Hi there! We have a few other animations created by Flavio Azm Rassekh that you might enjoy: Health in Iran ua-cam.com/video/0mHHOBnxvag/v-deo.html Through Their Eyes ua-cam.com/video/vig9l-TDcd8/v-deo.html Flavio also created a trilogy called Hope From Iran about the Baha'is in Iran which you can find here: ua-cam.com/play/PLePDtgwcyKAQwCyQX7CgviKFOMFu-fyKw.html
this isnt true. as video suggests most ppl were illiterate at the time and education was mainly for those who had privileged life. as tahirih was educated in the school her father established. its not like she was fighting for the right to have an education. or at same time women in qajar dynasty household were educated too and were very bright and exceptional
@@awesomeallegra2887 and most men were not part of royal family and didnt have access to education too for sure. i know her descendants and by todays standard they considered very religious. imagine by their mindset at that time she was allowed to have an education even her mother was educated
Baha’is are literally a bunch of ideological propaganda machines, trying to force down Eurocentric nonsense about history in Muslim countries. These people cry about stereotypes, yet here they are stereotyping muslim countries about how religion destroyed women and other shit
Curious as to your information source. According to wenr.wes.org/2017/02/educating-iran-demographics-massification “Over the past decade, almost half of Iran’s student population has been women,”
This film talks about education in Iran around 130 years ago. The situation has changed but many obstacles are still there: “Over the past decade, almost half of Iran’s student population has been women, many of whom enroll in STEM disciplines. However, women in Iran still face gender discrimination, and those who wish to break out of traditional gender roles may benefit from education abroad. Conservative circles view the high number of female students as a threat to Iran’s male-dominated social order, and some universities have attempted to “de-feminize” education with measures like quotas for female students. In 2012, 33 public universities banned women from programs in 77 academic fields, including engineering, accounting, education and chemistry, further limiting women’s options for education in a number of disciplines inside Iran. Moreover, unemployment is much more prevalent among young women than men. Youth unemployment for women stood at 41.4 percent in 2014, up from 32.1 percent in 2009. “
One of the points of the video is to bring to the light the contributions the Baha'is made to helping advance education in Iran as far back as the early 1900s.
Wonderful presentation, well done.
Thank you for your support!
Awesome video! The visuals are stunning, and the information very informative! Thank you for this beautiful creation 🙏🏽🙏🏽
Glad you enjoyed it Colby, and thanks for your constant support and encouragement! :)
Most beautiful video - are there more of this? Thank you. And the topic is amazing - I didn´t know that!
Hi there! We have a few other animations created by Flavio Azm Rassekh that you might enjoy: Health in Iran ua-cam.com/video/0mHHOBnxvag/v-deo.html
Through Their Eyes ua-cam.com/video/vig9l-TDcd8/v-deo.html
Flavio also created a trilogy called Hope From Iran about the Baha'is in Iran which you can find here: ua-cam.com/play/PLePDtgwcyKAQwCyQX7CgviKFOMFu-fyKw.html
waoo this is soo beautifull and inspiring
This is wonderful! Thank you so much for this.
You're so welcome! Thanks for your kind message and your support!
Wonderful and heartbreaking! Thank you for providing this video.
Well done video!👌🙏👍
Beautiful!
Thank you for your support and encouragement! :)
why islamic clergy are so against education against prophet Mohamad who encourage it.
That is a very good question
this isnt true. as video suggests most ppl were illiterate at the time and education was mainly for those who had privileged life. as tahirih was educated in the school her father established. its not like she was fighting for the right to have an education. or at same time women in qajar dynasty household were educated too and were very bright and exceptional
her education was the exception and very out of the norm. most women were not a part of the royal family and did not have access to education
@@awesomeallegra2887 and most men were not part of royal family and didnt have access to education too for sure. i know her descendants and by todays standard they considered very religious. imagine by their mindset at that time she was allowed to have an education even her mother was educated
Baha’is are literally a bunch of ideological propaganda machines, trying to force down Eurocentric nonsense about history in Muslim countries.
These people cry about stereotypes, yet here they are stereotyping muslim countries about how religion destroyed women and other shit
Today most college graduates are women in Iran, but the video is irrelevant and misleading in many ways.
Smells like propaganda crap!
Why do you think this is propaganda? You didn't even say your reason lol
Its pretty accurate so idk what youre talking about
Curious as to your information source. According to wenr.wes.org/2017/02/educating-iran-demographics-massification “Over the past decade, almost half of Iran’s student population has been women,”
This film talks about education in Iran around 130 years ago. The situation has changed but many obstacles are still there: “Over the past decade, almost half of Iran’s student population has been women, many of whom enroll in STEM disciplines. However, women in Iran still face gender discrimination, and those who wish to break out of traditional gender roles may benefit from education abroad. Conservative circles view the high number of female students as a threat to Iran’s male-dominated social order, and some universities have attempted to “de-feminize” education with measures like quotas for female students. In 2012, 33 public universities banned women from programs in 77 academic fields, including engineering, accounting, education and chemistry, further limiting women’s options for education in a number of disciplines inside Iran. Moreover, unemployment is much more prevalent among young women than men. Youth unemployment for women stood at 41.4 percent in 2014, up from 32.1 percent in 2009. “
One of the points of the video is to bring to the light the contributions the Baha'is made to helping advance education in Iran as far back as the early 1900s.