'Please Tell Me You're Okay': Watching Iran's Protests Erupt

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'Please Tell Me You're Okay': Watching Iran's Protests Erupt
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Iranian women, tired of being told what to do with their bodies, are taking to the streets and burning their headscarves. From PSaranj:

Iranian women, tired of being told what to do with their bodies, are burning their headscarves. Men cheer them on, blocking fists and batons crashing down on their sisters.

Protesters set their scarves on fire while marching down on Oct. 1, 2022 in Tehran, Iran. Protests over the death of 22-year-old Iranian Mahsa Amini have continued to intensify despite crackdowns by the authorities. My message to my brother, unread, sits in the chat box. He is in Tehran. I am in Baltimore. The separation is unbearable. Right now, I don’t even want an answer.

As my stomach churns with every thought, I aimlessly scroll through Instagram. It really is happening! Iran is imploding. The death of the 22-year-old Iranian woman, Mahsa Amini, at the hands of the “morality police” hasn’t just sparked spontaneous protests—it’s countrywide. Women are removing their headscarves and burning them because they are tired of being told what to do with their bodies. Men cheer them on, and some block the fists and batons crashing down on their sisters.

But in recent days, the tables have turned. These state-sanctioned militia members—sometimes appearing beleaguered and outnumbered—have received fierce retaliation from waves of protesters. I’ve seen the videos. Some people are so angry they fight the militia. “Bokoshesh,” a voice screams from behind a cell phone. In the distance, a man who has lost his weapon is on the ground. A crowd of young men and women are kicking him. “Kill him,” the voice repeats.

I don’t want my brother arrested. Having grown up in Iran, I know what its government does. After months of physical and mental torture, they force the prisoners to appear on TV. Emaciated, exhausted and devoid of light, they confess and apologize for conspiring to topple the regime. I have read the memoirs of journalists like

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