CRY FREEDOM.net

formerly known as
Womens Liberation Front

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Welcome to cryfreedom.net, formerly known as.Womens Liberation Front.  A website that hopes to draw and keeps your attention for  both the global 21th. century 3rd. feminist revolutution as well and a selection of special feminist artists and writers.

This online magazine will be published evey month and started February 2019 1st. 2019. Thank you for your time and interest.

Gino d'Artali
indept investigative journalist
and radical feminist

 

  

                             

 

      

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                                                                                                            CRYFREEDOM 2019/2020

Click below to read all cryfreedom.net published so far about the women's revolution in Iran began shortly after Jhina Mahsa Amini was assasinated
Click here for Chapter 4    Click here for Chapter 3    Click here for chapter 2     Click here for chapter 1

Gino d'Artali - Indept investigative journalist

CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL PARTS OF THIS SPECIAL

IN MEMORY OF from left to right ASRA PANAHI 16)- JHINA MAHSA AMINI (22) - NIKA SHAKARAMI (16) and SARINA ESMAILZADEH (16) HADIS NAJAFI (20), AND MORE WOMEN WHO WERE ASSASINATED SO FAR BY THE IRANIAN AXIS OF EVIL

'Facing Faces and Facts' to commemorate the above depicted and named and below their storys and more as food for thought and inspiration to fight on for the Zan, zendagi, azadi!> (Women, life, freedom!) revolution.
Gino d'Artali - Indept investigative journalist

When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali

Supportive flaming words for the Iranian/Kurdish women.
by Gino d'Artali
16 Oct 2022
The reader of www.cryfreedom.net knows its motto: 'If one kills or hurts a woman one kills or hurts humanity'.
When the 'morality police' assasinated Jhina Mahsa Amini on 16 September 2022 it was actually the start of what I call now the Iranian the 'axis of evil' of khamenei, the morality police and the basij who have one motto: we are the uebermensh meaning super human and women the uentermensch meaning less than human, 2 words that Hitler during WW2 used as pillars to try and eliminate the non-arians.
The now and more and more growing protests, led by women and with one shout: 'Women Life Freedom' is a flame the 'axis of evil' cannot extinguish.
It will grow more fierce and higher, throughout the nation and internationally, and the women more and more being joined by men are about to write history: the burning to ashes and fall of the axis i.e. khamenei.

By the way: you may have noticed that I keep naming Jhina Amini as such. Well, this is why:
SALON
15 Oct 2022
By Samaa Khullar
<<What's in a name: Kurdish martyr Jhina Amini and the struggle for culture and history.
A young Kurdish woman made famous in death still has a lesson to teach us: Call her by her name.
<Life.> That's what Jhina Amini's name meant in Kurdish, her native language. But after her death at the hands of Iran's <morality police> last month, the world began to know Jhina by what she considered her government name, Mahsa.
Protests have erupted across the Middle East and the rest of the world for women's liberation with the rallying cry <Women, Life, Freedom> or <Jin Jiyan Azadi.> But what many people don't know is that this phrase originated with a movement called Kurdistan Women's Liberation in Turkey in 2006. More than 16 years later, the phrase is being adopted by activists, fashion brands and news outlets, but few understand the historical context behind the chant, or the significance of centering Kurdish women in this movement. A chant that was intended to universalize the Kurdish struggle to women's democratic movements worldwide has been watered down. It was a specific phrase with important historical context, and that should not be forgotten.
....
Amini's Kurdish identity has been little noticed, and sometimes entirely ignored, in reports of her death. She is frequently only described as an Iranian woman, and her regime name, Mahsa, is almost exclusively used in the media. Many reports also fail to mention that she was only in Tehran that day to visit family, but actually came from Saqqez, in the province of Kurdistan.
....
To this day, Kurds make up almost half of Iran's political prisoners. There is a widespread ban on Kurdish given names, which forces many families, like the Aminis, to register their children under official non-Kurdish, Islamic names. This creates an internal dichotomy where Kurds have an <official> and <unofficial> identity, with the apparent goal of gradually erasing their culture and history.>>
Read all here:
https://www.salon.com/2022/10/15/whats-in-a-name-kurdish-martyr-jna-amini-and-the-struggle-for-culture-and-history/

JIHNA news agency
Kurdish Womens News Magazine
27 Sep 2022
editor's pick
<<Poem of the day: For Jina Mahsa Amini...
We share a Persian poem written for Jina Mahsa Amini, who was killed by morality police in Iran.:
<Mahsa was killed
No, no
Mahsa has become a flag
Creation in her veins, pride in her voice
She has become a cry, a resistance

Mahsa has become the flag of women's struggle
Mahsa was killed
No, no
She has become a flag.> >>
Scource:
https://jinhaagency1.com/en/editor-s-pick/poem-of-the-day-for-jina-mahsa-amini-31989?page=1

Note by Gino d'Artali: I applaud the poem but unfortunately the same mistake is made in it namely her name was Jhina Mahsa Amini! But thank you for contributing to the revolution!

JIHNA news agency
Kurdish Womens News Magazine
25 Oct 2022
<<News Center - The number of femicide cases increases every day due to the patriarchal and misogynistic system of the Islamic Republic, which has been ruling the Iranian society for more than four decades. In October, many women were killed in the country by men. Although the number of women, who were killed in October, is now unknown, the number of women, who were killed by the security forces, is reported as at least nine. There are no accurate statistics of the number of women, who were driven into suicide or killed in Iran in October due to the Iranian regime's restrictions to internet access. NuJINHA Persian listed the number of the women, who were killed in October in Iran, by compiling news from local and national newspapers, news websites and news agencies. The number of women, who were killed in October, is probably higher than listed.
The list of women is as follows:
On September 23, Sarina Ismailzadeh was killed by the security forces in Karaj, but her death was reported by press outlets a few days after her death.
On September 23, Hadiyeh Naimani was killed by security forces in Hafez street of Iran's Nowshahr city.
On September 25, 20-year-old Hadith Najafi was killed by security forces during a protest in the city of Karaj.
At the beginning of October, Roshana Ahmadi was killed by the security forces during a protest in the city of Bukan.
On September 22, 18-year-old Mehsa Mogoi was killed by security forces in the city of Fuladshahr, Isfahan Province.
On October 9, Nadia Erfani was killed by security forces in the city of Karaj.
On October 9, a Baloch woman from a Dastjardi family, was shot to death in the city of Qaleh Ganj by one of the security officers after rejecting his marriage proposal.
On October 10, Elaha Saeedi was shot to death by Iranian security forces in the city Saqqez.
Source:
https://jinhaagency1.com/en/actual/femicide-cases-increase-in-october-in-iran-many-women-killed-by-iranian-security-forces-32152
Note by Gino d'Artali: 3 other victims are named but were killed in an act of 'domestic violence'. My heart goes out to all the families and others left behind.

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