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Hajar Tarbiat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hajar Tarbiat
Member of the National Consultative Assembly
In office
1963–1971
ConstituencyTehran
Member of the Senate
In office
1971–1974
Personal details
Born1906[1]
Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Died1974[1]
Tehran, Iran

Hajar Tarbiat (Persian: هاجر تربیت, 1906 – 1974) was an Iranian women's rights activist and politician. In 1963 she was one of the first group of women elected to the National Consultative Assembly. Eight years later, she also became the first woman elected to the Senate.

Biography

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Tarbiat was born in 1906 in Istanbul, where her father Hossein Gholi Tarbiat worked in the Persian embassy. After completing her secondary education, she also began working at the embassy. While living in Istanbul, she met Mahammad Ali Tarbiat, who she married. The couple moved to Persia, where Tarbiat became head of a school in Tabriz.

In 1935 she established the Women's Centre in Tehran,[2] supporting the Kashf-e hijab reform against compulsory hijab (veiling).[3]

In 1943 she was amongst the co-founders of the Women's Party.[4] After the Shah ordered foreign schools to be run by Iranians, she became head of the American Noorbakhsh High School. She later worked as a schools inspector, headed the Tehran Teacher Training College and served as director-general of the Department of Social Affairs of the Ministry of Interior.[5]

Women were granted the right to vote in 1963, and in the parliamentary elections that year, Tarbiat was one of six women elected to the National Consultative Assembly.[6] She was re-elected in 1967. In the 1971 elections she was elected to the Senate, the first female Senator to be elected (the previous female Senators had been appointed).[4] She died in 1974.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Iranian Women’s Equality Calendar
  2. ^ Shireen Burki (2013) The Politics of State Intervention: Gender Politics in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran, p217
  3. ^ Hamideh Sedghi (1999) "Feminist movements iii. In the Pahlavi period" Encyclopaedia Iranica, IX/5, pp492–498
  4. ^ a b Women's Centre Foundation for Iranian Studies
  5. ^ Mehri Bharier (1978) Forugh Farrokhzad: Persian poetness and feminist
  6. ^ Lois Beck & Guity Nashat (2004) Women in Iran from 1800 to the Islamic Republic, p114