Join feminist actions across the globe, September 15 & 16.2023
Now on the eve of the anniversary of the murder of Jina, which is but the continuation of femicide politics and systematic misogyny of the
Now on the eve of the anniversary of the murder of Jina, which is but the continuation of femicide politics and systematic misogyny of the
We invite you to join us in echoing the voices of independent political and feminist activists who have based their resistance on the collective and grassroots unity of feminists inside and outside of Iran rather than the top-down coalition of individuals.
On November 25th, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women we come together in the streets with all other freedom fighters to be a united voice of resistance to all forms of gender-based violence and all forms of oppression. Our solidarity will bring “No one is free until we are all free” into reality.
Hundreds of feminist activists and researchers from different parts of the world participated in this conference. On the right side of the main hall of the conference hung a large picture of Jina Amini, and on the other side, a picture of Nagihan Akarsel, a Kurdish feminist who was murdered in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq.
Jina’s name became a sign, a sign to outcry: “Woman, Life, Freedom”. Jina’s body is a living wound of entangled discriminations, a wound on my body, on ours. An open wound on the body of the street.
Now on the eve of the anniversary of the murder of Jina, which is but the continuation of femicide politics and systematic misogyny of the
We invite you to join us in echoing the voices of independent political and feminist activists who have based their resistance on the collective and grassroots unity of feminists inside and outside of Iran rather than the top-down coalition of individuals.
On November 25th, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women we come together in the streets with all other freedom fighters to be a united voice of resistance to all forms of gender-based violence and all forms of oppression. Our solidarity will bring “No one is free until we are all free” into reality.
Hundreds of feminist activists and researchers from different parts of the world participated in this conference. On the right side of the main hall of the conference hung a large picture of Jina Amini, and on the other side, a picture of Nagihan Akarsel, a Kurdish feminist who was murdered in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq.
Jina’s name became a sign, a sign to outcry: “Woman, Life, Freedom”. Jina’s body is a living wound of entangled discriminations, a wound on my body, on ours. An open wound on the body of the street.