Monday, April 20, 2026
  • English
  • Français
  • فارسی
  • عربى
PODCASTS
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee
No Result
View All Result
Home Articles
Literacy in Iran - women, and girls make up two-thirds of illiterates

60% of the illiterate population in Iran are women

Literacy in Iran – women, and girls make up two-thirds of illiterates

September 8, 2021
in Articles

Literacy in Iran – women, and girls make up two-thirds of illiterates

September 8 marks International Literacy Day. Literacy gives people the possibility of education, enabling them to reach their goals and expand their education and potential for full participation in the larger society. The theme of Literacy Day 2021 focuses on the fundamental relationship between literacy and peace.

In the rich culture of the Iranian people, literacy is of particular importance. Ironically, under the mullahs’ rule, two-thirds of the illiterate population are women.

60% of the illiterate population in Iran are women

Literacy in Iran – women, and girls make up two-thirds of illiterates

Under Iran’s misogynistic rule of religious fascism, women and girls are considered second-rate citizens in all realms, including literacy and education.

One of the significant problems in Iranian society today is the lack of access to free education. With 80% of the population living under the poverty line, children’s education and literacy are not among the family’s priorities, particularly girls. So, girl children are first deprived of schooling and then forced into early marriages. For this reason, child marriage has turned into a social catastrophe in Iran.

In 2019, the parliament’s Research Center reported at least nine million illiterates, 10% of the population. Another 11 million people have little literacy. (The state-run farhangesadid.com, December 30, 2019)

The state media say 60% of the illiterates are women. (The state-run Tasnim news agency – April 25, 2018) In light of the regime’s bankrupt economy and the existing discriminations against women and girls, this figure should not have improved in the past three years.

Young girls in a village sitting on the floor under a tree to learn how to read and write

Education during the pandemic

After the Coronavirus outbreak in Iran, about 3 to 3.5 million students dropped out of school. The shocking figure signals the decline in education under the mullahs’ rule.

Some 40,000 students dropped out of school just in the Razavi Khorasan province, northeastern Iran, said Qassem Ali Khodabandeh, the director of the Department of Education. It is the highest number of dropouts in the country.

After the outbreak, the clerical regime embarked on a theatrical measure, launching an online educational network called “Shad” (meaning happing in Farsi) without providing the necessary devices for Iranian students.

Improper distribution of educational infrastructures, lack of funds in deprived areas to buy tablets, smartphones, etc., frequent power outages, lack of Internet in provinces such as Sistan and Baluchestan and Bushehr, and weak Internet line across the country led to the failure of the “Shad” network plan, effectively creating a crisis in education.

30% of students, or about 5 million, do not have intelligent teaching aids, says Javad Hosseini, head of the Exceptional Education Organization.

The National Statistics Center (NSC) officially confirmed in a report on December 22, 2020, that the dropout rate has almost doubled since the outbreak.

Online education threatens Iranian students’ lives

With the virtualization of education without providing the necessary infrastructure, poor students suffered double deprivation and difficulty.

In addition to students who dropped out of school, students in low-income families could not afford to buy a smartphone, and some of them committed suicide.

Parastoo Jalili Azar was one such student living in a village near Urmia, the capital of West Azerbaijan province, NW Iran. She took her own life.

On December 31, 2020, the state media in Iran published an ad to sell a 9-year-old girl’s hair because her mother did not afford to buy her a mobile phone to study online at home. (The state-run Khabarforionline.ir – December 30, 2020)

Due to the weak internet line, other students, including young children, travel miles to reach the Internet in dangerous high altitudes and connect to online classes with a smartphone. In 2020, people posted the unfortunate news of children falling from heights on numerous occasions.

Re-opening of schools in Iran during Coronavirus peaks

Re-opening of schools during Coronavirus peaks

The Coronavirus has taken a heavy toll on millions of Iranian students. Overlooking the health protocols and the need for lockdowns, the clerical regime opened schools in mid-September. But due to the protests of the students’ parents, they were forced to close in-person education.

