them in favor.[2]
The jokes and
the choice say something not only about gender biases in the Sixth
Majles, but also about what Fatemeh Haqiqatjoo came to stand for as
the assembly came to a close four years after it was elected with a
mandate for reform. Yet there was also political expediency in the
choice. The protesting MPs knew that a woman’s
resignation would have greater public impact, but also that
Haqiqatjoo was someone who never minced her words and would say what
many of them did not dare. With three months left, and with all
their efforts to bring reform frustrated one by one by the ruling
theocracy, the protesting deputies chose her to speak to the nation
on their behalf. She did not disappoint them. Explaining why reform
from within the system is no longer possible, she drew on religious
language, imagery and idioms, and appealed to revolutionary ideals.
Nowhere did she criticize Ayatollah Khomeini; rather, she invoked
the icon of the revolution to argue for reforms and
change.
“I Can No
Longer Keep My Oath”
A
five-a-side women’s soccer team at the Hijab Club, Tehran.
(Caroline Penn/Panos Pictures)
She started by
greeting Imam Hossein, whose martyrdom was commemorated that month
(February 2004 coincided with the Islamic month of Moharram), and
asking God to regard her as among the true followers of his path.
She then situated herself in the political landscape of the Islamic
Republic. Born in 1968 in the poorer, southern part of Tehran, she
is a doctoral student in psychology, and a researcher and instructor
at Tehran University. She is also a member of the Islamic Students’
Association of Tarbiyat Modarres University and has served two terms
on the national council of the Daftar-e Tahkim-e Vahdat. Finally,
she is a member of the political bureau of the Islamic Iran
Participation Front (whose candidates were almost all barred from
the elections). “I was ten years old when the Islamic Revolution was
victorious, and I took part in demonstrations full of hope and
fervor,” she continued, “but alas, after 25 years, I now witness a
fundamental departure of the rulers from the ideals of the
revolution and Imam [Khomeini].”
She
went on to analyze what has gone wrong in the Islamic Republic. The
idea of religious government as advocated at the time of the
revolution by its founder bore no resemblance to the medieval church
in Europe. But the Islamic Republic that was supposed to combine
Islam with democracy was diverted from its course by religious
obscurantism and bad governance. In the third decade, those who
understood the causes (the reformists), inspired by the founder’s
teachings, tried to modify the power structure within the limits of
the constitution. They wanted to defend the Islamic Republic, to
present a merciful image of Islam and to prove that Islam is
compatible with human rights and good governance. But their
opponents, those who shield their absolute power behind an aura of
sanctity, defined the ceiling of freedom. “In the eyes of the
power-drunk, any criticism of institutions under the Leader’s
control became a great crime against national security.” That is why
they resisted and sabotaged the attempts of the Sixth Majles, whose
“crime” was simply to seek to give legal force to those ignored
elements of the constitution that guarantee citizens’ rights to
freedom of speech and free elections. The reformists wanted to bring
transparency and accountability into the political arena, but their
attempts were eventually rendered impotent by the unelected
institutions that now hold the reins of power in the Islamic
Republic. To frustrate reform and to silence the reformists, their
opponents resorted to unethical and non-Islamic methods—violence,
intimidation and repression—and created one political crisis after
another: the serial assassination of intellectuals, attacks on the
universities, mass closure of publications, prosecution of
journalists and students, and so on. The February election,
Haqiqatjoo concluded, was the last
straw.
By
conducting sham elections for the Seventh Majles, the power-drunk
opponents of the popular vote have turned their backs on all the
achievements of the revolution. With this appointed
(farmayeshi) Majles, they seek to erase republicanism and
freedom from the political face of this country forever…. With a
26-day sit-in we warned the heads of the system that a rogue group
are slaughtering the nation’s security and the people’s right to
sovereignty…. They want people to be unable to choose their
representatives directly, republicanism to cease and the Islam of
the Taliban to take primacy over “pure Mohammadan
Islam.”
She
then read the oath she took when sworn in as MP in 2000, requiring
her to remain faithful to Islam and the constitution, to defend the
independence and the interests of the country, and to serve the
people.
As I
informed you, and you know, since the possibility of keeping my
oath has been taken from me and I have been deprived of [the
ability to] defend your legal rights, it is no longer a source of
pride for me to stay in this house and see the deviation from the
Imam’s ideal, the nation and the constitution. Therefore, by my
resignation, I declare my protest at the incorrect, illegal and
non-religious conduct of the appointed bodies in recent years,
which has reached its peak in the February 22 elections.
She
asked her colleagues in the Majles to accept her resignation, and
concluded by daring the Guardian Council to tell the people, via the
media, the grounds on which she was disqualified from the elections,
so that they could see the extent to which the Council had
deteriorated into a tool for safeguarding the conservatives’
interests.
