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Melia, 23, lit a cigarette on the dictator's portrait "I was the girl they used to torture"

Flibbertigibbet

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Melia, 23, lit a cigarette on the dictator's portrait
"I was the girl they used to torture"

23-year-old Melia sets fire to a photo of Iran's supreme leader.
Then she lights a cigarette in the flames.
And becomes famous overnight.


The embers lick the edge of the portrait.

Melia holds up the picture in a parking lot north of Toronto. With her long black nails, she grips the photograph of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in one hand and the lighter in the other. The cigarette hangs from the corner of her mouth. A friend stands next to her and films it.

It takes a few seconds for the paper to catch fire.

Then it bursts into flames.

She lights the cigarette in the flames, lets the portrait burn almost completely down and finally drops the last piece into the snowdrift. She points her middle finger at the remains.

On January 7, she records the video. A few hours later, she posts a screenshot of the clip – at the exact moment the cigarette bursts into flames.

Little did she know what she had started. Soon she would be given a new name on the internet:

When Aftonbladet reaches her two months later, she is at her job as a barista in Toronto.

A lot has happened since that flare-up.

Over 30,000 people are estimated to have died in protests that the Iranian regime brutally suppressed. Ayatollah Khamenei is dead and his son has taken power. The US and Israel are bombing targets in Tehran.

No one knows yet how it will all end.

She calls herself Melia. That is not her real name.

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She uses the alias for a simple reason: her family is still in Iran. In the worst case, burning a portrait of the country's supreme leader can be punishable by death. And doing it without a hijab – and lighting a cigarette in the flames – is about as disrespectful as you can be in the eyes of the regime.

For her, filming the sequence was a no-brainer.

“I just wanted to tell my friends that I stand with them. That even though I'm two continents away, I'm still there – my heart and soul are still with them.”

She had actually only intended to post it to her friends. But it exploded almost immediately online.

“I posted the picture in the middle of the night. I didn't plan for it to go viral, it was completely out of my control,” she says.

Melia says she had seen a similar picture online before and wanted to make her own version directed at Khamenei.

Reactions came quickly. Some thought the picture was AI-generated. Others speculated that it might have been filmed inside Iran.

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In response to the doubts, she posted the entire clip – 35 seconds long – and wrote briefly:

“What about the video?”

The video turned out to be filmed in Canada, by Melia, who is an Iranian refugee. At first, she was completely anonymous. On Twitter, she called herself only Morticia Addams, after the matriarch of “The Addams Family”.

Soon, more people began to copy the gesture. Critics of the regime in different countries lit cigarettes on pictures of the ayatollah – from Germany to Switzerland and the United States.

Newspapers published the picture. Activists shared it. Even her favorite author J.K. Rowling spread it on social media.

For Melia, it suddenly became clear that she had become a symbol against the regime.

– I thought: now it is obvious that I hate them. It is obvious that I am fighting against them.

But the regime was already familiar with her.

Melia describes herself as a radical feminist and has been active against the regime since she was 15.

– I saw that we did not have a normal life already as a teenager. I was arrested several times by the morality police because of my clothes, she says.

– I was beaten with a baton. But it was nothing compared to what happened later.

1773574550709.png

Mahsa Amini was arrested by the religious morality police in Iran because her headscarf did not cover her hair sufficiently. She died in custody in September 2022. Photo: Markus Schreiber / AP

She was first arrested at the age of 17 during the “Bloody November” protests in 2019, which broke out after the US withdrew from the nuclear deal with Iran and tightened sanctions on the country. Melia says she was injured by both batons and a taser during the demonstrations. Then she was taken away.

“For four nights, no one knew where I was. Finally, I had to call someone and tell them where I was, and they managed to get me out of there.”

Three years later, she took part in the protests after Mahsa Amini’s death in custody in 2022. During that period, she appeared in a YouTube program criticizing the mandatory hijab.

Shortly after, the phone started ringing. Calls from undisclosed numbers. With threats.

In 2024, after Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi died in a helicopter crash, she posted critical posts on Instagram. She says security forces raided her family's home in Isfahan.

- A few days later, people broke into my parents' house, arrested me, and took my laptop, phone, and all my digital stuff.

1773574612587.png

“Melia” in Iran. Photo: Private

According to Melia, she was subjected to severe humiliation and abuse during interrogations. She was then released on a large bail.

– Before they could convict me of anything, I left Iran. I had to, she says.

She managed to get to Turkey and later traveled to Canada on a student visa. Today, she has refugee status and lives in Toronto.

