ニューヨーク・タイムズさんのインスタグラム写真 - (ニューヨーク・タイムズInstagram)「Narges Mohammadi, Iran’s most prominent human rights and women’s rights activist, is serving a 10-year sentence in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison for “spreading anti-state propaganda.” But a jail cell has not succeeded in silencing her.   Her current imprisonment is hardly her first encounter with Iran’s harsh approach to dissent. Over the past 30 years, Iran’s government has penalized her over and over for her activism and her writing, depriving her of most of what she holds dear — her career as an engineer; her health; time with her parents, husband and children; and her liberty.  The last time Mohammadi, 51, heard the voices of her 16-year-old twins, Ali and Kiana, was over a year ago. Her husband, Taghi Rahmani, 63, also a writer and prominent activist who was jailed for 14 years in Iran, lives in exile in France with the twins. The suffering and loss that Mohammadi has endured have not dimmed her determination to keep pushing for change. PEN America gave her the Barbey Freedom to Write Award last month. The United Nations named her one of the three recipients of its World Press Freedom Prize this year.  “I sit in front of the window every day, stare at the greenery and dream of a free Iran,” Mohammadi said in a rare and unauthorized telephone interview in April from inside Evin, where she has a small window in her cell with a view of the mountains. “The more they punish me, the more they take away from me, the more determined I become to fight until we achieve democracy and freedom and nothing less.”   Tap the link in our bio to read more about @narges_mohamadi_51 and the fight for freedom in Iran. Photo by @reihanet taken at Mohammadi’s home in Tehran last year during a medical furlough from prison.」6月4日 0時19分 - nytimes

ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 6月4日 00時19分


Narges Mohammadi, Iran’s most prominent human rights and women’s rights activist, is serving a 10-year sentence in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison for “spreading anti-state propaganda.” But a jail cell has not succeeded in silencing her.

Her current imprisonment is hardly her first encounter with Iran’s harsh approach to dissent.
Over the past 30 years, Iran’s government has penalized her over and over for her activism and her writing, depriving her of most of what she holds dear — her career as an engineer; her health; time with her parents, husband and children; and her liberty.

The last time Mohammadi, 51, heard the voices of her 16-year-old twins, Ali and Kiana, was over a year ago. Her husband, Taghi Rahmani, 63, also a writer and prominent activist who was jailed for 14 years in Iran, lives in exile in France with the twins. The suffering and loss that Mohammadi has endured have not dimmed her determination to keep pushing for change. PEN America gave her the Barbey Freedom to Write Award last month. The United Nations named her one of the three recipients of its World Press Freedom Prize this year.

“I sit in front of the window every day, stare at the greenery and dream of a free Iran,” Mohammadi said in a rare and unauthorized telephone interview in April from inside Evin, where she has a small window in her cell with a view of the mountains. “The more they punish me, the more they take away from me, the more determined I become to fight until we achieve democracy and freedom and nothing less.”

Tap the link in our bio to read more about @narges_mohamadi_51 and the fight for freedom in Iran. Photo by @reihanet taken at Mohammadi’s home in Tehran last year during a medical furlough from prison.


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