Esha
Momeni, an Iranian-American 28-year old graduate student studying arts and
media at California State University,
Northridge, was arrested
on Wednesday October 15th in Tehran,
Iran. Esha is a
member and volunteer of the One Million Signatures
Campaign
--a
grassroots movement that has emerged inside Iran demanding gender equality. She
had flown out to Iran from Los Angeles in July to
visit family and friends. While there she was also working on a film about the
One Million Signatures Campaign to submit as her final graduating project at
CSUN.
Esha now sits in Iran's
notorious Evin prison after being pulled over by police on the pretext of
having made an illegal turn at an intersection. Authorities subsequently
entered her parents' house and removed items such as books, camera footage, and
computers. The authorities thus far have not mentioned to
her parents or her
lawyer what the charges are, if any.
Members of the Campaign in both Iran and California are working tirelessly to spread the word about Esha's arrest, which comes as a surprise considering the fact that all she was doing was filming campaign members and those interested in gender related issues. It should be stressed that all her activities were in accordance with the laws of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
I am also a member and volunteer in the campaign and would like to write a few words about my friendship and experiences with Esha Momeni. I will not give a melodramatic soliloquy on the matter, nor do I feel the need to interject with a character defence. What is obvious is that as a woman, a friend, a confidante, and a mentor Esha Momeni stood up for me, and all the other women and men in or outside of Iran that have raised their voices for change. But as we gaze from wherever our "outside" may be, Esha is still standing for us, even if it is in the 209th ward of Iran's Evin prison.




















