Faezeh hashemi rafsanjani biography of william shakespeare
Faezeh Hashemi Faezeh Hashemi Bahrami, Faezeh Hashemi Rafsanjani is an Iranian politician and social activist known equally for her audacious work on behalf of women and social reform as she is for being the younger daughter of powerful politician and former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. Faezeh Hashemi served one term in Iran's Majles parliament and has been active in both the governmental and nongovern-mental sectors as an advocate for change.
She is often categorized as an Islamic feminist as a result of her call for reforms within a framework that argues the compatibility between Islam and women's rights. Born in , Hashemi entered public life at a relatively young age. She first rose to major national recognition as a political figure during the parliamentary elections, when she succeeded in winning a seat as a Tehran representative in the Fifth Majles.
She ran as the only woman listed with the Kargozaran-e Sazandegi Servants of the Construction , a party whose origins trace to her father, the president of Iran at that time. As a result of factional struggles with a hardliner coalition, Rafsanjani had approved the formation of the moderate rightist coalition that became the Servants of the Construction party.
In , Faezeh Hashemi Rafsanjani, the daughter of late former 10 lines from Shakespeare's sonnets that are profound life lessons.
In her early thirties at the time of the election campaigns, Hashemi's energetic style and bold agendas. In the lead-up to the elections, Hashemi ran a spirited campaign advocating for women's rights and stressing the importance of women's involvement in sports and in the public sphere. Although she adhered to the convention of women political figures wearing the black chador , she added the flair of donning patterned scarves and casual clothing beneath it.
Her campaign style and platform greatly angered conservatives who attempted to variously disrupt her rallies and events held in her support. Announced election results showed that she had received the second-highest votes in Tehran after the conservative candidate and ranking cleric Ali Akbar Nateq-Nuri. Despite the enthusiasm surrounding her successful bid for Majles, Hashemi's parliamentary tenure was filled with disappointments and defeats.
Startled by the surprise victory of Reformist president mohammad khatami and the support he seemed to have among members of the Majles, hard-liners in the government pursued a number of tactics to undermine changes proposed by Khatami and reform-minded parliamentarians. Hashemi and her allies were unable to prevent the ratification of a number of bills drafted by ultraconservatives targeting women.
One such bill prohibited doctors from treating patients of the opposite gender and another attempted to curtail the press from running features and debates on women's issues.