CAMBRIDGE – On Saturday, March 18, Harvard University will host the Iran Freedom
Concert, a rally organized by Harvard students to support their counterparts in
Iran.

"As tensions rise over nuclear issues, our diverse student coalition wants to
spotlight the human side of the Iran crisis," said co-organizer Adam Scheuer, a
senior and editor at the Harvard Middle East Review.
"Iranian students are denied basic rights Americans take advantage of every
day. But there is a brave student movement in Iran working for change, and we
need to support them." Widespread student protests in Iran have broken out in
recent years, despite a brutal crackdown by the regime's security forces.
The concert, which begins at 9 p.m. at Leverett House, features leading
campus musicians and speakers from campus groups exposing repression in Iran.
Nine organizations are co-sponsoring, including an unusual alliance of campus
Democrats and Republicans.
"The coalition doesn't take a stand on policy debates like foreign
intervention," explained freshman co-organizer Alex McLeese. "But we agree that
the fundamental rights of Iranians cannot be held hostage to diplomatic
maneuverings over Iran's nuclear program."

The Iran Freedom Concert takes place just before the traditional Persian new
year of Norouz
reflecting
the students' hope for a new day for freedom in Iran.
"Iranian students are arrested for what they write on their blogs and have to
take their exams in handcuffs," noted freshman co-organizer Nick Manske. "In
fact, the essential elements of this concert are illegal in Iran: live singing,
mixed dancing, and discussing social messages. Not to mention the restrictions
on women, minorities, and journalists."
That message is being echoed on campuses across the country, with
simultaneous rallies planned at Georgetown, UPenn, Duke, and other schools.
Prominent Iranian dissidents, as well as the American Islamic Congress, are
sending statements of support.
"This is a critical moment for Iran," Scheuer said. "Iranian activists need
to know that American students are ready to help them hold the Iranian regime
accountable. We want to help our counterparts in Iran seize the moment and
advance their civil rights movement."
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