Mahboubeh abbasgholizadeh biography examples
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Peter Beaumont and Saeed Kamali Dehghan
The Observer, Sunday 12 September 2010
When Shahrzad Kariman finally saw her imprisoned daughter Shiva Nazar Ahari earlier this month, it was for a brief moment outside the Tehran courtroom where the 26-year-old human rights campaigner had been brought. “We could see her for a few minutes,” Kariman told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran last week. “Just enough to hug her. But we couldn’t ask her how the court session went… We didn’t know what the charges were prior to the court session.”
The charges against Nazar Ahari are among the most serious that can be levelled in Iran: muharebeh (enmity against God), a crime, in theory punishable by death, originally intended to be used against armed gangs and pirates, not dissidents.
Nazar Ahari is also charged with assembly and collusion aiming to commit a crime, propagating against the regime and disrupting public order. But perhaps mo
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Mahboubeh Abbasgholizadeh and Lisa Kyung Gross, The League of Kitchens Cookbook
Saturday, November 16, 2024, 11:00 am - 11:45 am
Foodwise Demo Ferry Plaza
Stop by the Foodwise Classroom for a cooking demo featuring the seasonal bounty of the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market. The demo will feature Mahboubeh “Mab” Abbasgholizadeh cooking a recipe from The League of Kitchens Cookbook by Lisa Kyung Gross.
Mab was born and raised in Khorramshahr, a city with a large Arab population in southern Iran. Her father owned a restaurant, a grocery store, and a tea importing company, and he taught her about picking the best ingredients for every recipe. Her mother taught her how to cook, often making dishes from the Azeri region of northern Iran, where both of Mab’s parents grew up. When cooking with her family, Mab learned to go “low and slow” to bring out the incredible flavors and smells of the food that would transport them back to Azeri. For Mab, cooking is the intersec
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Iran: 'Clear the path' for women
DW: Mahboubeh Abbasgholizadeh, you're one of the pioneers of the women's movement in Iran. For more than kvartet legislative periods you've been demanding that women should also be allowed to stand as presidential candidates. However, the responsible authorities say that women are perfectly able to förteckning and are not discriminated against, they're just not qualified for the office. Where exactly does the problem lie?
Mahboubeh Abbasgholizadeh: In the constitution. It has not been clarified whether or not a woman can assume the office of president. The constitution does not provide a clear answer to this. Article 115 of the constitution says the president must komma from the ranks of the political redjal. The Persian word redjal means "men," but it can also signify "persons."
For us, it's klar that this word definitely means "men." And the fact fryst vatten that in the past 38 years, since the Islamic Revolution, every woman who has put herself forwar