‘We want the clerics to get lost’: Iran’s schoolgirls emerge as powerful voices of dissent

Amid viral videos of Khamenei’s portraits being torn down in class, each death attributed to police brutality only stokes further waves of protest

On Monday night, 16-year-old Elnaz sat at home in the Iranian city of Karaj and wept with shock and rage as she scrolled through social media posts about the death of Nika Shakarami. The 17-year-old schoolgirl was allegedly tortured and killed by Iran’s security forces as they try to suppress the protests that erupted after the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman, allegedly beaten by police for infringing the hijab regulations.

The next morning, Elnaz arrived at school to find a small group of friends gathered in the playground, pulling off their hijabs and shouting: “Death to the dictator.”

“I was in tears when I saw the other girls standing together in protest and felt like I betrayed the memory of Nika by not doing more to express my anger. So I pushed back my headscarf, and joined them,” she says.

She says the death of Shakarami has proved a tipping point for her and hundreds of other schoolgirls across Iran.

All week, allegations surrounding the circumstances of Nika Shakarami’s death have been circulating on social media. She was reported missing on 20 September after joining a protest in Tehran, amid claims that she had been beaten, raped and her body stolen and buried by the regime in a village away from her family.

Although the authorities claimed that Shakarami killed herself, her mother has accused the security services of murdering her, claiming that they tried to force her to say her daughter had taken her own life.

“We want the clerics to get lost. Our mothers didn’t have the internet to tell the world what was done to them, but we do. I am here for Nika and for all other Iranian sisters who lost their lives but haven’t made the news,” Elnaz says.

On Tuesday, videos showing teenage pupils at Elnaz’s school and others across the country waving their headscarves in the air and shouting defiant protest slogans went viral. Many Iranians have been shocked to see schoolgirls emerging as a powerful force of protest.

Five girls without hijabs raise their middle finger
Schoolgirls express their defiance at the portrait of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, which is in every classroom. Photograph: Handout

Videos posted on social networks have shown girls tearing down portraits of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in classrooms and throwing them in the waste bin, a treasonous act in Iran. Others show girls berating male officials and shouting “Woman, Life, Freedom”, echoing the slogan being shouted on the streets as protests over the death of Amini entered their third week.

Elnaz says that although the school administration has discouraged them from protesting out of concern for their safety, they have done little to stop the demonstrations.

“Our teachers initially opposed [the protests] only for our safety as they feared the regime’s forces will break down the gates. Yet nothing happened, and we continue to gather to protest at the school,” she says.

“My mother always told me how she wants me to fight for freedom. She said the world thinks Iranians are just fighting now because freedom was curbed recently, but we were never free. We will take our country back from the mullahs.”

Throughout the week, Elnaz and her friends have been talking with other girls in schools across Iran on private messaging groups that have emerged during the protests.

In the nearby city of Rasht, Naznin, another 16-year-old schoolgirl, says she and her friends were also galvanised to protest by the killings of Nika and Sarina Esmailzadeh, another teenage girl allegedly beaten to death while protesting on the streets of Tehran on 23 September.

“A lot of our blood has been spilled. We only found out about Sarina’s death this evening after seeing it on Twitter,” Naznin says of the popular YouTuber.

“Within minutes, her videos were being shared among all the girls in our private message groups. She was exactly like Nika – she was fearless, determined and a young Iranian who wanted us to join the fight for Mahsa.

“I can’t get over her smile. I am so angry,” she says.

Naznin says all of her friends and the other schoolgirls she is in contact with who are protesting across Iran are aware of how dangerous their actions are.

“Yet I am not afraid because I have nothing to lose,” she says. “If I don’t join the protests, we will die anyway of hunger and high prices, or the government will kill us just like Mahsa. But I will try to survive these protests for my family.”

Contributor

Deepa Parent

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Another teenage girl dead at hands of Iran’s security forces, reports claim
Allegations that 16-year-old Sarina Esmailzadeh was beaten to death at a protest follow news of the similar death of 17-year-old Nika Shakarami

Deepa Parent and Annie Kelly

07, Oct, 2022 @2:25 PM

Article image
Iranian schoolgirl ‘beaten to death for refusing to sing’ pro-regime anthem
Fresh protests ignited around Iran by 16-year-old Asra Panahi’s death after schoolgirls assaulted in raid on high school in Ardabil

Deepa Parent and Annie Kelly

18, Oct, 2022 @5:30 AM

Article image
Rapper who protested over death of Mahsa Amini faces execution in Iran
UN calls for international action as regime announces public trials for protesters and Iranian lawmakers seek harsh punishment

Deepa Parent and Ghoncheh Habibiazad

11, Nov, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
‘We are risking death’: Iranians on Mahsa Amini protests
After the death of a 22-year-old in police custody, three protesters explain why the country is rising up

As told to Deepa Parent

23, Sep, 2022 @1:41 PM

Article image
Iran arrests musician as anthem for protests goes viral
The lyrics to Baraye by Shervin Hajipour are taken from ordinary Iranians voicing their anger in the wake of Mahsa Amini’s death

Rosie Swash

04, Oct, 2022 @11:26 AM

Article image
Iranian woman dies ‘after being beaten by morality police’ over hijab law
Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurd, dies after ‘violent arrest’ for infringing hijab rules amid Iranian crackdown on women’s dress

Weronika Strzyżyńska

16, Sep, 2022 @5:40 PM

Article image
Iranian officials to investigate ‘revenge’ poisoning of schoolgirls
The attacks on female students – called an act of ‘biological terrorism’ – are thought to be retaliation for protests against hijabs in the country

Deepa Parent

27, Feb, 2023 @6:26 PM

Article image
Iran blocks capital’s internet access as Amini protests grow
Social media platforms have also been cut off in areas of Tehran and Kurdistan as videos of dissent go viral

Weronika Strzyżyńska and agencies

22, Sep, 2022 @12:08 PM

Article image
Iran launches airstrike against Kurdish group in northern Iraq
Deadly attack comes in response to KDPI support for ongoing protests over Mahsa Amini death in custody

Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

28, Sep, 2022 @5:35 PM

Article image
‘The fire of our anger is still burning’: protesters in Iran speak out
Those taking to the streets say Mahsa Amini’s death has ignited a deep unrest that won’t end until the Islamic Republic is overthrown

Abu Muslim Shirzad

10, Oct, 2022 @1:41 PM