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Welcome to another episode of the NCRI Women's Committee Podcast. I am your host and I am thrilled to have our resident expert sitting across the table from me today. Hey everyone, it is great to be back. I am really looking forward to getting into our source material today. Yeah, And we've got quite a deep dive ahead of us.
We are looking at a very specific, a very specific window of time, mid February 2026. Right. Specifically, the sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, eighteenth, and twentieth. And, you know, to anyone just glancing at a calendar, those are just normal days in a month. But based on the sources we have in the context of the Iranian uprising, these dates represent a well, it's essentially a collision course. They absolutely do.
The Power of 40th Day Memorial: When Mourning Is Mandatory
And to really understand why these dates matter so much, we have to look back at the tragedy that set them in motion. We were talking about the fortieth day memorial ceremonies. The Exactly. The Chehellom (40th Day memorial) for the victims of the bloody crackdown that happened in January 2026.
Right. And for our listeners who might not be fully versed in the cultural nuances of this because it's so central to our deep dive today, can you explain the mechanics of Chehellom (40th Day memorial)? It really seems like the regime is caught in a loop that they just can't break. It is a massive paradox and arguably it's the regime's biggest strategic nightmare right now because in Iranian culture and Shia tradition specifically the fortieth day after a death isn't just a suggestion it is a mandatory time of mourning. You visit the grave site, you pay your respects.
Right. It is a deeply ingrained religious and cultural obligation. So, the regime is in a serious bind here. I mean, they can ban street protests, they can tear down banners, but they can't legally or culturally ban a family from visiting a grave without declaring war on the culture itself. Precisely.
And that is exactly the mission of our deep dive today. Okay.
From Tears to Tactical Resistance
We're going to look at how these quiet, traditional mourning rituals have been completely transformed. Yeah. Because they aren't just about passive grief anymore.
The sources make that very clear. They do. One of the reports explicitly states that these memorials have evolved into operational battlegrounds and vibrant political rallies. The traditional tears have basically turned into sparks. And the fuel for those sparks?
Sustained public anger. And crucially, and this is really the focal point we are exploring today, the leadership of women in all of this. This isn't just a general leaderless crowd. The sources highlight that this is a movement where women are the visible tactical leaders. Let's step back for just a second before we get into the specific stories.
We have some incredible profiles of these women to cover, but how did we get to February? Because this didn't just happen in a vacuum. No, it really didn't. You have to trace the fuse back a bit. Yeah.
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By NCRI Women's CommitteeWelcome to another episode of the NCRI Women's Committee Podcast. I am your host and I am thrilled to have our resident expert sitting across the table from me today. Hey everyone, it is great to be back. I am really looking forward to getting into our source material today. Yeah, And we've got quite a deep dive ahead of us.
We are looking at a very specific, a very specific window of time, mid February 2026. Right. Specifically, the sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, eighteenth, and twentieth. And, you know, to anyone just glancing at a calendar, those are just normal days in a month. But based on the sources we have in the context of the Iranian uprising, these dates represent a well, it's essentially a collision course. They absolutely do.
The Power of 40th Day Memorial: When Mourning Is Mandatory
And to really understand why these dates matter so much, we have to look back at the tragedy that set them in motion. We were talking about the fortieth day memorial ceremonies. The Exactly. The Chehellom (40th Day memorial) for the victims of the bloody crackdown that happened in January 2026.
Right. And for our listeners who might not be fully versed in the cultural nuances of this because it's so central to our deep dive today, can you explain the mechanics of Chehellom (40th Day memorial)? It really seems like the regime is caught in a loop that they just can't break. It is a massive paradox and arguably it's the regime's biggest strategic nightmare right now because in Iranian culture and Shia tradition specifically the fortieth day after a death isn't just a suggestion it is a mandatory time of mourning. You visit the grave site, you pay your respects.
Right. It is a deeply ingrained religious and cultural obligation. So, the regime is in a serious bind here. I mean, they can ban street protests, they can tear down banners, but they can't legally or culturally ban a family from visiting a grave without declaring war on the culture itself. Precisely.
And that is exactly the mission of our deep dive today. Okay.
From Tears to Tactical Resistance
We're going to look at how these quiet, traditional mourning rituals have been completely transformed. Yeah. Because they aren't just about passive grief anymore.
The sources make that very clear. They do. One of the reports explicitly states that these memorials have evolved into operational battlegrounds and vibrant political rallies. The traditional tears have basically turned into sparks. And the fuel for those sparks?
Sustained public anger. And crucially, and this is really the focal point we are exploring today, the leadership of women in all of this. This isn't just a general leaderless crowd. The sources highlight that this is a movement where women are the visible tactical leaders. Let's step back for just a second before we get into the specific stories.
We have some incredible profiles of these women to cover, but how did we get to February? Because this didn't just happen in a vacuum. No, it really didn't. You have to trace the fuse back a bit. Yeah.
Support the show