Today’s globally aware digital generation is used to
constant requests to sign online petitions on various issues of international
concern. Sceptics aren’t sure
how much good those few mouse clicks do – do those signing even know exactly
what they’re signing for? Would other types of action, like demonstrations, be
more effective in raising awareness for a particular cause? We’re all guilty of
skipping the small print and preferring the comfort of our own laptops now and
again.
Also in openDemocracy on the One Million Signatures campaign:
Roja Bandari, NWI Blog (May-June 2007)
Elahe Amani, “A rare
victory for women’s rights in Iran” (28 March 2008)
But the One Million Signature Campaign is a far cry from these
online drives for mouse clicks. It does not have the usual time limit, but the
signatures it seeks are very specific: Iran’s women and men. This petition is
not for Westerners but for those directly affected by the discriminatory family
laws it works to change. And there is no running total on the website of the
amount of signatures collected. Given the difficulty in collecting some written
petitions, the
organisers felt it would be unrepresentative to reveal the running total
after one year.
And as the campaign approaches its second birthday on 27
August, the total is still unknown, but their work goes on. There is plenty of
it. Whether a woman signs the petition or not, she is given
information about the implications of Iranian family law on her individual
situation. To date, over 1000 campaigners have been trained in educating others
and collecting their signatures. And all this is not without risk. Activist
after campaigner has been arrested or imprisoned for his or her part in the
fight against laws
which reduce women’s rights to divorce, limit freedom of expression, reduce restrictions on polygamy and
divorce for men, give automatic custody to a father after divorce and even
demand taxes on dowries, the one safety net for women considering divorce. And
yes, you read that correctly – his or
her part. Men
who sympathise with and work for this cause are also being imprisoned; no
one is safe.
But the campaigners are not giving up. Their website is
blocked by authorities; they start another. Peaceful protests are broken up
using violence and arrests; they organise another two years later. These women
and men are truly an inspiration. They continue to work in the face of
adversity, overcoming threats and challenges and persisting in their original
aim to reach a million signatures and adding new aims along the way. And we in
the West cannot email our MP, we cannot sort this one out with a few mouse
clicks. We can only watch in awe and voice our solidarity with these brave
people who will not let legislation violate their human rights. Happy birthday,
One Million, and here’s to plenty more years of courage, education and
progress.