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By those who took part, political refugees and exiles, a poignant account of resistance in Iran and its bloody repression, from the 2009 protests to the "Women, Life, Freedom" movement.

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00:18and we get frequent breaks, so...
00:24Are you going to give me a shot?
00:26No.
00:27He will give me a shot.
00:54My dear...
00:57Can you tell me what you see in this song?
01:01My daughter, who is in the end of the day,
01:07is not the same way.
01:10My daughter is not the same way.
01:12She is afraid of Islam.
01:18Can you tell me what you see in this song?
01:26No, I don't know.
01:32What time did you tell me?
01:34How many weeks ago?
01:38She had to go in and lay down
01:43and just wait for this guy to come and, like, beat her.
01:49Literally.
01:51That's how barbaric the punishments are.
01:59It's just fucked up.
02:07I think for a British person to understand
02:10what are the rules in Iran for women.
02:14I think it helps to imagine
02:16the English society in the Victorian era.
02:20You have to change your behaviour in public.
02:23You have, you know, people shouldn't talk about you.
02:25People shouldn't notice you.
02:27And the best girl is quiet.
02:31She's meek.
02:32She doesn't laugh out loud.
02:34And always obey the patriarchal system.
02:39As soon as you're in the spotlight,
02:42you're standing out and confronting them,
02:44you're a big problem.
02:47How is it to live in a cage?
02:50But the cage is not real.
02:53Outside this bubble,
02:55people are just living their life
02:57and, like, following what they want
02:59and, like, they're just being themselves.
03:01So, when you get this idea,
03:05when you understand this idea,
03:07you can just never go back
03:11to being the good girl, you know?
03:16So,
03:26let's go.
03:43I've seen so many people where you're in it
03:50he could say,
03:52she's just a name.
03:53And my wife and her friends
04:00Why don't you bring your mother in front of me?
04:07It's not that God will bring you to heaven.
04:12It's not that you will bring me to her.
04:24I will try to help the ball.
04:32I will try to put it in my room.
04:35I can't hold it in my way.
04:38I can't hold it in my way.
04:39I can't hold it in my way.
04:42but, the football was the only one.
04:52The only one who can be in the stadium, I would have to be the same as them.
04:59.
05:29and he saw one thing like this
05:31and started to come back and talk
05:36and he said,
05:39he said,
05:39he said,
05:40he said,
05:40he said,
05:42I said,
05:43I'll be doing it for a few seconds
05:46and he said,
05:46why did he say he said he said he's a daughter?
05:51He said,
05:53he said,
05:54he said,
05:54he said,
05:55he said,
06:00A
06:00A
06:00A
06:00A
06:00A
06:01A
06:02A
06:05A
06:12The murder of the police
06:14After the death of the police
06:14The police is here
06:17I found the whole thing
06:22I thought that was a creole
06:23But the police were gone
06:24I saw that
06:26And it was that time
06:30When it was a war
06:41The police said that you are a daughter.
06:46He took my hand and said that we are going.
06:50He said that you don't have to come.
06:57I'm going to cut it and it's gone.
07:00I'm going to get my energy.
07:07It's a really funny situation.
07:09I didn't understand what goes in their mind to think that watching a football for a woman is a scene.
07:16Like, what happens?
07:18Do I get super excited sexually when I see a man running in a short, sweating?
07:24I don't understand. I don't understand their mindset.
07:28But the government or the hardliners have been resisting it for years.
07:35It was an excuse to just oppress women and limit women's presence in the public spaces more and more.
07:45The police said that you are going to go.
07:48You are going to see the land and the stadium.
07:52You are going to keep your mind.
07:56You are going to keep your mind.
08:02You are going to keep your mind.
08:20You are going to keep your mind.
08:28I was probably 13 or 15 times.
08:33I was able to get a video from my own.
08:38I was able to get a video from my own and show me.
08:45We are going to get out of the way we are going to the stadium.
