
Loss of a century, Veiled women mourn Iran's Khamenei in Delhi's Karbala
India Today
With posters of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, women protesters were seen emotionally charged, and said they felt they had lost someone from their own family. Dressed in black and with tears in their eyes, they chanted anti-Israel, anti-US slogans. Read here
Women in black abayas and niqabs stood shoulder to shoulder, some whispering prayers, others openly weeping. Many had never attended a public protest before. Yet on Sunday evening, they stepped out of their homes, bringing children, sisters and elderly mothers along at Delhi’s Shah-e-Mardan Karbala in Jor Bagh, to mourn the killing of Iran’s Supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
For them, this was not distant geopolitics. It felt personal.
Zaibun Nisa Zaidi from Laxmi Nagar arrived with six members of her family. She clutched her candle tightly as she spoke, her voice steady but her eyes moist.
“He stood for humanity. He raised his voice for the oppressed,” she said. “What was the fault of an 86-year-old man? If standing with humanity is a crime, then we are all guilty.”
Around her, women nodded in agreement.
Dilkash, a first-year BSc student from Ghaziabad, said she woke up to the news early in the morning. The shock, she said, stayed with her through the day.













