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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Erotic Republic
Iran is in the throes of an unprecedented sexual revolution. Could it eventually shake the regime?
BY AFSHIN SHAHI | MAY 29, 2013

Foreign Policy Magazine
When someone mentions Iran, what images leap into your mind? Ayatollahs,
religious fanaticism, veiled women? How about sexual revolution? That's
right. Over the last 30 years, as the mainstream Western media has been
preoccupied with the radical policies of the Islamic Republic, the
country has undergone a fundamental social and cultural transformation.
While not necessarily positive or negative, Iran's sexual revolution is
certainly unprecedented. Social attitudes have changed so much in the
last few decades that many members of the Iranian diaspora are
shellshocked when they visit the country: "These days Tehran makes
London look like a conservative city," a British-Iranian acquaintance
recently told me upon returning from Tehran. When it comes to sexual
mores, Iran is indeed moving in the direction of Britain and the United
States -- and fast.
Good data on Iranian sexual habits are, not surprisingly, tough to come
by. But a considerable amount can be gleaned from the official
statistics compiled by the Islamic Republic. Declining birth rates, for
example, signal a wider acceptance of contraceptives and other forms of
family planning -- as well as a deterioration of the traditional role of
the family. Over the last two decades, the country has experienced the
fastest drop in fertility ever recorded in human history. Iran's annual population growth rate, meanwhile, has plunged to 1.2 percent in 2012 from 3.9 percent in 1986 -- this despite the fact that more than half of Iranians are under age 35.
At the same time, the average marriage age for men has gone up from 20
to 28 years old in the last three decades, and Iranian women are now
marrying at between 24 and 30 -- five years later than a decade ago.
Some 40 percent of adults who are of marriageable age are currently
single, according to official statistics. The rate of divorce,
meanwhile, has also skyrocketed, tripling from 50,000 registered
divorces in the year 2000 to 150,000 in 2010. Currently,
there is one divorce for every seven marriages nationwide, but in
larger cities the rate gets significantly higher. In Tehran, for
example, the ratio is one divorce to every 3.76 marriages -- almost comparable to Britain, where 42 percent of marriages end in divorce.
And there is no indication that the trend is slowing down. Over the
last six months the divorce rate has increased, while the marriage rate
has significantly dropped.
Changing attitudes toward marriage and divorce have coincided with a
dramatic shift in the way Iranians approach relationships and sex.
According to one study cited
by a high-ranking Ministry of Youth official in December 2008, a
majority of male respondents admitted having had at least one
relationship with someone of the opposite sex before marriage. About 13
percent of those "illicit" relationships, moreover, resulted in unwanted
pregnancy and abortion -- numbers that, while modest, would have been
unthinkable a generation ago. It is little wonder, then, that the
Ministry of Youth's research center has warned that "unhealthy
relationships and moral degeneration are the leading causes of divorces
among the young Iranian couples."
Meanwhile, the underground sex industry has taken off in the last two
decades. In the early 1990s, prostitution existed in most cities and
towns -- particularly in Tehran -- but sex workers were virtually
invisible, forced to operate deep underground. Now prostitution is only a
wink and a nod away in many towns and cities across the country. Often,
sex workers loiter on certain streets, waiting for random clients to
pick them up. Ten years ago, Entekhab newspaper claimed that there were close to 85,000 sex workers in Tehran alone.
Again, there are no good countrywide statics on the number of
prostitutes -- the head of Iran's state-run Social Welfare Organization
recently told the
BBC: "Certain statistics have no positive function in society; instead,
they have a negative psychological impact. It is better not to talk
about them" -- but available figures suggest that 10 to 12 percent of
Iranian prostitutes are married. This is especially surprising given the
severe Islamic punishments meted out for sex outside marriage,
particularly for women. More surprisingly still, not all sex workers in
Iran are female. A new reportconfirms
that middle-aged wealthy women, as well as young and educated women in
search of short-term sexual relationships, are seeking the personal
services of male sex workers.
