Jamileh Alam-ul-Huda: Iranian women did not fight for their rights because they have them.

Jamileh Alam-ul-Huda stated in an interview: Iranian women did not fight for their rights because they have them.
Jamaliah Alam-ul-Hada, the wife of Ebrahim Raisi, told Tom O'Connor, deputy editor of National Security and Foreign Policy for the American magazine Newsweek, in an interview: "Western-style feminism is inappropriate for the Islamic Republic of Iran. Men in Iran prefer not to ask their wives to work or bring money home. Women are seen as people who share love with men as mothers, wives, or daughters. You may find it very exciting and interesting that women in Iran have not fought for their rights because they have their rights, and this is because men protect their dignity in society."
He also ridiculed the efforts of the United States and other powerful countries to prove their values to Iran by saying, "Iranian women have the rights they need," adding, "The values that women in the country deserve have actually become laws and regulations in terms of moral aspects. We can share these laws and regulations that are dedicated to protecting women in society with you so that you can share them with the rest of the world and see how we deal with those issues."
She also pointed out that Westerners do not know much about Iran, saying: "The feminist movement in other parts of the world has not found its way to Iran, and this is primarily due to the tendency towards violence, in contrast to which women in Iran prefer peace rather than being exposed to violence through a feminist approach. This is the striking difference between these two elements. I must admit that Westerners do not know much about Iran, and this is the reason for the existing misunderstanding. They have not addressed the vast depth of the relationship between women and people, which is why they view women from a Western perspective."
"Not all people follow the standards of society, but what the West wants to say about women in Iran is a very political issue. Most women in the West feel lonely, and the reason for this is that their families and marriages are less supported. Women should be respected a lot because of their very deep feelings, but women in the West have a lot of work to do, they work as much as a man to be able to have a minimum standard of living. This is a significant difference between women in the West and women in Iran."
Jamila Alam-ul-Huda's words regarding women's enjoyment of their rights come at a time when not only have women in every strata of society been under pressure and the regime's laws regarding gender discrimination since the past, but in the past year we have also witnessed them being killed for their freedom of expression and freedom. Women and girls who were raped in detention centers and prisons and committed suicide after being released, or women who were shot in the face and genitals at close range by regime agents in order to take away their so-called beauty. The rights that Ebrahim Raisi's wife spoke about are all the rights that the regime could not tolerate and beat, arrested, raped, and killed them for demanding justice.




