His name, like a mantra, scrolls from lip to lip.
Not a day goes by without Narges Mohammadi, an imprisoned 49-year-old activist, being cited at the turn of a demonstration, without his mail-brains escaping discreetly from his cell in Evin.
“Long live Narges Mohammadi!”
, intoned a student from Allameh Tabatabai University in Tehran last week, before unleashing a deluge of
“Zan, Zendegi, Azadi”
(
“Woman, Life, Freedom”
) in a crowded amphitheater.
The slogan, so universal, so modern, of the Iranian revolt provoked on September 16 by the death of Mahsa Jina Amini, arrested and abused for a
“poorly worn veil”
, slams like a shield of words against the sword of the theocratic power in place for forty-four years.
It sums it all up: the fed up of young people connected to the world, their rage for life, and the long fight for more equality of which this seasoned activist is at the forefront.
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