Their last day

A poignant memory:

https://twitter.com/borzou/status/843403846818979842

 

Comments

5 responses to “Their last day”

  1. iknklast Avatar

    Most of those girls would be about my age. The Iran situation is one of my most powerful college memories. It makes me sad to think how I could walk around so free on my college campus, doing and thinking and saying what I pleased, while so many girls (young women) my age were being forced back into medieval times.

  2. Emily Vicendese Avatar
    Emily Vicendese

    I guess Iranian Islamists can now smugly congratulate themselves on being on the right side of history. Both god AND history on their side!

  3. Ben Avatar

    But the day after that photo was taken, all those women were finally able to empower and express themselves by wearing the hijab.

  4. Rrr Avatar

    THAT place was packed!

    Did that help much?

  5. John Avatar

    In the 70s Iran’s Marxists/socialists allied themselves with the Mullahs/Islamists in an effort to overthrow the U.S.-backed Shah, their common enemy.

    It worked, but within two years the Islamists had either murdered or forced into exile all of the Marxists.

    Common enemies don’t necessarily make for a common cause.

    Only the appearance of a common cause.

    Iran’s Mullahs understood that.

    Iran’s Marxists didn’t.