Here she openly shows off her tattoos. Wears colorful makeup. Piercings. Things that were not possible in Iran, or previously often led to problems with the country's morality police.

She has been in Canada for less than a year and lives in student housing. For security reasons, she does not want to say exactly when she fled.

She barely has time for hobbies. She works, studies, follows every news from Iran – and continues with her political activism on X.

When the picture of the burning Khamenei went viral, she was quickly met with attacks online from accounts that she suspects are connected to the regime.

At the same time, the spread gave her an unexpected sense of strength.

– It felt very good. Because they know the girl they used to torture during interrogations – and now the same girl has become the face of the movement.

Iran’s state media has directed threats against Iranians both in the country and those in exile. But Melia wants to continue protesting, regardless of the consequences. She is used to the threats.

– I’m actually not even afraid of death, to be honest.


LINK

When Khamenei died, she posted a dance video and wrote:

“I told you we would dance on your grave, right?”

Later, she posted a picture of a wine glass and wrote:

“As President Trump said: ‘he died like a rat.’”

She says she supports the Trump administration’s line.

– When a government shoots people just because they shout slogans, the people need support – including military support.

What frustrates her most right now is that many in the West oppose the war without understanding the situation, she says. She is particularly critical of those who call themselves feminists but at the same time oppose military interventions by the US and Israel.

– Please: if you have never lived in Iran, support Iranians who speak on social media. Don’t try to explain your own ideas to Iranians who have lived their entire lives in Iran and then were forced to emigrate to another country.

She hopes the conflict ends with the fall of the Islamic Republic.

Otherwise, she sees a darker scenario ahead.

– Then Iran will become like North Korea in the Middle East. They don't even try to hide it anymore, when they openly threaten people in state media.

1773574809881.png

Melia during a protest in Canada against the Iranian regime. Photo: Private

The worry for her friends and family who remain in Iran torments her. She has not heard from them for several weeks. She is afraid of what the regime might do to them.

She does not want to speculate on whether she herself can ever return. She herself does not really ask for much from the future.

– I am just an ordinary person who wants freedom for her country.

– It is actually sad that most of us just want a normal life, like you have. We just want to be able to go around as we please.

https://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/a/xrmO2V/melia-23-tande-ciggen-pa-diktatorns-portratt
 
The idiocy is they want ayatollah out, and the savagery of shah of iran back.
Tehran was the asian hq of CIA operations under the shah. They tolerated the brutal Savak secret police on its own people.
When shah was toppled, the students took over the US embassy and retrieved huge amount of information in spying operations in asia, which they distribute to respective countries.
 
The idiocy is they want ayatollah out, and the savagery of shah of iran back.
Tehran was the asian hq of CIA operations under the shah. They tolerated the brutal Savak secret police on its own people.
When shah was toppled, the students took over the US embassy and retrieved huge amount of information in spying operations in asia, which they distribute to respective countries.

There you go again, Don Quixote Mr Syed Putra - using lies mixed with half truths to FOOL the naive amongst us....

For centuries, the Shia sect of Islam had held on to Persia as their bedrock towards Shia sectarian Islamic Supremacy, misusing the religion of peace that Islam was meant to be.

With various leaders ruling Persia after 7th Century, some were wise and some foolish, but when the modern day clear sighted Shah of Iran saw the re-immergence of religion strives in his land, he did not hesitate to approve use of repressive methods upon the Radical Islamists such as the Shias, whom FOOLIED naive Persians YET AGAIN to the Shia beliefs, and thus, in order to maintain peace, stability, progress and evolution of the Persians, the seemingly savage SAVAK dept was formed to take on those cunning animals whom placed NO value on Human lives, but as slaves to a heretic god-on-Earth Ayatollah.

The SAVAK org may had overstepped boundaries of morality and decency, in their quest to ensure that Persia remains a secular Democratic State,, but the beatings upon those whom opposed Democracy, Freedom and progress had shown NO mercy to innocent mind, and thus, NO mercy will be shown to those insane seeking religion supremacy in retaliation.
 
There you go again, Don Quixote Mr Syed Putra - using lies mixed with half truths to FOOL the naive amongst us....

For centuries, the Shia sect of Islam had held on to Persia as their bedrock towards Shia sectarian Islamic Supremacy, misusing the religion of peace that Islam was meant to be.

