| They’re
holding hands. A double take confirms it. And they are not two
men holding hands (or hooking pinkies) like some do here in
the subcontinent. There is one man and one woman. In broad daylight.
In Tehran.
It’s
a Tuesday afternoon in early March – three months before
the disputed national elections and subsequent protests that
turned Iran upside-down – and the winding, uphill path
in Darband draws a slow, erratic flow of meanderers onto its
crooked back. Darband is at the northern end of the capital.
Lying in the foothills of the Alborz mountain range, it’s
the gateway to a hiking trail leading to Mount Tochal, almost
4,000 metres in the sky. The beauty of Darband, though, is not
the main attraction: it’s a beginning-of-the-road mini-resort.
Carved
into steep rock walls, restaurants and cafés have set
up terraced seating, overlooking the pedestrian corridor that
connects the road to the trail. Vendors selling boiled fava
beans and dried, pressed fruit line the pathway up. Atypical
late winter colours electrify every level of the route. Everything
seems to get its colour from the reds and yellows of the stacked
and packed berries, cherries and apricots. The railings, the
painted walls reflect the amber of the apricot piles, glowing
like suns. The rugs, cushions and awnings borrow the Venetian
red of the sour cherries and the midnight burgundy of the endless
mulberries.
But
within this colour wheel in the hills, what stands out the most
are the women. Up here women outnumber men. Some are alone with
a guy, like the one seen holding hands. Some are on double dates.
Others lounge in bigger all-girl groups: they sit cross-legged
on charpoys, chat, drink tea and puff on a qalyoun (hookah).
Perhaps they are off from school early. In the lead-up to Nowruz
(the Iranian New Year), some of them might be playing hooky.
All
around the city, people seem to roam and carry about their business
with, well, er, freedom. In Tehran, there are few overt signs
of oppression.
Words
like that could get a man choked at the hands of feminists.
The fact that women must cover up, from head-to-toe, in Iran,
is an unacceptable in-your-face form of oppression to many.
It is one of two glaring, undemocratic restrictions that outsiders
see. The other is a spoon-fed press.
Otherwise,
life looks normal. Men share the streets with women. Kids are
seen coming out of school, knapsacks hanging off their shoulders.
People hop on buses, go to work, window-shop, stop by the bank,
pick up Versace shoes and fight through bumper-to-bumper traffic
like anywhere else in the world. There is no disconcerting military
or police presence – traffic cops, though, are at every
intersection. There are no moral police combing the sidewalks
looking for rebels to beat into submission. In this Islamic
republic, there is a mingling of the sexes and no one seems
to care.
Except that the government does. Which is why, after walking
around the most cosmopolitan city in Iran, I saw only one couple
holding hands. Which is why women are forced to hide themselves,
become less visible, less individual. Women in Tehran, though,
find ways to be noticed.
It’s
hard to dress up in a chador. So those with a more fashionable
bent go for the manteau. The long overcoat covers the arms and
legs, usually past the knees, and often is belted across the
waist, promoting womanly curves. Yet, in terms of modest Islamic
dress, the manteau is only half a compromise: it doesn’t
cover the head. Enter the headscarf. Strategically placed, it
acts more as an accessory than a hood. A colourful Hermès
scarf can draw eyes towards a woman and her perfectly coiffed
hair that is more than peeking out from the front, blonde streaks
and all. From under the manteau, jeans and funky boots, stick
out too, demanding to be noticed. Iran is just as fashion-conscious
as anywhere else. And the men further confirm this.
The
18-35, male crowd is a metrosexual bunch. Crisp, fitted button-downs
and slim slacks are common. Hair, though, is the true beacon
of style for Tehrani men. Salons provide cutting-edge looks
and guys strut the streets with super-sculpted hair that is
the result of handfuls of gel. For women, the focus is on the
face. Among the hip, modern women in Tehran, a fastidiously
painted face is a must. Yet sometimes make-up isn’t enough.
Along
a major road with shops and boutiques on either side, I stand
by a shop window, watching people go by. There is a steady flow
of pedestrians. Men make deliveries and women with groceries
head towards the taxi stand. I notice a well put-together woman
with a broad white bandage across her nose. I think little of
it until I see another young woman, not shy about the gauzy
mark of surgery in the middle of her face. Tehran isn’t
filled with clumsy women who fall and break their noses. It
is filled with women who hate their noses.
“The
most popular form of plastic surgery in America is liposuction,”
states a 2005 CBS news report. “But in Iran, where the
female form is kept largely under wraps, women prefer to spend
their money where they can show it off.”
Many
Iranians believe the Persian nose is a big nose, while western
noses are small and beautiful, like Barbie’s. A short
documentary on current.com sniffed out a whole family sensitive
about their schnozes. The three daughters name their favourite
celebrity noses: Angelina’s, Britney’s and J-Lo’s.
