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This demonstrates how deep the cultural divide really is

loboloco

Well-known member
Iran offers modest new haircut guidelines for men



AP – In this picture released by the semi-official Iranian Mehr News Agency, an official explains about haircuts …





NASSER KARIMI, Associated Press Writer Nasser Karimi, Associated Press Writer – Wed Jul 7, 8:55 am ET
TEHRAN, Iran – An Iranian fashion organization has issued a new list of culturally appropriate haircuts for men, possibly indicating a new crackdown on male attire after years of strict rules for women, Iranian media reported.
Although the Ministry of Culture has yet to officially adopt the styles presented by the Veil and Modesty Festival, the private organization said approval is pending. It would be the first such rules for men's hair styles since 1979 Islamic Revolution.
"We introduced the hairstyles to the Culture Ministry," said Jaleh Khodayar, head of the group, telling Iranian newspapers Tuesday that it had been approved informally and an official statement would soon be made.
Clothing and hair styles have become a highly visible political statement in Iran since the first stirrings of the reform movement in the late 1990s. Many young women have tested authorities by allowing more hair to spill out from under their head scarves and wearing shorter and tighter coverings. Some men, too, push boundaries with earrings and long hair and ponytails.
Even shaving habits can take on broader overtones. Beards or heavy facial stubble - worn by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and other officials - are considered signs of religious piety and loyalty to the ruling clerics. But many men, including opposition activists, adopt a clean-shaven look.
None of the models shown wearing the shorter styles wore religious beards, however, perhaps as a way of appealing to less pious Iranians.
In posters presenting the new hairstyles, models' locks were cut in fashionable short bobs, varying styles for different hair textures from curly to straight.
The featured haircut weren't entirely without a sense of whimsy, including a 50s-style pompadour complete with sideburns for one as well as an almost circa-1990s Hugh Grant floppy mop for another.
The group says the styles will be modified for Iran's provinces based on regional culture and the models will be displayed in barber shops for visibility.
Hard-line groups have repeatedly launched drives to reimpose more conservative codes for women, but often gave only passing attention to men until now.
The new hairstyles are aimed at confronting the "Western cultural invasion," according to Khodayar, by promoting cuts based on the "law and culture" of the Iranian society.
She said female hair styles will be introduced in future and the styles would be featured in foreign exhibitions in hopes of spreading them to other Muslim countries.
Many trendy young Iranian men favor Western hair styles, including pony tails, inspired by Hollywood movie stars.
The introduction of appropriate hairstyles for men is the latest salvo in Iran's annual modesty campaign which peaks every year at summer time and is aimed at combatting any deviation from strict Islamic attire.
Since 1979 revolution that brought Islamists to power in Iran, authorities have regularly detained young people, male and female, for 'lack of virtue' in their clothing, hair styles and makeup.
Laws in place since the revolution require women to cover from head-to-toe in loose-fitting overcoats hiding their shape and cover their head with a scarf.
The rules are enforced by police and paramilitaries, who castigate women for showing too much hair, wearing makeup or figure hugging clothing.
 

mak2

Active member
No, honor killings demonstrate how deep the divide really is. Or the difference in getting stoned here and in Pakistan.
 

mak2

Active member
that is exactly why I think the Moslems will eventually be assimilated into the West. We have more fun.
 

mak2

Active member
Oh no, I was just babbling on. It does demonstrate the amount of control of society.
 

Doc

Bottoms Up
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
Amazing. I suspect treatment like that will nudge the people to revolt.

Question:
Is there any other nation that stipulates what haircuts are allowed to this extent?
 

loboloco

Well-known member
Amazing. I suspect treatment like that will nudge the people to revolt.

Question:
Is there any other nation that stipulates what haircuts are allowed to this extent?
For men, I don't think so. Many Islamic nations have severe dress and style codes for women though.
The thought process that makes this even thinkable is the real problem here.
 

EastTexFrank

Well-known member
GOLD Site Supporter
that is exactly why I think the Moslems will eventually be assimilated into the West. We have more fun.

You're partly right. The rich ones come to the west to party but eventually they have to go home and conform again. There will be no large scale assimilation.
 

loboloco

Well-known member
Another Wildass example:
Definitely keep your panties on over there ladies:


Woman Convicted of Adultery Will Not Be Stoned but May Still Be Put to Death, Iran Says


Published July 08, 2010
| FoxNews.com
ashtiani_640_397x224.jpg

AP/Amnesty International
This undated image made available by Amnesty International in London shows Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a mother of two who is facing stoning to death in Iran on charges of adultery.

An Iranian woman convicted of adultery will not be stoned to death but may still face execution in the Islamic Republic, Iran's embassy in London announced Thursday.
Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, 42, a mother of two, was found guilty of adultery in 2006. She has already spent five years in prison and endured 99 lashes for her illicit relationship with two men, but she still is condemned to be put to death.
On Thursday, Iran's embassy in the U.K. issued a press release saying Ashtiani will not be stoned, but it gave no indication that her life will be spared.
"According to information from the relevant judicial authorities in Iran, she will not be executed by stoning punishment," the embassy said in a statement released Thursday. "It is notable that this kind of punishment has rarely been implemented in Iran and various means and remedies must be probed and exhausted to finally come up with such a punishment....
"It should be added that the stoning punishment has not been cited in the draft Islamic Penal Code being deliberated in the Iranian Parliament."

But Ashtiani's 22-year-old son, Sajad Ghadarzade, remains unconvinced that his mother will be spared from stoning, Mina Ahadi, an unofficial spokeswoman for the family, told Fox News on Thursday.
Until the judge in Tehran who ordered the sentence says Ashtiani won't be stoned, it still could happen, according to Ahadi, who works for the International Committee against Stoning and Execution, based in Germany.
Ghadarzade had petitioned Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and its judiciary chief, Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani, to protest his mother's impending execution.
"I, as an Iranian citizen who has not succeeded in getting an audience with your office, say to you, the head of the judiciary who tells the television networks day in, day out, that justice must prevail and officials guilty of misconduct must be punished, that there is no justice in this country," Ghadarzade wrote to Larijani.
Ghadarzade, who lives in the northern city of Tabriz, wrote that he has traveled at least six times to Tehran to visit the three leaders and has written to them more than a hundred times -- but he has not received a response.
According to a statement released last week by Amnesty International, which tracks death penalty cases worldwide, Ashtiani has retracted a confession she made during interrogation, indicating that the statement was made under duress.
She was convicted by three of five trial judges on the basis of the "knowledge of the judge," a provision in Iranian law that allows judges to rule even in the absence of clear or conclusive evidence. Her death sentence was confirmed by Iran's Supreme Court in May 2007, according to the statement.
Under Iranian law, women convicted of adultery may be buried up to their chests before people throw stones at them until they die. (Men are buried up to their waist prior to stoning.)
At least 139 executions have taken place in Iran this year through Wednesday, said said Ann Harris, a London-based Iran researcher for Amnesty International. She said 10 people -- including three women -- are currently facing execution by stoning.
Iran had faced widespread criticism over the stoning sentence. Among those who issued statements condemning the sentence were the U.S. State Department, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry and European Union foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton.
A spokesman for the State Department said Thursday that the agency has "grave concerns" that Ashtiani's punishment does not fit her crime and cited "significant" human rights concerns.
Kerry, D-Mass., blasted the execution method as "appalling" and "barbaric" and called for the government of Iran to abolish it as a form of capital punishment.
 
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