Masha🤎💕✨
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Masha🤎💕✨
✨I Post Daily, Follow for more Alya Art!💗
Doing some doodles before my friends arrive, creating the ultimate over-the-top performers costume for my old drow bard, Mahsa. I think the star confetti inside the big sleeves would be enchanted with Featherfall so they drift about like a snowglobe.
Dancing in the Sky~ Seems Mahsa is more sure-footed when she's not on the ground, whereas for Riz it's the opposite. This is another one of those Key Scenes that's been in my head for years. Getting the composition to work the way I wanted (and the POSES) was a struggle! I spent weeks researching, referring to other artists' work to get everything "right". Luckily I had already found the landscapes I wanted to reference (or took the photos myself)
I hope ya'll love these pages!
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Read Ahead on | Patreon | Tapas Early Access
i was actually scared to post this, so if you have anything hateful to say, please do not interact with this post. thank you!
let's talk about mahsa amini.
so i'm sure you've all heard the name recently: she's been in the news a lot, because she was an iranian woman who died.
let's ask google how she died, shall we?
hm.
i'm going to have to disagree with you there, state authorities of iran.
mahsa amini was 22 years old. on the 13th of september, she travelled to tehran to visit her family with her brother, kiaresh amini. she was at the entrance of the hiqqani highway when she was arrested.
but why was she arrested? was she speeding on hiqqani highway or something?
oh no, of course not! it was because she was wearing her hijab "inappropriately".
she was told she'd be taken to a detention centre for a "briefing class" and released shortly afterwards, except she never made it. instead she was at kasra hospital - where she died on friday, febuary 16th.
she was in a coma for three days.
in an instagram post which has now been deleted, the hospital admitted she was brain dead on arrival.
"Resuscitation was performed on the patient, the heartbeat returned and the patient was admitted to the intensive care unit," they originally wrote, reports The Guardian. "Unfortunately, after 48 hours on Friday, the patient suffered a cardiac arrest again, due to brain death. Despite the efforts of the medical team, they failed to revive her and the patient died." - Harper's Bazaar
the "guidance patrol" who was supposed to be taking her to a detention centre, beat her.
the iranian police commander, hossein rahimi, claims that amini's death was simply an "unfortunate accident."
here's what amini's dad had to say.
“They said Mahsa had heart disease and epilepsy but as the father who raised her for 22 years, I say loudly that Mahsa did not have any illness. She was in perfect health. The person who hit my daughter should be put on trial in a public court, not a fake trial that results in reprimands and expulsions."
and all of this, such a brutal death covered up with attempted lies because of what?
a hijab.
iran has made the hijab mandatory since 1976.
and clearly, women who don't follow end up like amini.
i am a hijabi teenager, living far, far away of iran, and i think that's disgustingly wrong.
i wear a hijab for my lord. it was my decision.
wearing a hijab is for Allah. it's not for men. it's not for police.
and you, as a man, have no right to tell a woman how to wear her hijab.
you think Allah is pleased with you? for forcing these women to wear hijab? for killing them if you don't?
personally, i highly doubt it.
to any man who has forced a woman to wear a hijab, punishing her for not wearing it correctly, you are disgusting. you terrify me and disgust me and you are the reason people see islam as a terrorist religion.
and to think that in france, women are fighting to wear the hijab.
for god's sake, just let women wear what they want.
please.
A photo of Teheran (Iran) before Khomeini and Kabul (Afghanistan) before the taliban. Where are the headscarves and veils, the nikabs and the burkas?
No offence, but if you are not a hijabi but you still wrap or wear a headscarf for any other reason, whether it be religious, spiritual, sensory, or mental health related -- you need to support the protesters in Iran. Especially if you live in America or another democratic country where you have the choice to wrap or cover part time or full time. You need to support your headcovering kin. They don't have the capacity to share with others what is happening to them due to Internet suppression and media control. But you can be their voices. Don't let your sisters down.
Mahsa Amini
Persian wind was gently chilling the air,that surrounds the so-called Azadi square,though in Iran no one would dare,I started feeling the cold on my hair. The square reminds freedom for all,but for women, apart it falls,we are for their masculine control,apart from their guidance patrol. The police came from both sides either,screening on me for what they bother,showed any signs of respect…
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An interview with Federation of Anarchism Era, an organization with sections in Iran and Afghanistan, discussing the protests that have erup
Black Rose/Rose Negra (BRRN): Is it accurate to call these demonstrations feminist in character?
Federation of Anarchism Era (FAE): Yes, Absolutely. Like all other uprisings, there were developments and movements beneath the surface.
It can be said that the recent crackdown on the Hijab and increased brutality of the morality police started in response to Iranian women’s spontaneous, autonomous, and feminist self-organization. Earlier this year, women in Iran began to black-list and boycott people and businesses, such as cafes, that strictly enforce the Hijab. The movement was decentralized and leaderless, aimed at creating safe spaces for women and members of the LGBTQ community.
That brutal oppression culminated at this moment where women are at the forefront everywhere, burning their scarves and beating down cops without Hijab. The main slogan of the uprising is also “Woman, Life, Freedom,” a slogan from Rojava, a society whose ambitions are based on anarchist, feminist, and secular ideology.