08:50We are going to get out of the way we are going to the stadium.
08:56I had a lot of experience and I wanted all of them to my daughter.
09:02I had a lot of films that I left. They did a lot of stuff.
09:10But it's time when I say, why are you doing this?
09:15When I say, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.
09:19What do you say?
09:27I got a lot of friends. I gave a lot of friends.
09:32I gave a lot of friends and I gave them to me.
09:36I left my house and I had a lot of stress.
09:41I gave a lot of passport and had a few books.
09:47I gave a lot of letters and I gave a lot of money.
09:51I went to Teheran and I gave a lot of money.
10:08A female football fan set herself on fire and subsequently died, having been refused entry
10:15to a match earlier this year.
10:20Saha Kodayari set herself alight at her trial after hearing she could face six months in
10:25prison if convicted.
10:30We were three girls in one car driving around the city when I was reading out loud about
10:36the news.
10:38And actually I understand her really well because...
10:54The amount of pressure that you can be under when you're caught by the police or in general
11:05when you're leaving in Iran is too much.
11:11Just setting yourself on fire is actually easier than living in Iran as a woman.
11:20She became known as the blue girl because the color of this team was blue.
11:28Everyone suddenly knew the whole thing.
11:30Everyone knew the story.
11:31People were talking about the blue girl and it made everyone pay attention to it basically.
11:39That was great.
11:40After your head, the music happened.
11:41What was it?
11:44Perhaps this is a battle between the phantom and Islamic feudal leaders.
11:48This is a battle between the men and the one that had a struggle.
11:50What can I do with this?
12:17When I first fell in love,
12:19it's just my first experience.
12:24He was not a perfect person,
12:27but I feel I love him.
12:30He's the best man in the world, you know,
12:33because I was really young.
12:36I went to university to study computer.
12:41I was playing tennis.
12:43I was happy.
12:45But my mother was really traditional and religious,
12:52and she wanted to choose my husband.
12:57I fight a lot.
13:00I did everything that I could,
13:03but my mother forced me to marry with a guy
13:10that I didn't like him.
13:15After I married,
13:18I understand I don't have any freedom.
13:22The rule of the Islamic Republic of Iran
13:25allowed men to decide for women.
13:29My husband made all the decisions for me.
13:35He didn't allow me to go to university.
13:40He didn't allow me to play tennis.
13:43And I always be silent because
13:46when I started to say something,
13:50he beat me.
13:51He broke my nose and my head.
13:55And after that, I was scared a lot.
13:59I just was 22 years old.
14:03I have a lot of passion for my studies.
14:07I always want to be a strong woman.
14:12I have some value for society.
14:19I found out I was pregnant.
14:22I said to my husband,
14:25you shouldn't behave like this with me.
14:32And he hit me on my...
14:38On your belly.
14:39My belly, yeah.
14:41And I realized I have some blood on my pants.
14:52For almost four or five days,
14:55I was in the hospital alone.
15:00But I could keep the baby.
15:04And for protein from that day,
15:07I decided to divorce from my husband.
15:13The lawyer said,
15:15do you have any witness when he beaten you?
15:20I didn't have any proof.
15:23And I noticed that I don't have any rights in Iran.
15:31Women in Iran like property of men.
15:35We have no voice.
15:38The judicial system couldn't do anything,
15:43you know, because of the rules.
15:46And because of the rules,
15:48I couldn't change anything.
16:05For me, the story started Ace of March, 1979,
16:10when women take to their streets
16:12because the Islamic Republic wants to control their body.
16:18In 1979, when the revolution happened,
16:21like, a few days later,
16:22there was big protest of women
16:24that they were fighting with hijab
16:26and these religious rules.
16:28At that time,
16:29Islamic Republic said,
16:31okay, we don't do anything.
16:32But they did it gradually.
16:35I mean, the next summer, something,
16:38and then summer after that,
16:39and finally you notice that the whole community has changed.
