In Seattle, an Iranian protests in a way banned back home - through
dance
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[November 17, 2022]
By Matt McKnight and Daniel Trotta
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Hair uncovered and
hands painted red, Iranian-born choreographer Parmida Ziaei dances in
the streets and on stage to show her support for demonstrators more than
6,000 miles (10,000 km) from her home in Seattle.
Iran has been engulfed in protests since Mahsa Amini, 22, died on Sept.
16 after she was arrested for allegedly flouting the Islamic Republic's
strict dress code imposed on women.
At least 344 protesters have been killed in the protests, including 52
minors, according to the rights activist HRANA news agency. It also
reported 40 members of the security forces have been killed, and 15,820
people being arrested. Iranian authorities have not given any numbers on
those killed or injured; they have neither denied nor confirmed HRANA
reports.
At one street protest, Ziaei and two other performers, one Iranian and
one American, wore red skirts and painted their hands red to symbolize
the blood that has been shed.
Her choreography includes gestures that draw attention to their hair, as
if to defy Iranian authorities who have decreed women must hide their
hair under scarves in public.
Ziaei, who also performs solo, incorporates into her performances a pair
of songs that have become anthems of the Iranian movement: "Baraye"
("For") by Shervin Hajipour, with lyrics derived from the tweets of
protesters, and "Zan, Zendegi Azadi" ("Woman, Life, Freedom") by an
anonymous woman demanding rights.
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Choreographer and dancer Parmida Ziaei
talks with fellow dancers in her studio at 2+U in downtown Seattle,
Washington, U.S., November 1, 2022. REUTERS/Matt Mills McKnight
"Women have not been able to dance in public in Iran for the past 43
years," said Ziaei, 29, who left Iran for the United States a decade
ago to attend university. "We're not allowed to perform in front of
men. We're not allowed to dance with men. I can create a piece here
and I don't have to ask permission from anybody. I can be naked if I
wanted to, right?"
Some of the Iranian demonstrators have defiantly danced in the
streets as part of the latest protests in the country.
In Seattle, Ziaei has performed her protest dances before small
audiences at a dance festival, a symposium for artists of color, and
a street demonstration so far. Her work also can be seen on her
Instagram account, though not easily in Iran, where the internet is
censored.
Her protest is one of many organized by Iranians across the United
States.
The current protests in Iran are among the most forceful to confront
the clerical establishment since the Islamic Revolution of 1979 that
overthrew the country's U.S.-backed monarch.
"We're seeing a bravery that for me as a millennial is just so
incredible," Ziaei said. "These 15- or 16- year olds - Gen Z -
running in front of the bullets. They don't have anything to lose
anymore. They just want to have a future."
(Reporting by Matt McKnight in Seattle and Daniel Trotta in
Carlsbad, Calif., Editing by Donna Bryson and Deepa Babington)
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