The Angelina-admiring daughter, at 19, is undergoing rhinoplasty
the next day. Her mother, who already had her proboscis tweaked,
says her nose was never as bad as her daughter’s and describes
the teenager’s nose as “too meaty.” The 19-year-old
is one of 35,000 Iranians to get a nose job that year.
Western
movies and satellite television may be blamed for shaping this
trend, but in Iran, the government has done plenty of other
propagandising. Around Tehran, hundreds of murals prove the
old adage “a picture is worth a thousand words.”
The city’s most famous mural shows a giant US flag draped
sideways with skulls replacing the stars and bombs dropping
from the stripes. Anti-American statements and images have covered
the walls of the former US embassy for years now. Other political
murals depict national war heroes from the war with Iraq, while
paintings of the late Ayatollah Khomeini are ubiquitous.
Drive
around town and it’s clear that it is not all political.
There are also large murals of rolling hills, blue skies, doves
and children. And there may be more to come. City officials
have launched a beautification drive that aims to replace many
negative murals with paintings of peace and hope. “The
plan is to make the crowded, traffic-congested, polluted capital
of Iran lively with lasting and universally understood murals,”
said the man behind the drive in a news report. “We have
to give a new message for a new generation.”
While
crossing the road in Mashhad, I receive a message. The second
largest city in Iran is less modern than Tehran, but it is bustling.
Traffic flows in and out of each roundabout in relentless waves.
I step out onto the street just as a car passes. There is a
gap before the next rush of vehicles. Watching the lead car,
an old, white Peugeot, I start to cross. But the driver, a woman
in her fifties, is watching me too – though, not because
I’m a moving obstacle. As our eyes meet, she leans forward
and takes her right hand off the steering wheel. She gestures
at me with an inward twist of the wrist and a nod. She’s
trying to pick me up. No, not in that way. She wants to know
if I want a lift.
In
Iran, an informal car-sharing system exists as a grassroots
taxi service. People wait along the street for drivers travelling
in the same direction to stop and pick them up. It’s a
common scene by highway on-ramps: groups of people standing,
looking for rides. Often they are not far from other travellers
who have stopped to picnic. Iranians have no problem picnicking
in unthinkable places: immediately along the side of the highway,
just metres from the asphalt, in the dust, the desert on one
side, engines on the other. It’s said that every Iranian
automobile is eternally packed with the essentials for an impromptu
picnic: carpet, water, tea, biscuits, coal and a qalyoun.
The
passengers looking for rides, though, aren’t hitchhiking:
they pay. During a cross-town trip a driver may pick and drop
many passengers, helping him pay for the petrol. The old woman
approaching me is looking for gas money too. I shake my head
and scurry across the street.
That
woman and her wave signalled more than necessity: they signalled
mobility. Even in Mashhad, a not-so cosmopolitan religious centre,
women roam independently, walking, driving, living. More women
may wear a full chador here, as compared to Tehran – this
undoubtedly has something to do with the presence of Imam Reza’s
golden-domed shrine – but they are still independent –
no need for mahrams here.
In
Iran, approximately 60% of university students are female. And
women are encouraged to work. They work in offices and hospitals,
and even at highway rest stop restaurants and gift stores. They
work in the front lines of retail, interacting with male strangers
everyday. They are more progressive than their neighbour, another
Islamic Republic, Pakistan.
Many
Iranians don’t have a great impression of Pakistan. In
Tehran, our host’s Pakistani servant, dressed in shalwar
kameez, offers to take us for a walk. It’s our first day
and he wants to show us the upscale shopping, great mountain
views and nice sidewalks. But he asks us to wait. He can’t
go out the way he is dressed. “People will think I am
Taliban,” he says.
Views
aren’t much better in Mashhad. After chatting with a group
of men in a dry fruit store, one of the guys beckons me to follow
him outside. As we walk to another food stall, he stops and
reconfirms, “Pakistan?” I say yes. “Pakistan,
boom boom,” he says, looking me straight in the eyes,
while his right hand finishes the thought as it forms a gun:
his index finger points ahead and his thumb slams down repeatedly,
mimicking a pistol’s hammer. Even in our own neighbourhood,
this is our nation’s image.
It’s not like things are perfect in Iran. As we travel
into downtown Tehran to visit the ruby and emerald-encrusted
Peacock Throne of Fat’h Ali Shah, our young driver talks
about the sanctions against Iran taking their toll: the currency
is not strong, the economy is weak. “Change is needed,”
he says. Change may be in the air. US President Obama is reaching
out with talk of “mutual respect.”
Not expecting any overnight miracles, Iranians push forward.
The government may try to limit its citizens’ independence,
dictating how to look and what to think, but the Iranians’
sense of freedom has not been lost. Some express that freedom
by substituting a manteau for a chador, some by surfing every
part of their unblocked Internet universe, while others do it
by hitting the underground music scene. And, some show it by
simply pulling over, claiming a patch of desert for half an
hour and firing up the coals for some hot tea.
|