16:42Now everybody has to wear a scarf,
16:45and even more than that,
16:47chadors and things like that.
17:11Controlling what you wear is the most closest thing
17:16that you can control everything in.
17:18in one person.
17:20Control over women meant
17:22they can control this half of the society
17:25and at the same time get the other half,
17:28men either controlling their women,
17:31or if they're not,
17:32they're going to face the consequences of that.
17:35So they managed to control everyone
17:37by controlling women.
17:40For six years,
17:42I fight for my divorce
17:44and for the custody of my child.
17:47I was really lucky.
17:50I could get a divorce.
17:53But that opened my eyes
17:57for women's issue in Iran.
18:00I wanted to help the other women
18:02and I wanted to change the rules.
18:07That days we have some strikes in the streets.
18:11A woman went to the utility box
18:16and protested against mandatory job.
18:20Her name is Vida Mawahe.
18:23It was really incredible.
18:26And after that,
18:28I always said,
18:30I have to do something.
18:34I decided to write something
18:37and post on my Instagram,
18:41I am tired.
18:43It is time to act.
18:47I put this scarf on my back.
18:53I walk around the utility box
18:57and I was scared.
19:00Honestly, I was scared.
19:02And I thought about Viana,
19:06my daughter.
19:08I knew I will be arrested
19:11and they could destroy my life.
19:15But I didn't want my daughter
19:18to grow up like my situation,
19:22abused by her husband.
19:25And because of this,
19:27I decided to go off.
19:35I don't have any voice.
19:38I don't have any voice.
19:38And I just held this scarf on my hand.
19:41But on my mind, I yelled.
19:47It was about our hijab.
19:51It was about custody of our own children.
19:53It was about rules of our divorce.
19:56It was about everything.
19:58That they want to control us.
20:02I am strong.
20:04I am not scared from your government.
20:08I want to have my rights.
20:13As a woman in Iran,
20:15you have to obey this mandatory hijab law.
20:17It was like having this feeling of injustice
20:21all the time with you
20:22and trying to fight it back.
20:24But you would feel like no one else cares about it.
20:28It's only my problem.
20:30So imagine someone is standing for your rights
20:34after four decades of this oppressive law
20:37that is enforced on every aspect of your life
20:40and changing everything.
20:41And someone is standing there for you.
20:43Someone like you.
20:45Putting everything they have in danger after this.
20:49They know they're going to be in prison.
20:51But they're still doing it.
20:54The first time we saw this act,
20:56it took us some time to understand
20:58how important it is for women's rights.
21:03But when it happened again,
21:05we all had the chills.
21:06We were like,
21:07OK, this is going to change into something
21:09that's a regular thing.
21:10We can do the same, maybe.
21:13What these women did was very clever
21:15because the headscarf was white.
21:17And a white scarf is a sign of peace.
21:21And secondly, they did it
21:23on the infamous Revolution Street.
21:25It was targeting every aspect of Islamic Republic.
21:30I'm going to look into your eyes,
21:32pay the price and say,
21:35I don't want your mandatory hijab law.
21:39This was a movement.
21:41The girls of revolution street movement.
21:47I was one of them.
21:50After, I think, 20 minutes,
21:53one of the security forces put me down.
22:01They arrested me and beaten me.
22:06And the investigator said,
22:08you never work again.
22:10You will never study.
22:13You will never have your custody
22:16of your own daughter.
22:19And everything that he said,
22:23he did.
22:27I was sentenced for three years.
22:30I have to take my daughter to my ex-husband.
22:41I decided to flee.
22:46I forced to leave my country with my daughter.
22:50It was really dangerous.
22:53Crossing the border is really dangerous.
22:55We have a lot of trauma from the border.
22:59It has a lot of cost.
23:02But many people ask me,
23:05if you go back,
23:08do you want to do these things again?
23:11And I say, yes.
23:39And I say, yes.
23:57Iran is an old country, you know,
23:59one of the old civilizations.
24:01We're rich in history.