The Guardian
Council ignored her challenge. There are few reformist newspapers
left, and none dared to publish her speech in its entirety.[3] Reformist websites and online magazines, which
have tried to replace the vibrant press that played such a key role
during the 2000 elections before also being closed down in the fall
of 2004, gave full coverage to Haqiqatjoo’s resignation. One
published the speech together with a minute-by-minute account of the
session.[4] Another entitled its report: “Silence in the
Face of the Creation of an Appointed Majles is Haram: The
Resignation of Fatemeh Haqiqatjoo, the Brave Tehran Deputy.”[5]
“Lion-Woman”
While some have
seen Haqiqatjoo’s resignation as signifying the collapse of
reformist dreams in Iran, there are other, more complex readings of
the event. Powerful though her resignation speech was, the way it
has been received and celebrated reveals a cultural politics of
transition in gender and society.
On the
reformist websites, women have celebrated Fatemeh Haqiqatjoo’s
politics of honesty and integrity in poetry and prose. They pun on
her name Haqiqatjoo (“Truth/Justice Seeker”) and praise her as a
“lion woman” (shirzan)—a traditional Persian term for a
prominent and brave woman, roughly equivalent to javanmard
for men. They allude to her life circumstances, link past and
present, and address her baby daughter Sara, telling her that she is
too little to appreciate what her mother did today, and warning her
what the future holds for her in the patriarchal society that women
like her mother are struggling to change.
In a poetic
essay, “One Day You Will,” the writer describes the legacy of pain
that woman have inherited and their yearning for an elusive freedom,
and how she as a woman voted for the Sixth Majles filled with that
yearning. She continues, “Today is another day—though I am still a
woman and have to ‘prove’ that I exist…I am proud that it was a
woman who was first not to allow my rights and yours to be trampled
on…. It was a woman who was first not to agree to bargain with
people’s rights…it was a woman who honored my vote.”[6]
In another
piece, “For Sara, Who Has a Truth/Justice Seeker Mother,
Haqiqatjoo,” the writer addresses the baby girl: “You know, whenever
a girl is born in this land, her mother’s heart sinks. The mothers
of this land give birth to girls whose life is worth half that of
boys.” Then she tells Sara not to believe the nursery rhyme her
playmates will soon sing to her: “‘Girls are mice, run like rabbits;
boys are lions, cut like swords.’ The lion-woman who is your mother
has silenced this myth forever, and has made the women of this land
realize that there is honor in giving birth to a girl—a girl like
your mother.”[7]
A Dutiful
Daughter
The way Fatemeh
Haqiqatjoo captured the public imagination with her resignation from
the Sixth Majles contrasts intriguingly with Fa’ezeh Hashemi’s
election to the fifth parliamentary assembly in 1996. The contrast
is highly revealing of the extent to which Iranian political culture
has changed over the intervening eight years, and
of the challenges ahead for women in the male-centered world of
Iranian politics.
Fa’ezeh Hashemi
entered the Fifth Majles with much fanfare. As the daughter of
then-President Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, her name was on the
candidate list of the Kargozaran-e Sazandegi party, which had just
emerged under her father’s patronage. In the presidential elections
of 1997, she and her party joined the coalition that brought
Mohammad Khatami to office—though not to power. This was the
beginning of the reformist movement, and Fa’ezeh joined in
wholeheartedly. It was rumored that her father encouraged her to
enter politics, as she was unhappy in her marriage and suffering
from depression. Whatever the case, her entry was of benefit to her
and also to the women’s movement in Iran. She founded Zan,
the first (and, so far, only) women’s daily newspaper, stood up to
her colleagues in the conservative-dominated Fifth Majles and sided
with the reformists on every issue. Yet when she stood for the Sixth
Majles in 2000, she failed to get enough votes; she was rejected,
not because of her own politics, but because she chose not to
distance herself from those of her father. The conservatives had his
name on their list of candidates for Tehran, and hoped to have him
installed as Majles speaker. In the event, and to the great shame of
his backers and himself, Hashemi-Rafsanjani finished last in the
poll, and eventually withdrew. Though he had supported the election
of President Khatami, for the reformist press of the time he came to
embody the patriarchal and patrimonial style of politics that they
were challenging. Fa’ezeh also disappeared from the political scene.
Her family links, that had brought her into prominence in 1996,
caused her fall in 2000, when the reformist movement and press were
at their peak.[8]
Not Afraid to
Be Called Feminist
By contrast,
Fatemeh Haqiqatjoo’s election in 2000 attracted little attention.
