preview

How Kurdish Are Treated Differently From The Traditional Iranian Women

Decent Essays

Part1:
In Ghobadi’s cinema, we see how Kurdish are treated differently from the normal Iranian women. For instance, their dress code is different Rojin address is exposing too much of her skin, she wears traditional colorful clothes were on a normal occasion she is supposed to wear the black chador in Iran. Though she covers her hair, she does so with a white headscarf, unlike the traditional Islamic black headscarf. The film also highlights the male dominance issue in the society. The women are married off to women they do not know, for instance, Rojin marries a man who she has never seen in the film “A Time for Drunken Horses”. Moreover, women are not prohibited from singing in public in Iran for religious reasons. This restriction is particularly restrictive to Kurdish women who are used to sing and dance with men in a traditional or public gathering.
Ghobadi, …show more content…

In addition, they have a four old blind child, Riga with them. Her faces reflect her suffering. For instance, she never smiled in the film, reflecting her past hard life, where she was raped by Iraqi soldiers. Giving birth to Riga as a result of that heinous act. Agrin is forced to carry this pain with whenever she goes and Riga is the constant reminder. The burden is too much for her to bear to an extent that it reaches a point that she wants to abandon the little Riga. Moreover, she is contemplating suicide as a result of this depression. But she eventually did commit suicide by throwing herself down the precipice. Agrin is a representation of a Kurdish woman, she is unhappy, hopeless and either raped or occupied. She is stripped off her joy for life just like her tribe that is divided by international boundaries, and subject to constant wars and bombings. The Kurdistan is under occupation, denied freedom and it is full of land

Get Access