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After protests, brushstrokes of reform in Iran

For anyone wondering what has happened to the mass protests that convulsed Iran last fall, look away from the public square to center stage. The annual arts festival in the southern French city of Avignon opened its venues yesterday to a celebration of what one featured Iranian photographer described as “this beauty, this resilience, this hope” of equality.

That won’t be welcomed by the regime in Tehran, which the United Nations Human Rights Council accused last week of extrajudicial detentions, executions, and greater repression of women and girls in response to the demonstrations. The festival is voicing what the ruling Islamic mullahs have sought to muzzle – a mental liberation from tyranny, rooted in a sense of dignity and spirituality as deeply individual.

“We have to come here and let the Western world know that the people’s uprising is still going on,” Mina Kavani, a playwright and performer who helped organize the festival’s Iranian program, told Le Monde newspaper. “That young people are modern, talented and determined to break the shackles of Islam, dictatorship and censorship.”

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