CMHR marks anniversary of Mahsa Amini's death in Iranian custody with display of Woman, Life, Freedom banner - Action News
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CMHR marks anniversary of Mahsa Amini's death in Iranian custody with display of Woman, Life, Freedom banner

A banner featuring the rallying cry of the recent uprising in Iran will be displayed at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights exactly one year after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Aminiwhile in custody ofIranian morality police.

'My hope is to echo and amplify the struggles of women in Iran,' artist Hajar Moradi says

A wide banner on display says Woman Life Freedom in bold black letters
The letters on the Woman, Life, Freedom banner are made from braided fabric, symbolizing women's hair strands. (Submitted by Canadian Museum for Human Rights)

A banner featuring the rallying cry of the recent uprising in Iran will be displayed at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights exactly one year after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Aminiwhile in custody ofIranian morality police.

Aminiwas arrested for "improper attire" after she allegedly did not weara hijabin accordance with government standards.

"It's still as painful as a year ago," said Hajar Moradi, a Toronto-based Iranian-Canadian artist who created the Woman, Life, Freedom banner being installed at the Winnipeg-based museum.

It will remain on display from Saturdayuntil March 10,2024.

The banner's slogan is the English translation of the Kurdish phraseJin, Jian, Azadi, which became the motto of what Moradi calls "a feminist revolution" in the wake ofAmini's death. It was chanted at Amini's funeral.

Black and white photo of a woman who's looking at the camera but half her face is obscured by a wooden post
Hajar Moradi says she created the banner to amplify a collective message, bringing together women's voices across borders. (hajarmoradi.com)

"Woman, Life, Freedom" is written across the banner in raised black lettering andsurrounded by100messages of solidarity and support, in various languages, written on colourful squares of fabric sewn to the banner.

"I designed and created the banner to amplify a collective message, bringing together women's voicesacross borders," Moradi told CBC ManitobaInformation Radio host Marcy Markusa on Friday.

"My hope is to echo and amplify the struggles of women in Iran."

Amini was arrested in Tehran on Sept. 13,2022. She died three days later.

Iranian police said the cause ofdeath was a heart attack, which caused Amini to fall into a coma before being transferred to a hospital.

But women detained with Amini alleged she suffered police brutality. Iran's morality police havebeen criticized in recent years for theirtreatment of people, especially young women.

Colourful squares of paper, with words of support, are pinned to a banner
Messages of solidarity and support, in various languages, are sewn to the Woman, Life, Freedom banner. (Submitted by Canadian Museum for Human Rights)

Thedeath sparked widespread protestsin the streets of Iran, which then spread globally.Iranian womenremoved hijabs and somepublicly cut their hair.

The hijab, or headscarf, has been compulsory for women in Iran since after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and members of the morality police enforce the strict dress code.

The letters on Moradi's banner are made up ofbraided fabric strings, symbolizing women's hair strands.

Growing up female in Iran, you learn early that your rights are not the same as those of men, Moradi said.

"And you learn to fight constantly, on a daily basis, for your rights, whether it's within your family, in schoolor at work. You become a fighter," she said.

A crowd of people walk a city street with a banner in front of them, which says Woman Life Freedom
The banner is carried during Toronto's International Women's Day rally in March 2023. It was later completed by Moradi, who added 100 messages of solidarity and support, written on colourful squares of fabric. (Submitted by Canadian Museum for Human Rights)

The uprising after Amini's death wasn't something that erupted spontaneously, but was stewing for decades, Moradi said. Amini's death was the boiling point.

"It stood on the shoulders of many movements, revolutionaries, activist workers, students, religious minorities and marginalized ethnicities fighting for their rights," she said.

The upheaval has filled her with hope.

"I feel like more and more women are aware of their rights, and they don't want this situation anymore."

People in Iran are planning to gather in the streets on Saturday to mark the one-year anniversary, she said.A demonstration is also plannedoutside theCMHR.

"We'll see what's going to happen tomorrow," Moradi said.

Woman, Life, Freedomis on display inthe CMHR's community corridor on the main level. It canbe viewed free of charge during the museum's regular hours of operation.

Banner honouring Mahsa Amini on display at CMHR

1 year ago
Duration 2:51
Iranian-Canadian artist Hajar Moradi talks about Women, Life, Freedom, a banner she created to highlight the plight of Iranian, Kurdish and Afghan women, on the anniversary of the death of Mahsa Amini. It will be on display at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights until March.