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Iran has largely crushed protests, but a spirit of defiance still burns

As Iran marks the 44th anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution Saturday, hard-line ideologues are gloating that regime enforcers have, once again, bottled up widespread public expressions of discontent. Human rights groups estimate that some 500 people have been killed and 20,000 arrested in a government crackdown on the nationwide protests billed as Iran’s first feminist uprising.

“There is no doubt the protests have fizzled out,” says Yosra, a high school math teacher in Iran’s largely Kurdish northwest, where officials used direct military force to quell dissent. “But does that mean it’s over? Absolutely not.”

Why We Wrote This

In Iran’s Islamic Republic, anti-regime protests have ebbed and flowed. For now, fierce public expressions that harnessed women’s outrage have been brutally suppressed, but the resolve to find a path to change hasn’t.

As the street protests themselves disappear, resistance today, she says, means “keeping awareness among my students … reminding them of their mission to press ahead and never allow this to become a new normal,” to preserve “the bravery within us.”

Romina, who previously detailed her detention and abuse to the Monitor and says she has been the target of intimidation since her release, says she keeps up her criticism of the regime and continues to flaunt hijab rules.

“I know many who have become disappointed after four months and no tangible outcomes,” she says. “But I keep telling them that we have a long way ahead. … It does not happen overnight, does it?”

In her high school classroom in northwest Iran, the math teacher strives to ensure that her female students don’t lose sight of what they achieved taking part in unprecedented anti-regime street protests – even if those protests have now largely been crushed.

“There is no doubt the protests have fizzled out,” says the teacher in the city of Sanandaj, epicenter of the protests in Iran’s largely Kurdish northwest, where officials used direct military force to quell dissent.

“Look around, except for the 40th day [funeral] memorials, few rallies are being held these days,” says the math teacher, who gives the name Yosra. “But does that mean it’s over? Absolutely not.”

Why We Wrote This

In Iran’s Islamic Republic, anti-regime protests have ebbed and flowed. For now, fierce public expressions that harnessed women’s outrage have been brutally suppressed, but the resolve to find a path to change hasn’t.

Back in November, when the protests were raging, Yosra told the Monitor that her students were unfazed by the steady flow of threatening messages from education authorities. Her students, she said then, “are a different species; they won’t accept humiliation.”

Yet as the street protests themselves disappear, resistance today means “keeping awareness among my students, dissecting the regime’s nature, and reminding them of their mission to press ahead and never allow this to become a new normal,” she says.

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