Cameron Glenn and Garrett Nada
The contrast between the Islamic State and the Islamic Republic is especially visible in their treatment of women and minorities, evident in ISIS documents and Iranian laws. On paper, both discriminate. But in Iran, women and ethnic or religious minorities generally enjoy greater rights and freedoms than either group living under ISIS control.
  Women
  The Islamic State actively recruits women to move to the territories of Iraq and Syria it now controls. Ten percent of its recruits are reportedly female. Jihadist social media portray the Islamic State as an idyllic Islamic society and an alternative to life in the West. But media accounts and testimony of women who have escaped indicate women experience violence, rape, forced marriage, and general repression.
  In the Islamic Republic, women play visible roles in politics, economic life, education, the professions and public life. Women hold seats in parliament, run their own businesses, attend universities and participate in (segregated) sports. Despite protections in the constitution, however, they face discrimination in many respects. The dress code is not as restrictive as under ISIS, and women do not need a male escort to leave their homes.
Women’s Rights and Role in Society
|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “Stability is in the   house, inherently the khidr,or women’s quarters, and go out [from the   house] only when necessary for the guidance of the mothers of the believers…   blessings upon them.” - From an ISIS city charter "Woman was created to populate the Earth just as man was. But, as God wanted it to be, she was made from Adam and for Adam. Beyond this, her creator ruled that there was no responsibility greater for her than that of being a wife to her husband." - From a manifesto on women released by the al Khansaa Brigade, translation via the Quilliam Foundation In practice: In ISIS territory,   women’s freedoms are severely curtailed. They are encouraged to stay at home   and are required to have a male escort to go out in public. In Raqqa, for example, women   have reportedly been   beaten or arrested for traveling outside their homes   without a male chaperone. Many young Syrian   women in ISIS territories have also reportedly been forced to marry against their will. ISIS opened “marriage bureaus” to facilitate marriages between women and   ISIS fighters. Militants have financial incentives to wed, as married   fighters receive a $1,200 grant, a home, and fuel for heating. Many women have been   victims of violence and assault, and militants have executed women for adultery.   ISIS stoned eight women to death in Raqqa alone in June 2014. After seizing   Mosul in June 2014, ISIS militants reportedly went door-to-door assaulting   women. The UN estimated in 2014 that ISIS forced 1,500 women, girls, and young boys   into sexual slavery. ISIS provides limited educational   opportunities for young girls. It has established female-only religious schools, which teach students to memorize the Quran. ISIS enforces   gender segregation in these schools, and prohibits male teachers   from teaching girls. ISIS is also unusual among jihadist groups in that it has an all-female morality   police. The al Khansaa Brigade in Raqqa arrests and punishes other women for   not abiding by ISIS’s strict rules on women’s behavior in society. Members of   the brigade reportedly ask women questions to test their knowledge of prayer,   fasting, and the hijab. In January 2015, the brigade released a semi-official manifesto on the role of women in society. It encouraged women to stay at home and detailed three limited circumstances in which it was permissible for women to leave the house: jihad, studying the Quran, and serving as a doctor or teacher. | Article 20 “All citizens of the   country, both men and women, equally enjoy the protection of the law and   enjoy all human, political, economic, social, and cultural rights, in   conformity with Islamic criteria." Article 21 “The government must   ensure the rights of women in all respects, in conformity with Islamic   criteria, and accomplish the following goals: “1. create a favorable   environment for the growth of woman's personality and the restoration of her   rights, both the material and intellectual; “2 .the protection of   mothers, particularly during pregnancy and childrearing, and the protection   of children without guardians; “3. establishing   competent courts to protect and preserve the family; 4. the provision of   special insurance for widows, and aged women and women without support; 5. the awarding of   guardianship of children to worthy mothers, in order to protect the interests   of the children, in the absence of a legal guardian. In practice: Despite protections   outlined in the constitution, Iranian women face serious discrimination,   especially in matters related to marriage, divorce, inheritance and child   custody. A woman, regardless of her age, needs her male guardian’s consent   for marriage. Women also require permission to obtain a passport and travel   abroad. Child marriage, though   uncommon, is not illegal. The legal age of marriage is 13 for girls and 15 for boys. A judge can grant permission   for children to marry at even younger ages. Rape is illegal and   subject to harsh penalties, including execution. But