With various leaders ruling Persia after 7th Century, some were wise and some foolish, but when the modern day clear sighted Shah of Iran saw the re-immergence of religion strives in his land, he did not hesitate to approve use of repressive methods upon the Radical Islamists such as the Shias, whom FOOLIED naive Persians YET AGAIN to the Shia beliefs, and thus, in order to maintain peace, stability, progress and evolution of the Persians, the seemingly savage SAVAK dept was formed to take on those cunning animals whom placed NO value on Human lives, but as slaves to a heretic god-on-Earth Ayatollah.

The SAVAK org may had overstepped boundaries of morality and decency, in their quest to ensure that Persia remains a secular Democratic State,, but the beatings upon those whom opposed Democracy, Freedom and progress had shown NO mercy to innocent mind, and thus, NO mercy will be shown to those insane seeking religion supremacy in retaliation.
Arent you suppose to be in church on Sunday?
The shah regime is not iranian in nature but serves the interest of the zionist and The us..
I was told there were two possible factions when shah was toppled to take charge of the country.
The communists and the ayatollah. No way will US want communists to run iran when Soviets were still dominant and were in afghanistan.
 
Iran must look forward if it survive this to forge greater trade alliance with landlocked afghanistan, uzbekistan.
A possible canal to link Caspian sea to gulf of persia will be great if it can be built. The mountains terrain will be a challenge plus frequent strong earthquakes makes it a hazard. Trade has always been at the heart of ancient arabs and Persians.
Some persian words have been instilled in malay language.

Some simple ones like "majlis" that i came across.. The malays stand with iranians who had not done any harm and traded in peace with malays for centuries.

International Journal of Language and Linguistics Vol. 5, No. 2, June 2018 doi:10.30845/ijll.v5n2p7 55 Persian and Malay: 1000 Words in Common Abolfazl Shirban Sasi Department of Applied Foreign Languages TransWorld University Taiwan Abstract Today, varieties of the Malay language are spoken by more than two hundred million people, mostly in Indonesia and Malaysia. Also, more than one hundred million people speak Persian dialects in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan. Throughout centuries, Malay has been influenced by other languages such as Arabic, Dutch, Portuguese, and English. Likewise, Persian has borrowed many vocabularies from Arabic and European languages. Since words are one of the most important elements in mastering any language, a concise classification of the common Persian and Malay words has vast pedagogical implications. In this study, more than 1000 Malay words that were recited to 64 Iranian university students on various occasions were recognized by them to be almost completely homophonic to Persian words. Most of these common terms were then classified into five main categories the biggest of which is those words which have exactly the same meaning, and almost identical pronunciation. Keywords: Arabic; Homophonic; Farsi; Malay; Persian 1.Introduction This study was carried out during the researcher’s stay in Malaysia when doing his Ph. D. degree. Being an Iranian, he came across several instances of Persian words which were almost identically used by the Malay. Below are the main sources which finally led to the current study:  Mass media such as TV/radio programs, newspapers, etc.  Interactions with Malay native speakers  Malay books and dictionaries  Educational lectures delivered in Malay  English movies with Malay subtitles  Various signage used in public places like banks, hospitals, streets, universities, airports, malls, etc.  Malay catalogues and brochures More than two hundred million people in Indonesia, Malaysia, southern Thailand, Singapore, and Brunei speak dialects of the Malay language. Also, more than one hundred million people speak Persian varieties in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan (The World Factbook a & b; Katzner, 2002). It is very interesting that we can observe so many Farsi (Persian) words that are somehow used in the Malay, given the fact that these languages belong to two very different language families, i.e. Austronesian, and Indo-European. In this study, the researcher does not intend to sort out the etymology of the words, rather their being used by Persian speakers is the focus of this paper. Thus, whatever the root of the terms, the criterion in this research is that the word should be comprehensible when heard by Persian native speakers. Excluding a lot of technical terms, jargons and proper nouns which are almost equally used in both languages, the researcher has classified hundreds of shared vocabulary into word groups with detailed properties. As mentioned, this study does not focus on the etymology of the words in question; however, since Islam is the dominant religion in all the countries where Malay and Persian are spoken, and also because Arabic is the language of Islam, the researcher postulates that most of the common words in Malay and Persian have Arabic roots. Since the dawn of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula in the 7 th century A.D., Arabic, a Semitic language, has effected (or in some cases, replaced) numerous languages in Asia and North Africa (Kartzner, 2002). Likewise, both Malay and Persian have borrowed many common words from Arabic. This might be the most influential cause for the existence of the common vocabulary in these two languag
 
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