Her name was not known outside the student groups that supported her
and two other candidates who entered the Sixth Majles as their
representatives. As the youngest female deputy, she soon established
herself as a relentless advocate of reform and democracy, not just
women’s issues. Her speeches in the Majles and outside aroused
conservative anger. In 2001, after a speech in Qazvin during the
anniversary of the revolution, she was arrested and received a 20-month prison sentence for “misinterpreting” the words
of Ayatollah Khomeini and for insulting the Leader and the Guardian
Council. On appeal, she was cleared of the first charge, and her
sentence was reduced to ten months and suspended. Meanwhile she has
another case pending, arising from a speech in a public Majles
session, in which she revealed what students had told her about the
latest violent attack on a dormitory during the June 2003 student
protests: as the militia beat them and threw them out of the
windows, they praised the Supreme Leader.
In her second
year as deputy, she married a parliamentary journalist, and in
November 2003 she became a mother. At first, she showed little
interest in the issue of women’s rights. She opposed the formation
of the first ever Women’s Bloc, but later joined it along with a
number of male colleagues, and made some of the most important
statements and interventions in defense of women’s rights. In the
first year, she made headlines when she spoke in a Majles open
session to protest about the arrest of a woman journalist who was
dragged from her home by security police. In a sharp, sarcastic
speech, she asked the authorities, “Where is the ‘cry of Islam’ when
a Muslim woman’s chador is pulled off by the police?” She
upbraided Khatami for not choosing a female minister; and she ran
into several altercations with her colleagues when questioning
government ministers for not having women in decision-making posts.
She has no qualms in calling herself a feminist—a term that women in
politics have previously tried to avoid. Since her resignation, when
asked about her reaction to being called “the one man of the Sixth
Majles,” she says: “I am very much against such a statement. I
always tell my friends that I am a feminist, and such a remark is
not a compliment to me but an insult; of course, I say this jokingly
as I know those who said it meant it as praise. The reality is that
patriarchy is the culture that dominates our society.”[9]
What shaped
Haqiqatjoo’s career as an MP was her involvement with Islamic
student groups and their transformation since the early 1990s.
Freeing themselves from the straitjacket of Islamic ideology, these
student groups are a force and voice for democratic reform. They
became one of the first targets of the conservative backlash in July
1999 when, following a peaceful demonstration at Tehran University
against the closure of a reformist newspaper, the paramilitary
forces attacked a student dormitory. The event ignited a chain of
protests in other universities, and the first mass demonstrations
since the revolution, which were violently suppressed. The
subsequent treatment of the students and Khatami’s failure to
intervene on their behalf initiated a rift, and eventually a break
between the students and the reformists in government. The student
groups began to demand constitutional reforms and a “proper
republic” in which people’s votes and the right to choose their
government are no longer mediated through unelected and theocratic
bodies. In effect, they want an end to the dual sovereignty that has
enabled unelected institutions to frustrate efforts by the people’s
representatives to deliver the reforms for which they were elected.
The Balance
Sheet
The
Sixth
Majles was a turning point for women and the
politics of gender. Like Haqiqatjoo, other
women deputies became public figures. Elaheh Koula’i
frequently commented and gave interviews on international affairs
and relations with the West, especially the United States, and
negotiations with the International Atomic Energy Agency. Jamileh
Kadivar was reporter for the Article 90 Commission, dealing with
human rights abuses. Soheila Jelowdarzadeh, a representative of
workers’ movements and veteran of the previous Majles, was on the
Majles Speaker’s Board. The 13 woman deputies, all
aligned with the reformists, also
challenged the unwritten rules that had defined the gender
space and politics of the five previous parliaments: the
chador (mandatory for all women politicians), special seating
in the assembly and a curtained-off dining area. Some of the new
women deputies appeared in a more informal headscarf and coat.
Conservative members objected and demanded their dismissal, but the
women argued that they had campaigned in this dress and people had
voted for them knowing this. There remained a row of assigned
women’s seats in the assembly, but in the dining room they did away
with the curtain, and moved to a table in a corner. When women
joined in a protest sit-in, men did not know how to make room for
them, but by the end all seemed at ease with each other.
A priority for
some of these women was to redress the gender inequalities in law
and society, one of their election promises, and unlike in previous
parliaments, they had little difficulty in persuading their male
colleagues to vote for such bills. But then they faced the hurdle of
the Guardian Council, which rejected every single bill related to
women and the family on the grounds of incompatibility with the
shari‘a. Women deputies introduced 33 bills,[10] 16 of which eventually became law after
intervention by the Discretionary Council, but only after being
emptied of their progressive elements. Among them were: removing the
condition that required a woman to be married and accompanied by her
husband before getting a scholarship to study abroad; amending
articles of the civil code to increase the minimum marriage age for
girls from 9 to 13; and increasing from 2 to 7 the age up to which
mothers have custody rights of sons (it remained at 7 for girls).