24:04Unfortunately for the last 45 years,
24:07what we have seen has been a tyranny.
24:12If you ask any Iranian family,
24:15if they have lost anybody in the last 45 years,
24:19the answer, unfortunately, would be yes.
24:29Even if you leave the country,
24:31then your country comes in your heart.
24:33You can't forget the place that you fell in love
24:37or had your child.
24:40I mean, this is important.
24:51The decision was to come to Canada.
24:57I remember I said to my wife, Parisa,
24:59that, okay, for these dentistry exams,
25:02I will try once.
25:04And I hope it works.
25:06So for the first year,
25:08we didn't go to any party.
25:10We didn't go to shopping.
25:11We didn't have any fun, honestly.
25:14You know, the only fun that we had
25:15was spending time with our daughter, Rira.
25:28We passed the exams,
25:30and the first job that we had,
25:31me and Parisa,
25:32we were the only dentists in town.
25:34You know, we did everything together,
25:36and that became like a habit for us.
25:41It was September 2019
25:43that we heard my sister-in-law is getting married.
25:47And Persian weddings are big things for us.
25:51You know, I mean,
25:52we have usually very big weddings.
25:54It was not something that Rira would experience
25:57in her whole life,
25:58so she has to be there.
26:00On 25th of December,
26:02they left to go to Iraq.
26:07On 3rd of January,
26:09it was the wedding.
26:10So I was here in Canada,
26:12and I was kind of participating
26:14in the wedding on the phone.
26:18You know, all of them were dancing,
26:20and they had a good time.
26:23Five hours later,
26:25when they were asleep in Iran,
26:28we heard about Asim Soleimani.
26:30One of the most powerful men in the Middle East,
26:33Iran's military commander,
26:34General Qasem Soleimani,
26:36has been killed by a US airstrike in Iraq.
26:40This was the moment that the US assassinated Qasem Soleimani
26:44and pushed the Middle East into a new decade
26:46of uncertainty and more danger.
26:51Qasem Soleimani was very powerful in that mafia
26:54that is controlling my country.
26:56I mean, if Ali Khamenei is number one,
26:59Asim Soleimani was number two.
27:04I called Parisa,
27:06and I said,
27:07Parisa, come back.
27:09She said,
27:10what about?
27:11About this guy that got killed?
27:13And I said,
27:13this guy is important, Parisa.
27:15The war between Islamic Republic
27:18and United States could be imminent.
27:23Parisa's reaction was,
27:24everything is fine in Iran.
27:26Nobody feels that there's a war going on.
27:30Finally, I calmed down,
27:32and I said,
27:32okay, you're coming back in four days,
27:35and that's fine.
27:40So I was at work.
27:43I was supposed to see my last two patients.
27:46I went, checked my cell phone,
27:50and one of my friends on Facebook has written,
27:53and the war started.
27:59On and on they came,
28:01one missile after another,
28:02soaring high into the Iranian night sky.
28:05More than 20 in all.
28:07Their destination,
28:09two American military bases in Iraq.
28:11Direct retaliation, the Iranians say,
28:14for the U.S. assassination of their general Qasem Soleimani.
28:18Everybody was talking about the Third World War
28:22between Iran and the United States.
28:25The first thing that came to my mind
28:27that they could cancel all the commercial flights.
28:32Unfortunately, Parisa's phone had no roaming.
28:34They were supposed to fly at 5.15,
28:37so I went to radar.
28:43On the map, I could see they departed.
28:49And at the time that I was at the border,
28:51I texted my friends,
28:52when this woman is back,
28:54I'm gonna lock her in.
28:58And my daughter,
28:59I was like,
29:00never again.
29:01It's not gonna happen again.
29:03We don't get separated again.
29:05So, uh,
29:06I started to clean the house.
29:09I had prepared Parisa's car,
29:12you know,
29:12filled the tank,
29:13and, like,
29:15changed the oil,
29:16and even changed the tires.
