Forty Days After January Massacres, Iranians Pour Into the Streets, Defying the Government

Iranian state TV via AP

In Shia tradition, 40 days is the standard period for the soul to complete its transition. It is believed that the family of Imam Hussein returned to his grave in Karbala 40 days after his martyrdom, establishing the precedent for the Arba'in pilgrimage.

Advertisement

Beyond religious figures, it is a standard custom for Iranian families to hold a memorial service on the 40th day after a loved one's passing to mark the end of the formal mourning period.

Forty days ago, Iran was a much different place. Following a call to protest the regime from the Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi on Jan. 8, Iranians poured into the streets by the millions.

The protests began in late December 2025 after the collapse of the Iranian currency. Shopkeepers, the backbone of the 1979 Iranian revolution and strongest supporters since, took to the streets. They were immediately joined by Iranians of all ages in the biggest protests since 1979. After the call to take to the streets from Pahlavi, the authorities decided to act.

The night of January 8-9 saw Iranian security forces open fire at protesters in at least 90 cities. The barbarity of the action shocked the world.

Advertisement

This video of a father searching row upon row of body bags for his son, Sepehr, calling out his name and weeping, has gone viral. It has become a potent symbol of the resistance to the government.

Forty days later, Sepehr's father addressed relatives and friends.

The Free Press:

Now Sepehr Shokri’s 40-day death ceremony is circulating on social media, through channels linked to Iran’s expatriate opposition. But his father refuses to hold a traditional funeral service. Instead, he thanks mourners for coming to his son’s wedding. “We will not talk about death here. We will only speak of life and joy.” He says you may ask what the bride’s name is. “Her name is Iran,” he offers. All of this takes place in the same cemetery where Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini is interred.

The celebrations are defiant, bold, and poetic. The dead are being called javeed naman or eternal names, not martyrs (shaheed), the term the Islamic Republic uses for fallen comrades. Forty days ago, many of those being remembered were waiting for help that was supposed to be on its way—promised prematurely by President Donald Trump in a social media post. Now their families have been left fighting to preserve the memories of their loved ones.

Advertisement

The regime knew this was coming. The 40 days of mourning have, in the past, marked a renewal of unrest in the streets. This time, despite the threat of being fired on by security forces, Iranians once again took to the streets. Instead of political protests, the people are celebrating birthdays, weddings, and other normal life events their dead children never got to experience.

Regime murderers could only stand by and watch.

“People are angry and getting ready for the second go,” Nazenin Ansari, an editor at the opposition newspaper Kayhan London, says. “Iran pre–January 7 [before the height of the protests] is not the same as Iran post–January 10 [when the regime began killing demonstrators en masse].”

Advertisement

Arrests continue, and family members who complain are threatened with repercussions, sometimes of a sexual and violent nature, according to Ansari. After the protests, she told me, regime henchmen visited at least one school and demanded students, both boys and girls, lift their tops so that they could see who had birdshot wounds. Fourteen protesters were sentenced to death on Monday, according to Iran International TV. Activists worry that if their names are not circulated and pressure is not applied to the regime, they will be killed soon.

People have always spoken about brain drain from Iran, since young people there often pursue freedom and greater opportunity overseas. Now the talk is of the thousands of brilliant young people who have been lost to violence from their own government.

“It brings tears to my eyes how courageous they are, and to what extent they are putting their lives on the line,” Ansari told the Free Press. “These are our modern-day heroes. You know Iranians love to read the Shahnameh,” she said, referring to the epic Book of Kings from Iran’s mythical past. “But now we have the story in real life.”

There are at least 30,000 stories to add to the Book of Kings of Iranian men and women, boys and girls, moms and dads, grandparents, and all the loved ones cut down because one, old, feeble man wants to remain in power.

Advertisement

Related: War With Iran 'Imminent'? Trump Could Give the 'Go' Order at Any Time

The new year promises to be one of the most pivotal in recent history. Midterm elections will determine if we continue to move forward or slide back into lawfare, impeachments, and the toleration of fraud.

PJ Media will give you all the information you need to understand the decisions that will be made this year. Insightful commentary and straight-on, no-BS news reporting have been our hallmarks since 2005.

Get 60% off your new VIP membership by using the code FIGHT. You won't regret it.


Recommended

Trending on PJ Media Videos

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Advertisement
Advertisement