the government   reportedly does not enforce the law effectively. Spousal rape is not   addressed as sex within marriage is considered consensual. Iran’s laws do not   specifically prohibit domestic violence. Little data is available, but a 2011 University of Tehran   study suggested that a woman was physically abused every nine seconds in   Iran. Women make up some 60 percent of university students. Yet quotas and restrictions limit subjects women can study, notably medicine   and engineering. Only about 16 percent of the workforce is female, according to a U.N. estimate. In the workplace,   women reportedly earn about 61 percent as much money as men in similar jobs. The   law does not require equal pay for equal work. Women must have a man’s consent   to work outside the home. Women serve in   parliament and hold high positions in government ministries. But all of the approximately   30 women who registered as candidates for the 2013 presidential election were disqualified   by the Guardian Council. | 
Iranian women are educated, capable & powerful. In this Gov. we're hoping to ensure equal opportunity #GenderEquality pic.twitter.com/7rjtqBYQ5D
— Hassan Rouhani (@HassanRouhani) September 2, 2013
Women’s Dress Code
  |  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “To the honorable   women: God is in decency and loose jackets and robes.” - From an ISIS city charter “Women…are completely forbidden   from showing their eyes [and wearing] open abayas that reveal colorful   clothes worn underneath.” “[Clothing] must not be decorated   with beads, sequins, or anything else.” “[Women] must not wear high   heels.” “Anyone who violates this will be   penalized.” - ISIS   statement distributed in Deir Ezzor (translation via the Syrian   Observatory for Human Rights) In practice: ISIS requires that women over the age of ten veil from head to toe when   leaving the house. A November 2014 UN report said police regularly evaluate women’s clothing at multiple   checkpoints in ISIS-held towns. ISIS also inflicts   harsh punishments on women who do not comply with dress   requirements. ISIS documents do not detail punishments, but a woman in Mosul   was reportedly sentenced to 40 lashes for violating the dress code. Men are   also punished if ISIS determines that a woman within their family is not   dressed properly. | Article 638- Anyone in public places and roads who openly   commits a harām (sinful) act, in addition to the punishment provided   for the act, shall be sentenced to two months’ imprisonment or up to 74   lashes; and if they commit an act that is not punishable but violates public   prudency, they shall only be sentenced to ten days to two months’   imprisonment or up to 74 lashes. “Women, who appear in   public places and roads without wearing an Islamic hijab [veil], shall   be sentenced to ten days to two months’ imprisonment or a fine of fifty   thousand to five hundred Rials. - Islamic Penal Code of   the Islamic Republic of Iran –Book Five In practice: Iran lacks a clear   definition of appropriate dress for women. Hijab literally means   covering and could describe many different types of clothing. Some women wear   traditional chadors, while others boldly express themselves. The prevalence of leggings led lawmakers to summon the interior minister in June 2014 to questioning   on lax implementation of dress codes. Women risk being fined or sentenced to   lashings based on the opinion of male and female members of the Basij militia   who enforce the dress code on the street. The dress code, however, does not prevent female athletes from participating in international competitions. Eight out of 53 of Iran’s competitors at the 2012 Olympics were female. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said Iranians should be proud of female athletes who make it to the medal podium wearing hijab. President Hassan Rouhani has congratulated female athletes on their accomplishments several times.   | 
Heard this from women and FSA MT: @ajaltamimi: #Syria: latest ISIS advertisement for modest dress for women in #Raqqa pic.twitter.com/AIzNOtqhUO
— Shona Murray (@ShonaMurrayNT) November 28, 2013Particularly proud of our women's historic performance in #AsianGames while upholding Islamic values. #Empoweredwoman pic.twitter.com/jJjFVf3gZY
— Hassan Rouhani (@HassanRouhani) October 4, 2014Religious Minorities
ISIS has tried to cleanse its territory of people it deems unbelievers, including Shiites and non-Muslims. It has reportedly killed hundreds of Shiites and Yazidis, among others. The militants have also destroyed property belonging to minority groups, including ancient holy sites.
   Iran has not attempted to wholesale convert, expel or kill its religious minorities. According to Iran’s interpretation of Islam, some minorities are considered “People of the Book,” and are thus entitled to protection and some autonomy. The constitution provides for representation of Armenians, Assyrian and Chaldean Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians. But Baha’is, Iran’s largest religious minority, are not protected under the law, are not allowed to practice their faith, and have faced persecution. Although minorities face discrimination from wider society and the government, they generally do not fear for their safety on a daily basis as minorities in the Islamic State do.
