Women are increasingly seen riding motorbikes in Iran's capital, where laws and religious mores once barred women from motorbikes.
When 38-year-old Merat Behnam first gathered enough courage to drive her yellow motorbike through the gridlocked streets of Iran's capital to the coffee shop she runs, traffic wasn't her main worry.
A young couple watch the sunset over Chitgar Lake in Tehran. Arne Immanuel Bänsch/dpa Dating is often fraught with its emotional ups and downs, compounded with the difficulty of meeting "the one" and ...
Iranian journalist Zeinab Rahimi has refused to wear the mandatory hijab for over two years, despite the risk of arrest and imprisonment. She is among a growing number of women and girls who have ...
Zaghari-Ratcliffe's chosen work is a subtle statement around female solidarity, which evokes memories of her time in prison.
“The View” host Sara Haines offered a lengthy correction to comments she made on-air this week via her social media on Thursday, admitting that she conflated societal rules in Iran with rules in ...
One of the thrills of watching what we once called “foreign” films is discovering a movie from an entirely different culture and realizing just how similar we all are: Our dreams aren’t so different, ...
Iranian musician Mehdi Rajabian is awaiting trial for working with female dancers and singers after being arrested earlier ...