29:17And, you know,
29:18the last thing I had to do
29:20was to buy flowers
29:21and go to the airport.
29:23One hour later,
29:25I came to check again,
29:27and I found
29:28eight missed calls from Iran.
29:31I didn't call them right away.
29:33I went to check BBC News.
29:40This is the final resting point
29:42of Ukrainian International Airlines
29:44flight PS 752.
29:48It came down in flames
29:49just a few minutes
29:50after an early morning takeoff.
29:54Charred parts of the plane,
29:56luggage,
29:56and other personal belongings
29:58litter the field.
30:00On board,
30:01176 passengers and crew.
30:07Bodies were taken away.
30:10There were no survivors.
30:16Oh.
30:27All of a sudden,
30:28everything is gone.
30:31Your life is gone.
30:37At the same time that I had to go to the airport
30:40to pick them up,
30:42I was at the airport to go and bury them.
30:47The timing of this crash is certainly extraordinary.
30:51Last night,
30:51Iran fired ballistic missiles
30:53at military bases inside Iraq.
30:56Iranian officials immediately blamed
30:58mechanical problems.
31:00All eyes are now on the Iranian authorities
31:03to see how transparently they cooperate.
31:07What was the official word at that point?
31:09At that point,
31:10they were talking about technical failure
31:12and they kept saying this lie for three days.
31:16The IRGC officers at the crash site
31:20bulldozing the crash site.
31:21And this is the classic way to cover up a crime.
31:26And three days later,
31:28only by international pressure,
31:29the IRGC said,
31:32yes,
31:33we shot the plane down.
31:35What did they say had happened?
31:37They said that it was a human error.
31:41They said that the downing of a commercial flight
31:44was a human error.
31:47We think that it was intentional.
31:51Hang on.
31:52You think that the Islamic Republic
31:56purposely blew up their own domestic plane
31:58with innocent civilians on it?
32:01Yes, absolutely.
32:04They wanted to take revenge
32:06of killing Qasem Soleimani
32:08at the same time that they didn't want
32:10to see any retaliation from the United States.
32:13So they shot down the plane
32:15as a distraction to stop America from attack?
32:18This is what I believe.
32:21The idea of the government
32:24bringing down their own passenger airplane
32:26on purpose might seem upset.
32:29And it is upset.
32:31But unfortunately for Iranians,
32:34knowing their pattern of Islamic Republic,
32:37this government's only goal is to stay in power.
32:41And nothing else matters.
32:43So it wasn't that difficult to understand
32:47why they would do that.
32:48and so on the other side of the island
33:02and so on the island
33:11was an environmentalist.
33:12And the island of my country
33:14was largely the death.
33:14And the island of my country
33:14was a greatyanar-looking country.
33:16And the island of my country
33:18was an bastionist.
33:18And the island of my country
33:18People were so angry, then suddenly they realized this regime would do anything, anything to us.
33:27We have no value whatsoever.
33:32It made people rethink everything, because they realized no one is safe.
33:41Our loved ones, they're not with us anymore. This is unforgivable crime.
33:51The majority of us, the families, we were fighters.
33:55We are fighting for justice.
33:58Only in an international impartial court we will find out about the real reasons about the downing of Flight PS75.
34:08The time of the pandemic was a lot.
34:23After the pandemic, the pandemic became a problem.
34:29In the pandemic, the pandemic has become a problem.
34:34The pandemic was a problem.
34:36The pandemic was a problem with the pandemic.
34:38It was a very calm and calm, without a hat.
34:44It was a lot of people who were ashamed of them.
34:52The roads were like a house.
35:00I was in Tondo and I was 18 years old.
35:08When I was a kid, I played a lot of my kids.
35:14I was a very good kid. I was a very good kid.
35:24I was a very good kid.
35:28I was a very good kid.
35:31I was a 4-year-old daughter.
35:33And I was a pretty good kid.
35:41I was just a kid.
35:45And I was a kid with my dad.
