The Flogging of Mehdi Yarrahi

In 2023 the singer Mehdi Yarrahi was arrested in Iran for releasing a song inspiring women to take off their hijabs. In the Islamic Republic of Iran wearing a hijab is compulsory for women. Yarrahi spent a year in prison for his “crime.” On Mar. 6, 2025 he was given 74 lashes by his tormentors.

Mehdi Yarrahi pictured on X. Photographer unknown.

On his X account (@yarrahimehdi) Yarrahi wrote: “He who is unwilling to pay a price for freedom is unworthy of it.”

Yarrahi’s song is titled “Roo Sarito” which means “Your Headscarf” in Farsi. The singer was arrested four days after the song’s release. IRNA, the Islamic Republic’s propaganda news agency, accused Yarrahi of “releasing an illegal song that is against the morals and customs of Islamic society.” Here’s an example of those immoral lyrics: “Take off your scarf, the sun is sinking, take off your scarf, let your hair flow. Don’t be afraid, my love! Laugh, protest against tears.”

The Islamic fundamentalists that rule Iran maintain a “morality police” force with the Orwellian name of Guidance Patrol. It particularly enforces Sharia law and Islamic dress codes for women. The wearing of hijab is mandatory for all Iranian women. Article 638 of the Islamic Penal Code, dictates that Iranian women can be arrested, imprisoned, or fined for not wearing prescribed Islamic dress.

The preferred style of hijab in Iran is the full-body-length semicircle of fabric called chādor. Millions of women have been warned by the Guidance Patrol to wear hijab, many have been imprisoned for refusing… some have been killed.

On Sept. 13, 2022 the goons of the Guidance Patrol arrested 22-year-old Mahsa Amini for the crime of wearing her hijab “improperly.” She was taken to a police station where she was beaten to death. The killing of Mahsa led to huge protests calling for liberty that occurred all across Iran under the slogan of “Women, Life, Freedom.” In their attempt to repress the protests, the “security forces” of the Islamic Republic of Iran shot and killed over 185 protesters.

Protester with a Mahsa Amini mask. Date, place, photographer unknown.

As of this writing the Islamic Republic of Iran is considering a bill titled “Protecting the Family by Promoting the Culture of Hijab and Chastity.” It calls for dissolving the Guidance Patrol, but replacing it with high-tech facial recognition software that will identify violators of rigid Islamic dress codes. Those that disobey the law will face severe financial penalties and prison sentences up to 10 years. Persons unable to pay fines may have their passport, driver’s license, or vehicle registration denied. Digital spaces will be monitored for violations, and those online who promote violating the dress codes will be punished.

For now Mehdi Yarrahi is alive and on the mend. The insane zealots of the Islamic Republic will no doubt have their evil eyes on him. He will lick his wounds, and continue to write beautiful songs. I wish that American artists had the courage of Yarrahi. One day Iran will be free. Just remember the words of Martin Luther King Jr., “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

As an American artist, I cherish the First Amendment of the US Constitution, which assures I have the God given right to free speech and free expression. We must hold those words to heart. I hope that one day Mehdi Yarrahi and all Iranians who have suffered so much abuse at the hands of tyrants, will live as free people.

Similar Posts

  • Germany’s Art Controversies

    In Berlin Germany, the Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art opened a major exhibition on January 29th, 2005 – Regarding Terror: The RAF Exhibition. Through the works of some 40 contemporary artists working in various media, the exhibit focuses on Germany’s infamous terrorist organization, Red Army Faction (RAF). In the 1970’s and 80’s, the communist urban guerilla group conducted a violent…

  • The Humblest Artisan Praised

    “There is nothing more contemptible than an idle citizen who can combine his laziness with wealth and, consequently, with honors. The humblest artisan, is more worthy of appreciation and, I think, of real honor, than the most illustrious, the most honored, and the richest gentleman if he is at the same time lazy and useless.” [ From an essay printed…

  • One Thousand and One Nights

    This photo shows a US occupation soldier standing near a painting by an anonymous Iraqi artist. The artwork was inspired by the tales of One Thousand and One Nights, the classic book of Arab literature. First compiled in Arabic during the 9th century, the stories have inspired untold thousands of artists. It is the only Arabic work to have become…

  • WITHERED Arts Journalism in LA?

    On March 24, 2005, a public forum titled Whither Arts Journalism in LA? was held on Olvera street in downtown Los Angeles on the topic of arts journalism in LA. Moderated by Adolfo Guzman Lopez, the panelists included art critics Christopher Knight (LA Times), Peter Frank (LA Weekly), Malik Gaines (artUS magazine), and Caryn Colemen (art.blogging.la). The event attracted an…

  • Art of Engagement Exhibit

    A major exhibition of socially engaged artworks is presently on display at Jack Rutberg Fine Arts in Los Angeles. Art of Engagement presents works that address major world conflicts and conflagrations, from the Spanish Civil War, the Holocaust and Hiroshima, to the Vietnam war and the present debacle in Iraq. Some of the artists included in this amazing show include…

  • |

    Art and the Global Economic Meltdown

    An unavoidable political topic is on the lips of everyone in the art world these days, I am not speaking of the U.S. presidential election – but of an international economic meltdown the likes of which we have not seen since the Great Depression of the 1930s. No matter what “new” political circumstances we wake up to in the aftermath…