Some 30,000 students under 18 years have contracted the Covid-19, and 300 have lost their lives, reported Hossein Kermanpour, managing director of the Emergency Clinic of Sina Hospital in Tehran. (The state-run Etemadonline.ir – October 2, 2020)

Nevertheless, the Education Minister announced that they would open the schools in February and resume in-person classes. (The official IRNA news agency – January 11, 2021) The announcement came in step with the 4th peak of the pandemic in Iran and the banning of purchase and import of foreign vaccines by the mullahs’ supreme leader on January 8, 2021. Massoud Mardani, a member of the science committee of the Coronavirus Task Force, asserted, “It is dangerous to rush the re-opening.”

Various regime officials cited the early re-opening of schools as one of the reasons for the transmission of the British variant. The virus is more common in people under 20, especially children, than the non-mutant variants.

Literacy in Iran - women, and girls make up two-thirds of illiterates
Girl children enthusiastic to learn have to drop out of school because of poverty

Denying education to Iranian children and adolescents

We conclude by emphasizing that according to Article 30 of the regime’s constitution, the government must provide free education for all children and adolescents by the end of secondary education. However, schools and universities have privatized and demand tuition from students. As a result, thousands of children and adolescents in Iran have been deprived of access to education. Iranian girls are left out of school more than boys. The number of girls who have to drop out of school is three times that of boys. (The state-run ANA news agency – September 17, 2019)

As far as the clerical regime is concerned, its routine method is discrimination against girls and women in education and literacy, leading them to early marriage and marginalizing them in the house. But those girls who get the opportunity of receiving education use this opportunity with great motivation. About 60% of university graduates and holders of higher education are Iranian women. However, due to double oppression, discrimination, and deprivation of equal opportunities, most women cannot find a suitable job and remain unemployed. For these reasons, women and girls oppose this regime and are the main force for change in Iran.

Female students taking the college entrance exam
Tags: Child marriagecoronaviruseducationPovertyThe girl child
ShareTweetPinShareSendShare

Related Posts

UN Women and UN Experts Express Grave Concern Over the Killing of Schoolgirls in Minab

March 11, 2026
UN Women and UN experts Expresses Grave Concern Over the Killing of Schoolgirls in Minab

Amid escalating military tensions in the Middle East and mounting concerns over the humanitarian consequences of the conflict, UN Women has issued a warning about the serious risks...

Read moreDetails

A Report to CSW70: Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law

March 8, 2026
A Report to CSW70: Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law

Structural Inequality and State-Sanctioned Oppression of Women Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law” is the title of the NCRI Women’s Committee’s report to CSW70, as it focuses on “Ensuring...

Read moreDetails

Annual Report 2026: From Protests, to Uprising, and the Role of Iranian Women

March 3, 2026
Annual Report 2026: From Protests, to Uprising, and the Role of Iranian Women

On the eve of International Women’s Day 2026, the NCRI Women’s Committee presents its Annual Report 2026, offering a recap of events in 2025 as related to women’s...

Read moreDetails

Students Under 20 Comprised 45 Percent of Protesters; Children Subjected to Torture and Facing Execution

February 21, 2026
Forty-Five Percent of Protesters Were Students Under 20; Children Subjected to Torture and Facing Execution

A significant proportion of participants in Iran’s nationwide January protests were high school students and minors. A government official acknowledged that in some provinces, as many as 45...

Read moreDetails

Schools Under Security Siege: Ideological Scrutiny Follow Nationwide Protests

February 13, 2026
Schools Under Security Siege: Ideological Scrutiny Follow Nationwide Protests

In the aftermath of the nationwide protests in January 2026, schools across Iran have reportedly become sites of heightened security presence and ideological scrutiny. Educational institutions are increasingly...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Female teachers and educators held protests in Tehran, Varamin, Dezful

Female teachers and educators held protests in Tehran, Varamin, Dezful

Documents

A Report to CSW70: Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law

A Report to CSW70: Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law

March 8, 2026

Structural Inequality and State-Sanctioned Oppression of Women Gender-Based Discrimination Under Iranian Law” is the title of the NCRI Women’s Committee’s...

Annual Report 2026: From Protests, to Uprising, and the Role of Iranian Women

Annual Report 2026: From Protests, to Uprising, and the Role of Iranian Women

March 3, 2026

On the eve of International Women’s Day 2026, the NCRI Women’s Committee presents its Annual Report 2026, offering a recap...