Most important among the 17 other bills are: the proposal that Iran
join the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) passed by the UN General
Assembly in 1979 (now under consideration by the Discretionary
Council); a proposal to create a Majles Commission to address issues
relating to family, youth and women; and a proposal to give the
right of residence and nationality to non-Iranian spouses of Iranian
women (to address the problem of Iranian women married to Afghan
refugees who do not want to leave the country when their husbands
return).
The fate of
these bills is now in the hands of the Seventh Majles and its
conservative majority. Ten of its 12 women MPs are supported by the
Zainab Society, which is funded by the Leader’s office and had
supplied women MPs in the Fourth and Fifth Majles but did not put
forward its better-known figures for this election in fear of a
public backlash. Two women are Majles veterans (Nafiseh Fayyazbakhsh
and Nayereh Akhavan-Bitaraf), and know how to deal with the media,
but the less experienced ones have already received adverse
publicity for their remarks. For instance, when Fatemeh Aliya spoke
of polygamy as a blessing for women, and boasted about the Zainab
Society’s source of funding, she got wide coverage on the
websites.
The women of
the Seventh Majles have defined themselves by criticizing the women
of the previous one for introducing bills defying the “teachings of
Islam,” such as joining CEDAW or sending female students to study
abroad. When the Fourth Economic, Social and Cultural Plan
(containing the reformists’ policies for the next five years),
approved by the Sixth Majles, was recalled by the Seventh, among the
revisions was elimination of the pledge to maintain “gender
justice,” and none of the new women deputies raised any
objection.
The Sixth
Majles failed to make political power accountable, as Fatemeh
Haqiqatjoo says in her resignation speech, but it
went a long way toward demystifying the way the elite play
power games in religious language and use the shari‘a
instrumentally to justify autocratic rule and patriarchal culture.
It has also brought home to reformists that their vision of Islam
and democratic society cannot be realized without addressing the
core problems of power relations, among which is that of gender
inequality. The heated exchanges between the reformist deputies and
the members of the Guardian Council that followed the introduction
of bills such as the proposal to join CEDAW or banning torture shed
light not only on the retrograde nature of the arguments put forward
by their opponents but also on the distance between their rhetoric
and practice.
The Importance
of Being Fatherless
Apart from
Haqiqatjoo, the Guardian Council disqualified two other women
deputies (Elaheh Koula’i and Sharbanoo Amani-Anganeh) from standing
in 2004. Others withdrew or stood for election unsuccessfully, and
only one (Mehrangiz Morovvati) was reelected. Among those who
withdrew was Fatemeh Rake‘i, who declared that she felt insulted not
to have been disqualified. Rake‘i is a poet. In her homage to
Haqiqatjoo, “For Sara Tahavori [Haqiqatjoo’s daughter],” she
concludes by telling her that when she grows up she will learn about
the cruel world of politics, and will hear of her mother’s name,
which will make her identification card a document she can be proud
of. “But what is not written in your mom’s ID card is the secret
that, like the Prophet, she grew up without a father, and for this
the Jaheliyat never believed her.”[11] Jaheliyat, the pre-Islamic era, here
suggests the pre-reform era in the Islamic Republic when the power
elite, whose vested interests were threatened, resisted the reforms
and denied their truth and justice.
Author’s Note: Research for this paper was
part of a project funded by the Nuffield Foundation; the paper was
written during a fellowship at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin. I
am grateful to Richard Tapper for his comments on earlier
drafts.
[1]
In Persian, “Majles yek mard dasht, ke khastim zudtar beravad ta
hameh ba-ham mahram bashim.” The joke implies that the reformist
deputies are all “women,” and uncomfortable with the presence of the
lone “man”—Haqiqatjoo.
[2] For an account of this session, see Zahra
Ebrahim, “Fatemeh Haqiqatjoo, The First!” Zanan 107 (Esfand
1382/March 2004). [Persian]
[3] The judiciary closed Sharq for ten days
for printing the text of the deputies’ open letter to the Leader on
February 17, 2004.
[4] This website was www.emrooz.ws, which replaced
the paper Sobh-e Emrooz.
[5] This headline appeared on www.rooydad.com, the
website of the Participation Front.
[6] Narges Mahdavi, Rooydad News, April 25,
2003. The site is no longer available. In an October 2004 crackdown
on reformist sites, a number of Rooydad’s writers and
technicians were arrested and the site was closed down. When it
reappeared, its archives were gone and it now carries only brief
news items.
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