OXFORDSHIRE, United Kingdom — “The world is fucking on fire right now,” Iranian-American Activist Hoda Katebi said on the VOICES stage Thursday afternoon, on the fifth day of Iran’s government-imposed Internet blackout.
“How can we ever think that what we’re creating [in fashion] shouldn’t be engaging with that?” she added, implicating the fashion industry as part of the global economy that perpetuates oppressive systems. Western nations are “profiting off of the fact that [certain] countries aren’t growing after all,” she said.
In an impassioned and far-ranging impromptu speech, Katebi highlights the role of US and UK government sanctions as having a crippling effect on everyday Iranians and how brands like Nike undermine ongoing social revolutions in the world by touting its hijab athletic wear amid reports that the company allegedly sources some materials from Muslim Uighur internment camps in China.
Katebi, who founded the Blue Tin Production Co-Op — known as America’s first apparel manufacturing co-op run by refugee women — calls this “revolution-washing,” not unlike corporate “greenwashing.” Large corporations guilty of revolution-washing market themselves as allies of marginalised groups without fully committing to the related ethos, she explained.