35:48I was a kid with my dad.
35:49I was a kid with my dad.
35:55I was a kid with my dad.
35:57And I learned that he's a kid.
36:00The year janaataha has been.
36:08In the middle of summer it can go up to 40 degrees or something.
36:13It was a really hot summer and you're just trying to survive this weather
36:18and you have to wear a hijab on top of this
36:21and there is this police that's telling you that you have to have it
36:25and if you don't have it they're going to just take you, arrest you and put you away.
36:34Women were clashing with Morality Police officers.
36:37They had been dragged on the streets.
36:40They had been pushed into the vans that belonged to the Morality Police.
36:47So there's a sense that pressure was increasing.
36:51And then we hear that a young woman had gone into a coma
36:56whilst she was in the custody of the Morality Police.
37:00We all were just like, how? Why?
37:04You know, you're there to just guide them to heaven and shit.
37:09Why would you want to be that brutal?
37:13I was at the entrance of the hospital.
37:16At first there was just like maybe two or three of us,
37:19but then people started to come more and more.
37:22People were getting angry and talking on social media.
37:25They were just sharing ideas of like what the fuck happened.
37:28We should fight back and stuff.
37:29And in the middle of my thought process,
37:32we had this news that like she's dead now.
37:37It was the first time that a woman had been killed
37:39because of her headscarf.
37:42I phoned the editor and I said,
37:44we need to update the piece because this woman has passed away.
37:49Then I went for a walk and I cried because I knew it was important.
38:04Her name is Mahsa Amini and she was just 22.
38:09She was arrested by the Morality Police in Tehran.
38:12They said she wasn't wearing the mandatory hijab or headscarf properly.
38:18This is happening after the story of the blue girl,
38:22the story of Vidam of Ahed, you know, the girls of Revolution Street
38:26and the downing of the plane.
38:29So the society is bubbling up with all of this anger and frustration
38:34towards the Islamic Republic.
38:36And people are fed up with that.
38:37They just want to stop it.
38:48Police officers started to come like fucking ants.
38:53They're keeping her family away.
38:56They're keeping the journalists away.
38:58They're not putting out any videos.
39:00They're not saying anything.
39:02And then they started to cover up.
39:04You know, they say she has had heart problems since childhood
39:07or she has had surgeries or, you know, she just fainted.
39:12The security forces have released this heavily edited CCTV footage
39:17of Mahsa in detention.
39:22They say she died of a heart condition,
39:24but eyewitnesses say she was beaten up in the police van.
39:29They were trying to blame the victim and say that, look,
39:33she did something wrong.
39:36They said, oh, she did something wrong.
39:39They thought, oh, she did something wrong.
39:39In this case, I thought, oh, she did something wrong.
39:40When I saw the people on the streets,
39:42I thought it was a healthy movement.
39:44It was 24 hours, it was a complete operation.
39:46But anyway, it didn't have any kind of thing.
39:49It was a very different experience.
39:53I saw the people on Instagram.
40:00The people who saw the population of the valley
40:03and the people from the country
40:28It was on the first day of the process that we started to burn the scarves.
40:33We just put them in fire and let them burn and watch these things get burned and we were dancing
40:39around this.
40:41I was like, okay, something big is happening.
40:45A cycle of daily protests started. Women removing their hair scarves.
40:51And then when women started, then men followed.
40:55This is the first time that every layer of the society is involved.
41:00Not only in Taiwan, the whole country comes together as a whole.
41:05And I think that's what makes it fundamentally different from any other thing that happened in the country in the
41:12last four decades.
41:14Day 40 of Mansa Amini's death, estimates say 10,000 people marched to the cemetery where she was buried.
41:21And the footage, which then became the first page of many major newspapers, you could see that a woman was
41:28standing on top of a car and you could see a sea of cars on the highway.
41:33As journalists, you're not allowed to show your emotions. You're not allowed to show that you're on either sides of
41:39the story.
41:40And that was tough. That was tough.
