(زن، زندگی، آزادی)
×۶
به نام تو که اسم رمز ماست
شب مهسا طلوع صد نداست
بخوان که شهر، سرود زن شود
که این وطن، وطن شود
شباهنگام میان کوچههاست
به در کوبد که نوبت شماست
برادرم که سنگر من است
چو سایهسار روشن است
دویدنش، فراخ سینهاش
چو جانپناه و مأمن است
بر تن شاهدان تازیانه میزنند
این ز جانخستگان پارهی تن مناند
بهجای او به قلب من بزن
جهان ترانه میشود
امان بده ببوسمش به خون
که جاودانه میشود
بسته بالای سر گیسوان، چه هیبتیست
کشتهاند هر که را راوی جنایتیست
سفر چرا؟
بمان و پس بگیر
ز جورشان نفس بگیر
بخوان که شهر سرود زن شود
که این وطن، وطن شود
×۶
به نام تو که اسم رمز ماست
شب مهسا طلوع صد نداست
بخوان که شهر، سرود زن شود
که این وطن، وطن شود
شباهنگام میان کوچههاست
به در کوبد که نوبت شماست
برادرم که سنگر من است
چو سایهسار روشن است
دویدنش، فراخ سینهاش
چو جانپناه و مأمن است
بر تن شاهدان تازیانه میزنند
این ز جانخستگان پارهی تن مناند
بهجای او به قلب من بزن
جهان ترانه میشود
امان بده ببوسمش به خون
که جاودانه میشود
بسته بالای سر گیسوان، چه هیبتیست
کشتهاند هر که را راوی جنایتیست
سفر چرا؟
بمان و پس بگیر
ز جورشان نفس بگیر
بخوان که شهر سرود زن شود
که این وطن، وطن شود
Langue: anglais
English Translation / Traduzione inglese: BlueBird
WOMEN'S ANTHEM
[Women and men chant several times:
Woman, Life, Liberty! ]
In the name of you, [1]
Our night's passcode
The dark downing of our Mahsa [2]
Is the dawn of a hundred Nedas [3]
Sing! Let a woman's song fill the town!
Make this land our homeland again!6
A nightghost frequenting the streets
knocks on the door, "Your turn!"
It's my brother, my stronghold
A bright shade tree
His running, his broad chest
Is my safe sanctuary
They're flogging the bystanders
Blood of my blood, tired souls
Let him go! Land your lash
At my heart!
As the world becomes a song
Give me a chance 7
To kiss him a kiss of blood
As he enters the hall of the slain!
She preps by tying up her hair [4]
Wow! What a fierce fighter!
They slew every single crime-teller
Why should we leave? [5]
Stay put! Take back our country
Make the tyranny lose its breath [6]
Sing! Let a woman's song fill the town!
Make this land our homeland again!
[Women and men chant several times:
Woman, Life, Liberty! ]
In the name of you, [1]
Our night's passcode
The dark downing of our Mahsa [2]
Is the dawn of a hundred Nedas [3]
Sing! Let a woman's song fill the town!
Make this land our homeland again!6
A nightghost frequenting the streets
knocks on the door, "Your turn!"
It's my brother, my stronghold
A bright shade tree
His running, his broad chest
Is my safe sanctuary
They're flogging the bystanders
Blood of my blood, tired souls
Let him go! Land your lash
At my heart!
As the world becomes a song
Give me a chance 7
To kiss him a kiss of blood
As he enters the hall of the slain!
She preps by tying up her hair [4]
Wow! What a fierce fighter!
They slew every single crime-teller
Why should we leave? [5]
Stay put! Take back our country
Make the tyranny lose its breath [6]
Sing! Let a woman's song fill the town!
Make this land our homeland again!
[1] Religious rulers of Iran usually begin their speech with "in the name of God". Protestors distinguish themselves by beginning with the name of those killed in the protests
[2] Mahsa (zhina) Amini, a young Iranian Kurd girl, died after spending a couple of hours in 'morality police' detention on 16 September 2022
[3] Neda Agha-Soltan was a young woman killed by direct shooting during 2009 election protests in Iran
[4] A short video of a young woman tying up her hair to get ready for a nightly confrontation with the police became a symbol of current Iranian protests. See the video
[5] The former ruler of Iran, Mohammad Reza Shah, once said "Any Iranian who doesn't like us, should use his passport and leave this country". Some new rulers of Iran and their acolytes repeat this famous saying. The line might refer to that sentence.
[6] The original sentence seems equivocal in Persian. It could literally mean either "take the breath out of (i.e. suffocate) their cruelty' or 'let their cruelty give you (more) breath [to continue fighting].
×
Mehdi Yarahi’s “Soroode Zan” (Woman’s anthem) is one of several songs from the protests, which takes the form of a soroode or revolutionary anthem. This hopeful song, which praises the women’s movement, was inspired by Mahsa Amini’s death and released in the first weeks of the protests.
Revolutionary Hit Parade: 12+1 Protest Songs from Iran