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432 pages, Paperback
First published October 3, 2000
Given the harsh treatment of women in much of the Islamic world, it is understandable that Iran’s clerics would seek to rehabilitate their country’s image around the world by celebrating the centrality of their women. Women make up 25 percent of Iran’s labor force and half of the university population. They drive their own cars, buy and sell their own property, and run their own businesses. They keep their own names at marriage. The roots of these rights date from the constitutional movement of the early twentieth century, when women began to demand more rights, and later from the rule of Reza Shah, who expanded education and employment opportunities for women.So I will go for four stars on this one. It is, however, worth the read. I enjoyed the few days I tried to get through it. But I need to move on. Too many books waiting.
Most important, women vote in elections and hold political office. In 1999, when Iran held the first town council elections since the revolution, some Iranians told me that they voted for certain candidates simply because they were women.
...Unlike many other Islamic countries, Iran has an active family planning program, and birth control is widely available. Women are out on the streets early and late; they catch buses and communal taxis to school and work at 6:00 a.m.” and they shop for food at 3:00 a.m. in twenty four-hour supermarkets. In countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, most of these rights are denied to women.