OP-ED: How Islamic Revolution empowered and uplifted women in Iran

The female literacy rate in the Islamic Republic of Iran is higher than the global average. Photo: Supplied

The female literacy rate in the Islamic Republic of Iran is higher than the global average. Photo: Supplied

Published Mar 13, 2023

Share

By Humaira Ahad

On a cold January evening in the ladies-compartment of the Tehran metro, I saw women discussing their daily engagements in a language that demonstrated their cultured but sophisticated imitability.

They all appeared like working women coming back from their respective workplaces, not exhausted but fresh and happy. This is not the image Western media will show of Iran.

Contrary to reality, the women of Iran are shown as controlled and oppressed. Did the Islamic Revolution really push them back or lift them up to dignified positions and honour? Are they living in a repressive society or one that liberates and empowers them, especially women, in a progressive way?

Historical evidence shows that women in Iran had no adequate political and social rights before the Islamic Revolution. Both politically and socially, they were in a closed and passive space. The school system of the Pahlavi era, Westernised as it was, stopped many females from pursuing education.

Today, universities in Iran are flooded with women – confident, happy and self-assured. The Muslim-majority country’s literacy rate for women is among the best in the world.

Various studies have credited it to the founder of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Khomeini, who called for the active participation of women, not only in politics but also in higher education and the public sector.

After the Islamic Revolution in 1979, women were given equal rights to shape their futures. Iranian women are today far more politically aware and enlightened than their counterparts in other Muslim societies.

According to data, in 1977 only 17 percent of the female population in rural areas were literate. The figure grew to 73 percent in 2017, showing a substantial change brought about by the revolution.

As per the 2020 statistics, the overall literacy rate of women in the country was 85.5 percent, more than that of men at 80.8 percent. Surprisingly this female literacy rate happens to be higher than the global average.

As a strong social value for Iranian women, education is seen as real freedom. Almost 60 percent of all university students are females today. The percentage of women in higher education has increased nearly 21 times since the Islamic Revolution.

Presently, the number of female graduates in medical sciences, basic sciences and humanities exceeds the number of male graduates.

A comparative study was conducted between the Islamic Republic of Iran and Turkey to study female attendance in the universities of the two Muslim-majority countries. The result revealed that 60 percent of females enrol in universities in Iran while only 19 percent enrol in Turkey.

This remarkable improvement in the education sector has had a considerable impact on Iran’s job market as well, with women taking more jobs in both the public and private sectors.

For the first time in the country’s history, the labour force today consists mostly of women specialists. This strong presence of women from all walks of life is playing a significant role in shaping Iran’s future which appears to be bright.

According to a World Bank report, the number of female board members in various organisations has seen a three-fold increase, growing from 11 percent in 1970 to 30 percent in 2016.

There was a ten-fold increase in the number of women physicians between 1979 and 2012. Almost 40 percent of all specialised doctors in the country today are women, which is even more than in the United States where the number stands at 34 percent.

In the entertainment industry, there are more than 900 female filmmakers and 20 percent of women serve as managing directors of various media outlets.

Contrary to Western propaganda, the Islamic Revolution has played a significant role in prioritising the freedom of women.

The Islamic Republic of Iran emphasises the importance of strong women and strong mothers. The Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has been quoted as saying that if someone tries to deprive women of scientific work and stops them in their economic, political and social endeavours based on supposedly Islamic views, they act against the divine decree.

In the West, it is wrongly perceived that the backwardness of Iranian women in social and legal matters is due to the Islamic government. The minimal involvement of women in the public sector of Iran before the Islamic Revolution of 1979 was probably due to the imposed Western standards oblivious to the social, cultural and economic realities of Iranian society.

Also, did Iranians not survive the devastating war imposed by the West-backed Saddam regime, making headway on the road to progress despite hardships and difficulties?

The people of the world who are sensible and reasonable appreciate Iran’s Islamic system and see it as a model for people who are being knocked by the neo-imperialist hegemony.

* Humaira Ahad is presently pursuing her PhD at a university in Tehran.

** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Media.