Iran has not attempted to wholesale convert, expel or kill its religious minorities. According to Iran’s interpretation of Islam, some minorities are considered “People of the Book,” and are thus entitled to protection and some autonomy. The constitution provides for representation of Armenians, Assyrian and Chaldean Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians. But Baha’is, Iran’s largest religious minority, are not protected under the law, are not allowed to practice their faith, and have faced persecution. Although minorities face discrimination from wider society and the government, they generally do not fear for their safety on a daily basis as minorities in the Islamic State do.|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “Be very wary of   allying with the Jews and Christians, and whoever has slipped by a word, then   let him fear Allah, renew his faith, and repent from his deed. […] Even if he   supported them just by a single word. He who aligns with them by a single   word falls into apostasy– extreme apostasy.” - Issue # 4 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine On Yazidis: “Their creed is so   deviant from the truth that even cross-worshipping Christians for ages   considered them devil worshippers and Satanists.” “Unlike the Jews and   Christians, there was no room for jizyah payment. Also, their women could be   enslaved unlike female apostates who the majority of the fuqahā’ say cannot   be enslaved and can only be given an ultimatum to repent or face the sword.   After capture, the Yazidi women and children were then divided according to   the Sharī’ah amongst the fighters of the Islamic State who participated in   the Sinjar operations.”  - Issue # 4 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine ISIS does not permit Christians to build new churches or display   religious symbols in public places. There have also been reports of Christians being forced to convert to Islam or face   execution. In Iraq, ISIS has destroyed Christian property and churches. ISIS deals with other   religious minorities even more harshly. Militants invaded Yazidi communities in Sinjar in August 2014, killing those who refused to convert, and   driving tens of thousands from their homes. ISIS has also killed Shiites in newly captured territories. One ISIS member stated that the Islamic State’s territorial gains in 2014 “purged vast   areas in Iraq and Syria from the filth of the Safavids,” referring to the   sixteenth century Persian Shiite dynasty. | Article 12 “Other Islamic   schools, including the Hanafi, Shafi'i, Maliki, Hanbali, and Zaydi, are to be   accorded full respect, and their followers are free to act in accordance with   their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites. Article 13 “Zoroastrian, Jewish,   and Christian Iranians are the only recognized religious minorities, who,   within the limits of the law, are free to perform their religious rites and   ceremonies, and to act according to their own canon in matters of personal   affairs and religious education. Article 14 “In accordance with   the sacred verse ("God doesn't forbid you to deal kindly and justly with   those who have not fought against you because of your religion and who have   not expelled you from your homes" [60:8]), the government of the Islamic   Republic of Iran and all Muslims are duty-bound to treat non-Muslims in   conformity with ethical norms and the principles of Islamic justice and   equity, and to respect their human rights. This principle applies to all who   refrain from engaging in conspiracy or activity against Islam and the Islamic   Republic of Iran. In practice: Iran does not   differentiate between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in reporting statistics. But   Sunnis are thought to number between 4 and 8 million, or five to 10 percent of the population.   Sunnis reportedly face discrimination and restrictions on building mosques   and schools. Marginalization of Sunnis in Balochistan led to the formation of   Jundallah, an armed separatist group, in the early 2000s. Sunnis in Iran are from several   ethnicities, such as Baloch, Arab and Kurd. Christians, Jews and   Zoroastrians collectively make up less than one percent of Iran’s population.   Yet they are guaranteed places in the 290-seat parliament proportionate to   the size of their communities: • Two seats for   Armenian Christians, • One for Assyrian and   Chaldean Christians, • One for Jews, • One for   Zoroastrians. But minorities  reportedly still face discrimination in education, employment and property   ownership. Authorities also sometimes charge them for moharebeh (enmity   against God), “anti-Islamic propaganda” or threatening national security for   their religious activities. But Iran’s largest   religious minority, the Baha’is, are not protected under the law or allowed   to practice their faith. They reportedly number up to 350,000 and are   considered apostates by the state.   Other Christians not associated with an ethnic group,   such as Protestants, are not represented in parliament. And conversion from Islam is punishable by   death under the law. So proselytization is banned. | 
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