Iranian women Who Lost Their Lives in Iran’s January 2026 Uprising

Iranian Women Who Lost Their Lives in Iran’s January 2026 Uprising

January 25, 2026

Names That Must Not Be Forgotten Iranian women played a central and courageous role in the January 2026 uprising, standing...

Monthlies

March 2026 Report: How Iranian Women Are Shaping the Resistance
Monthlies

March 2026 Report: Courage Under Fire

April 3, 2026
January 2026 Report: Women at the Core of the Uprising
Monthlies

January 2026 Report: Women at the Core of the Uprising

January 31, 2026
December 2025 Report: A Year in Review: Iranian Women’s Resistance Against Religious Dictatorship
Monthlies

December 2025 Report: A Year in Review: Iranian Women’s Resistance Against Religious Dictatorship

January 5, 2026
November 2025 Report: Under the Clerical Regime, Nowhere Is Safe for Women in Iran
Monthlies

November 2025 Report: Under the Clerical Regime, Nowhere Is Safe for Women in Iran

November 30, 2025

Articles

Mothers Who Gave Their Lives for Freedom during January 2026 Uprising in Iran

Mothers Who Gave Their Lives for Freedom during January 2026 Uprising in Iran

April 6, 2026

Among those killed during the January 2026 uprising in Iran there are mothers whose names stand out—women who took to...

Amid the harshest trials and tribulations, your inspiring voice made my steps more steadfast

Amid the harshest trials and tribulations, your inspiring voice made my steps more steadfast

April 5, 2026

A letter from Vahid Bani Amerian to Aziz, the mother of the martyred Rezaeis Ms. Zahra Norouzi, who is known...

Ferdows Mahboubi (Mother Mosanna): 50 Years of Dedication to PMOI

Ferdows Mahboubi (Mother Mosanna): 50 Years of Dedication to PMOI

April 2, 2026

Ferdows Mahboubi (Mother Mosanna), one of the steadfast supporters of the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), passed away in...

The Fallen for Freedom

Sholeh Sotoudeh (Pregnant)
The Fallen for Freedom

Sholeh Sotoudeh (Pregnant)

April 19, 2026
Ghazal Aghaei Lindi was killed on January 9, 2026
The Fallen for Freedom

Ghazal Aghaei Lindi

April 16, 2026
Farzaneh Tavakkoli, a resident of Arak, was killed on January 9, 2026
The Fallen for Freedom

Farzaneh Tavakkoli

April 13, 2026
Shabnam Ferdowsi was killed on January 8, 2026, during the nationwide protests
The Fallen for Freedom

Shabnam Ferdowsi

April 12, 2026

ABOUT US

NCRI Women Committee

We work extensively with Iranian women outside the country and maintain a permanent contact with women inside Iran. The Women’s Committee is actively involved with many women’s rights organizations and NGO’s and the Iranian diaspora.
The committee is a major source of much of the information received from inside Iran with regards to women. Attending UN Human Rights Council meetings and other international or regional conferences on women’s issues and engaging in a relentless battle against the Iranian regime’s misogyny are part of the activities of members and associates of the committee.

CATEGORIES

  • Activities
  • Articles
  • Documents
  • Famous Women
  • Heroines in Chain
  • IWD Conferences
  • IWD Speeches
  • IWD Videos
  • Maryam Rajavi
  • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
  • Monthlies
  • Podcast
  • Reference Library
  • Solidarity
  • Statements
  • The Fallen for Freedom
  • Videos
  • Women in History
  • Women in Leadership
  • Women of Iranian Resistance
  • Women's News

BROWSE BY TAG

Child marriage coronavirus education execution forced hijab Gender Gap Generation Equality Honor killings Iran Teachers Maryam Akbari Monfared Nurses Plan on Women's Rights and Freedoms Poverty Prisoners Protests rural women Saba Kord Afshari The girl child Violence against women Women's Leadership Women Heads of Household Zeinab Jalalian

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • Publications
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • About Us
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • Ten Point Plan for Iran
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
  • Vanguards
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • Events
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • Video
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • Podcast
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • فارسی
  • عربی
  • Français

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.