|
by Majid Rafizadeh • August 18,
2018 at 5:00 am
- To people in the
West, it may seem impossible for dancing to become a crime.
But as sharia laws get imposed, before you know it, any
innocent act of "fun" can suddenly become a crime.
- Maedeh Hojabri
posted video clips of herself dancing on Instagram. For this
"crime," the 19-year-old woman was arrested, jailed
without due process and without an opportunity to defend
herself, and publicly shamed with a televised confession of
her "crime."
- Who will the
morality police come for next?
Maedeh
Hojabri, shown in this Instagram video screenshot committing the
"crime" of dancing. For this, she was arrested by the
Iranian police, jailed without due process and publicly shamed.
A Muslim mother in the sharia-ruled country of Iran,
was talking about her 10-year-old daughter: "She asked me,
'Why can't I dance? We dance because we are happy. How can being
happy be wrong? Why is dancing a crime?'" She spoke about the
confusion in her daughter's eyes. "It is a question I don't
know how to answer."
Her daughter's life had changed, she said, when she
heard that a 19-year-old woman named Maedeh Hojabri had become the
target of the Iran's Islamist "morality" police. Her
crime? Posting video clips of herself dancing on popular worldwide
social media sites, like Instagram. The consequences for an act
like that are severe. As has happened to other young women who
posted video clips of themselves dancing, Hojabri was arrested,
jailed without due process and without an opportunity to defend
herself, and publicly shamed with a televised confession of her
"crime."
|
No comments:
Post a Comment