This is the third episode of “Our Man in Tehran,” a video series on nytimes.com, produced with VPRO in the Netherlands, and the second of two videos about issues facing women in Iran.
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Date of birth: July 6, 1982
Hometown: Dowlatabad, Iran, north of Isfahan
Education: M.A. in English literature from Islamic Azad University, central Tehran branch, 2013.
Employment: High school English teacher at state schools for 13 years; worked as translator for The Washington Post; works as translator and assistant to the Tehran bureau chief of The New York Times.
Life experiences: I got married at the age of 20, when I had just started to work as a teacher in a suburb in Isfahan. I moved to Tehran in 2003 to live with my husband. After we lived together for two years, I spent the next seven or eight years trying to fix my marriage and then get a divorce. I was officially divorced about two years ago.
How do you describe yourself? I am an adventurous person trapped in an atmosphere that hardly appreciates such a personality trait. I would like to know better the world in which I live and I want to be useful and helpful to other people.
Are you active on the Internet? I basically use the Internet for my work, which requires reading news websites daily. However, I use Facebook to be connected to my friends and interesting people whom I may not know in person.
What do you hope for the future? I would like to become a successful journalist.
What are your hobbies? I enjoy going out with friends and watching movies and, of course, reading books when I can find some free time.
Have you traveled outside of Iran? Where? What did you think? Once. I went to Syria when it was peaceful. It was a fabulous place with great people. I really feel sorry for what is happening there now.
What is your most important memory? It was the moment I could officially get a divorce.
It was about seven years of hardship before I heard someone call my name in the official registration office where my husband and I were sitting. The officer asked me to sign something certifying that I would get my divorce in return for giving up all my marriage rights, like the Islamic right for a woman to receive a mehrieh or marriage payment. I flew, I didn’t walk, from my seat to the desk where the paper granting me my freedom was waiting for the final signatures. I still clearly remember how that heavy burden I carried all those years on my shoulders was left on the ground when I stood up from the chair to go to the desk.
What do you love most? My personal slogan is that I need something to learn, something to laugh and something to help others with.
What is your favorite meal? I love gheymeh with rice — an Iranian stew of minced meat, tomatoes, peas and onions.
How do you see the future? I am not very optimistic about the near future. It would take many years for this country to improve in different areas for many reasons. But, I am thinking of emigrating to another country.
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