Gisuboran

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Hair cutting - Solidarity with Iranian Protests in Australia

Gisuborān meaning haircutting (Persian: گیسوبران) is one of the mourning rituals in Iranian culture. This ritual gives a sad and emotional state to mourning. In 2022 women in Iran and later internationally used haircutting as a protest against the treatment of women in Iran. The BBC included an unknown woman cutting her hair as one of their 100 Women in 2022.[1]

In Shahnameh, written by Ferdowsi, Farangis cut her hair because of her husband's unjust death, named Siyâvash.[2][3]

This ritual has also been reflected in poems of Hafez,[4] Khaghani[5] and Salman Savaji.[6][7]

Modern writers like Simin Daneshvar have used this ritual on their metaphors. Simin writes in savushun about a tree named "Gisu tree" (the hair tree) from which women would hang their cut hair.[8][9]

In culture of Iranic ethnics

Gisuboran for Mahsa Amini

References

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