41:43Six weeks on and many Iranian women are already living a different life.
41:47They refuse to wear the headscarf when they go out in public.
41:50It was just so shocking and so big and so historic.
41:56People were talking about overthrowing the regime.
42:00It was possible.
42:02We were actually, like, feeling it inside.
42:05We're stepping up against the Hindiava dosis.
42:09Sorry I can't do it, but they refuse to
42:13a attention to everything else and there are�s that.
42:13But, I said, we were getting the reins in for a secondーユ闘,
42:20what was that, what we were making for is that,
42:34you can't say anywhere from our other people
42:35I know that sometimes the sheriff can kill them.
42:43From 1 km away, I could smell the pepper spray in the air.
42:48The number of police would increase.
42:52They're getting more violent.
42:54One time, I was hiding inside the frame of this door,
43:00and one of these policemen he literally took his gun up and literally pointed at
43:06this lady and look she was an old lady and then hit and the tear gas I saw I
43:13saw it tear gas came and look it hit her head literally in the middle and look
43:18she started bleeding and she was an old lady look she could have died in that
43:22moment we see the spread of the protest but at the same time we see the
43:27oppression is growing as well more people are arrested and they start shooting
43:34people with shotguns people start dying there was a protest in Kermanshah the
43:44city that I live we saw lots of guards they had weapons they had shotguns I
43:53didn't have enough courage to join them some of the roads they were blocked and
44:01I had to go other directions to get to my house when I got home I found my father
44:09alone he said that your mom's not home she went to the protest mom believed in
44:18freedom believed in justice she had empathy with Masa's mom because she had
44:27daughters recalled all the relatives all the friends but nobody had no clue where
44:34she was
45:05They found her in Talagani Hospital.
45:08There was 167 pellets in her back.
45:13She was already gone due to internal bleeding.
45:17One of the guards that was there, he was laughing at them.
45:24And...
45:27Um, sorry.
45:32The day after my mother has been killed, I've seen the video on Facebook.
45:39She was dying in the street, surrounded by strangers.
45:44I couldn't stop watching it.
45:47I watched it maybe ten times.
45:51She didn't deserve to die like this, in that way, alone.
45:58The regime continued to kill, and with everybody that they killed,
46:01it was like the clock restarted again.
46:04So, there was a cycle of deaths and protests.
46:07Deaths and protests.
46:10I've seen things in this period,
46:13that I can't breathe in my mind.
46:16I'm not afraid to be afraid of it.
46:20There are two sides of the guards,
46:22and fuckin' down in the body,
46:26The time I was digging,
46:27and when you got out of the dead,
46:30you're taking your body and all your wounds.
46:36You're getting there in your heart,
46:36you're going to take my heart over it.
46:45And you just used to get together.
46:47You're staying behind us.
46:49You're going to see these wounds.
46:49You're going to see these wounds.
46:51They're going to see them even if they were not.
46:52You're going to see them.
46:52When I was in the middle of my life, I was in the middle of my life.
46:59I was in the middle of my life.
47:04I saw my head that I was in the middle of my life.
47:15And...
47:21I saw a man in the back of my head.
47:27I saw a man in the back of my head.
47:36They were always in the place of the autobuses,
47:39because they didn't have the power of the autobuses.
47:43They said that I was an autobuses.
47:47When I went to Iska, we were in the back of my head.
47:50We saw 10 cars in the back of my head.
47:56It was only a black car.
48:02We started to go to the back of my head.
48:08I saw something in the back of my head.
48:12I saw something in my head.
48:16I saw something in the back of my head.
48:22I saw something in the back of my head.
48:34I saw something in my head.
48:35I saw something in my head.
48:37I felt a lot of warm warmth.
48:40I didn't have my head or anything.
48:44I didn't have tears during my head.
48:47I was my head even.
48:50I was a head-shared.
48:52I was a head-shared.
48:53I was a head-shared.
48:55I was a head-shared.
