اگر روزی به سرزمین ما رسیدی با چادر سیاه و تسبیح و ریش نیا. با آواز و موسیقی و رنگ بیا. ای نادیده ترین ما به وسعت یک تاریخ از تو محروم مانده ایم...
Rich Tehrani girls wearing shorts!
Colorful, vibrant and elegant. Fashion in the streets of Iranian cities often defies the mainstream media portrayal of Iran as a dark and colorless society in which women are forced to wear black outfits from top of their head to the tips of their toes, an image similar to the attire worn in countries like Saudi Arabia. Iranian women have had their special way of wearing hijab from the time that Islam was first introduced to Iran 1400 years ago.
At first glance, they look like flashy rich kids from any Western country – hanging out by the pool with whiskey glasses in hand, dancing up close to one another in minimal attire, and driving around in luxury cars to the sound of bouncy music.
But these rich kids don't live in Beverly Hills or a prestigious London neighborhood, or even Herzliya Pituach. They live, party and fill the social media websites with photographs of ostentatious wealth, plus a healthy dose of exposed body parts in skimpy bikinis, in fundamentalist Iran – and they do so without fear of the country's Revolutionary Guard Corps or the ayatollahs' so-called thought police.
Rich Tehrani girls wearing shorts!
Colorful, vibrant and elegant. Fashion in the streets of Iranian cities often defies the mainstream media portrayal of Iran as a dark and colorless society in which women are forced to wear black outfits from top of their head to the tips of their toes, an image similar to the attire worn in countries like Saudi Arabia. Iranian women have had their special way of wearing hijab from the time that Islam was first introduced to Iran 1400 years ago.
At first glance, they look like flashy rich kids from any Western country – hanging out by the pool with whiskey glasses in hand, dancing up close to one another in minimal attire, and driving around in luxury cars to the sound of bouncy music.
But these rich kids don't live in Beverly Hills or a prestigious London neighborhood, or even Herzliya Pituach. They live, party and fill the social media websites with photographs of ostentatious wealth, plus a healthy dose of exposed body parts in skimpy bikinis, in fundamentalist Iran – and they do so without fear of the country's Revolutionary Guard Corps or the ayatollahs' so-called thought police.
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