Episode 26 – Haleh Esfandiari – My Prison, My Home

Haleh Esfandiari

 
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This week’s guest is Dr. Haleh Esfandiari. She is the Director of the Middle East Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and has had a rich and varied career. In her native Iran, she was a journalist, served as deputy secretary general of the Women’s Organization of Iran, and was the deputy director of a cultural foundation where she was responsible for the activities of several museums and art and cultural centers. She taught Persian language at Oxford University and, prior to coming to the Wilson Center, from 1980 to 1994, she taught Persian language and contemporary Persian literature and courses on the women’s movement in Iran at Princeton University.

She is the author of Reconstructed Lives: Women and Iran’s Islamic Revolution (1997), editor of Iranian Women: Past, Present and Future (1977), co-author of Best Practices: Progressive Family Laws in Muslim Countries, the co-editor of The Economic Dimensions of Middle Eastern History (1990) and also of the of the multi-volume memoirs of the famed Iranian scholar, Ghassem Ghani.

Her articles have appeared in essay collections in a number of books as well as in Foreign Policy, Journal of Democracy, Princeton Papers in Near Eastern Studies, New Republic, Wilson Quarterly, Chronicle of Higher Education and Middle East Review.  Her Op-Ed, “Held in My Homeland,” appeared in the Sept. 16, 2007 Outlook section of the Washington Post. Haleh Esfandiari is the first recipient of a yearly award established in her name, the Haleh Esfandiari Award; this award was presented to her by a group of businesswomen and activists from countries across the Middle East and North Africa region on the occasion of a conference sponsored by the Wilson Center – Women Entrepreneurs: Business and Legal Reform in the MENA Region – held in Amman, Jordan on May 20-22, 2008. She is also the recipient of the Special American Red Cross Award (2008), an honorary degree from Georgetown University Law Center (2008), the Women’s Equality Award from the National Council of Women’s Organizations (2008), Miss Hall’s School Woman of Distinction Award (April 2009), a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation grant and was a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars from 1995 to 1996. Dr. Esfandiari is a member of the Board of Advisors of the Project on Middle East Democracy and, in December 2008, became one of three first annual recipients of POMED’s “Leader for Democracy” award.

She was featured in Parade magazine (May 2008) in O, the Oprah Winfrey magazine (November 2008), and in Vogue magazine (August 2009). Her memoir, My Prison, My Home, based on her arrest by the Iranian security authorities in 2007, after which she spent 105 days in solitary confinement in Tehran’s Evin Prison, was published in September 2009.

For additional reference we’ve included links to some of the people, places and things discussed in this episode*:

*coming soon

3 Comments

miptalk
miptalk 2.14.10

Dr Haleh Esfandiari spent 105 days in solitary confinement at Tehran’s Evin prison. Hear her story on #MIPtalk http://www.miptalk.com/?p=398 #podcast
via Twitoaster

dragontatt
dragontatt 2.15.10

RT @miptalk: Dr Haleh Esfandiari spent 105 days in solitary confinement at Tehran’s Evin prison. Hear her story on #MIPtalk http://bit.l
via Twitoaster

life is un fare
life is un fare 2.16.10

MY dear brave Haleh

You give us as women a motive to move in our life. However, we fased in this un fair life keep going we look to you.

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