Farrokhroo Parsa

Farrokhroo Parsa

Parsa in official ministerial regalia
Minister of Education
In office
27 August 1968  2 January 1971
Monarch Mohammad-Reza Shah
Prime Minister Amir Abbas Hoveida
Preceded by Parviz Natel-Khanlari
Succeeded by Manouchehr Ganji
Personal details
Born (1922-03-22)22 March 1922
Qom, Persia
Died 8 May 1980(1980-05-08) (aged 58)
Tehran, Iran
Political party Rastakhiz Party
Spouse(s) Ahmad Shirin Sokhan (1948–1980, her death)
Profession Physician, politician

Farokhroo Parsa (22 March 1922 – 8 May 1980; Persian: فرخ‌رو پارسا) was an Iranian physician, educator and parliamentarian. She served as Minister of Education of Iran in the last pre-Islamic revolution government and was the first female cabinet minister of an Iranian government.

Parsa was an outspoken supporter of women's rights in Iran. She was executed by firing squad on 8 May 1980 after the revolutionists came to power in Iran, on religious-revolutionary charges. In the early 1960s, she wrote a letter to the Shah requesting the right to vote for women; the late Shah replied, “I will seek my nation’s vote on the matter, my people do not consist only of men.”

Biography

Board of Governors of Association of Patriotic Women [Kānun-e Nesvān-e Vatan'khāh], Tehran, 1922-1932 (1301-1311 AH). The left-most woman sitting is Ms Fakhr-e Āfāgh Pārsā, mother of Farrokhroo Parsa.
Farrokhroo Parsa, in revolutionary court, 1979

Farrokhroo Parsa was born on 22 March 1922 in Qom, Iran to Farrokh-Din and Fakhr-e Āfāgh Pārsāy. Her mother, Fakhr-e Āfāgh, was the editor of the women's magazine Jahān-e Zan ("The World of Woman"),[1] and a vocal proponent for gender equality and for educational opportunities for women. Her views on this subject met with opposition of the conservative sections of the society of her time, leading to the expulsion of the family by the government of Ahmad Qavām, from Tehran to Qom, where Fakhr-e Āfāgh was placed under house arrest. It was here that Farrokhroo was born, some minutes past midnight on Iranian New Year's Eve 1922 (Nowruz, 1301 AH).[1] Later, with the intervention of Prime Minister Hasan Mostowfi ol-Mamalek, her family was allowed to return to Tehran.

Upon obtaining a medical degree, Parsa became a biology teacher in Jeanne d'Arc Highschool in Tehran. At the school she came to know Farah Diba, one of her students at this school, and who would later become wife of King Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.[1][2]

In 1963, Parsa was elected to parliament (the Majles), and began petitioning Mohammad Reza Pahlavi for suffrage for Iran's women.[1] She was also a driving force for legislation that amended the existing laws concerning women and family. In 1965 Pārsā was appointed Deputy Minister of Education and on 27 August 1968 she became Minister of Education in the cabinet of the Amir-Abbas Hoveyda government.[1] It was the first time in the history of Iran that a woman has occupied a cabinet position.

Farrokhroo Parsa was executed by firing squad on 8 May 1980 in Tehran,[3] at the outset of the Islamic Cultural Revolution.

In her last letter from prison, Farrokhroo Parsa wrote to her children: "I am a doctor, so I have no fear of death. Death is only a moment and no more. I am prepared to receive death with open arms rather than live in shame by being forced to be veiled. I am not going to bow to those who expect me to express regret for fifty years of my efforts for equality between men and women. I am not prepared to wear the chador and step back in history."[1]

Her successor as the Education Minister of Iran, Manouchehr Ganji another minister before Islamic revolution, expressed surprise at her execution: she was "a lady, [...]Doctor, a competent physician who entertained good relations at the Ministry with revolutionaries like Beheshti, Bahonar, and Rejaii."[4] In fact, during her tenure as minister of education, Beheshti, Bahonar and Mohammed Mofatteh were on the ministry's payroll. These three were to be major players in the Islamic Revolution several years later. With her ministry's funding, Beheshti established the Islamic Center of Hamburg and Bahonar was able to set up a few Islamic public schools around Tehran.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Bahrami, Ardavan (May 9, 2005), A woman for all seasons: In memory of Farrokhrou Parsa, iranian.com.
  2. Pahlavi-Diba, Farah (May 8, 2000), In memory of Mrs. Farrokhrou Parsay executed on May 8, 1980, (in Persian), farahpahlavi.org.
  3. Lentz, Harris M., "Farrokhrou Parsay", Assassinations and Executions: An Encyclopedia of Political Violence, 1865-1986, Jefferson: McFarland, p. 208.
  4. Ganji, Manouchehr (2002), Defying the Iranian Revolution: From a Minister to the Shah to a Leader, p. 80.
  5. Pirnia, Mansureh (2007), Madam Minister: A Collection of Memoirs and Notes Written by Farrokhroo Parsa
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