48:57I was a head-shared.
49:04I used to put a lot of things on my side.
49:06When I was at the bottom, I had to put a lot of things on my side.
49:10For example, I was in my side with my head.
49:14The first piece of the wall was to go to the temple.
49:20Then I had to look at the back of my side, I had to put a lot of pieces on
49:24my side.
49:26Can I tell you again?
49:27No, I don't like it.
49:32You don't have to worry about it.
49:36I'm sorry because I'm in my house.
49:43I have a feeling that I can talk to you about it.
50:21There was a slogan.
50:22There was a slogan while the protests were going on that was made specifically for the people who had lost
50:30their voice.
50:33We have this Persian myth about this guy who had snakes on his shoulders.
50:40And the snakes would eat grains of young and smart people.
50:47So we were referring to the supreme leader as this person.
50:53Maybe he loved to eat the rice and maybe that's how he's getting the satisfaction that he needs.
51:01It took a few days for us to hear that people were blinded.
51:05I think the regime were shocked by the scale of the protests.
51:10That it was almost impossible to contain all of them.
51:14The regime has been really strategic, shooting directly in people's eyes or critical places, making sure that there is a
51:21long-lasting effect in their lives.
51:36The regime has been a long-lasting effect in Iran.
51:52The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
51:56The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
52:06The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
52:17The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
52:29The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
52:34The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
52:37The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
53:13The regime has been a long-lasting effect.
53:15Okay
53:46No, I can't.
53:48No, I can't.
54:15I would like to even rest.
54:16I cannot, I cannot.
54:21I can't escape this.
54:28I can't do anything.
54:34My house just broken my heart.
54:41I had just gone.
54:42I'm going to go to Islam, I'm going to go to Islam, I'm going to go to Islam, I'm going
54:48to go to Islam.
54:55Iran, my beautiful homeland, with deep wounds.
55:01Beautiful mountains, beautiful rivers, beautiful environment.
55:07With beautiful people, but deep and historic wounds.
55:13This is how I remember my homeland, Iran.
55:20Not wearing a hijab now in Iran is, you can see, these girls, the new generation,
55:28they're just so brave that they don't give a fuck about anything,
55:32and they're just there to live their own lives.
55:35As simple as it is, it can have really bad consequences still.
55:39Look, we have Roya Ejmaty, the girl who was whipped.
55:42People are still getting fucked.
55:45But, I mean, we paid so much for this, and of course we're going to keep it that way.
55:55I think 2022 was successful in terms of changing the values of part of the Iranian society.
56:04But in terms of the future, I think that people will go back.
56:08It's like a wave.
56:09Every time the wave comes, it comes bigger.
56:11We had 2017, 2019, 2022.
56:16Every time it came, it came bigger with more force.
56:19And I believe it will come again.
56:22Do I think that it will have enough power to topple a regime?
56:25It's a million dollar question.
56:27But one element that will be important is the day that the Supreme Leader will die.
56:32And that will be at some point in the near future, because he's already in his eighties.
56:36And that could potentially be a game changer.
56:42I personally feel like this is the beginning of an end.
56:47And I wanted to stay on the top of people's minds.
56:55As you know, their whole team still isn't what they were doing.
56:59They are even a big part of a regime than the Muslims have ever seen.
57:10Because they have a problem for their lives.
57:12They aren't trying to look at themselves even more than the Jews.
57:13putting it on their escalation.
57:16I have seen some of these movements,
57:19The peace about them, is that it is not part of the regime that's associated with the Muslims.
57:21The ihan possible regime that they have had sustained war,
57:21And even the peace of the regime is part of these.
57:24What do you want to see?
57:26Yes.
57:29Because of the dictatorship, it's a dream.
57:55It's a dream.
57:56It's a dream.
58:15It's a dream.
58:16It's a dream.
58:20It's a dream.
58:22It's a dream.
58:23It's a dream.
58:24It's a dream.
58:25It's a dream.
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