FakhrAfagh Parsa (Persian: فخرآفاق پارسا) (born in Tehran in 1898), was a journalist during the Iranian Constitutional Revolution and a member of the Women's Movement in Iran.
[2] This magazine, which was first published every two weeks, focused on subjects related to the freedom of women in European style and the equality of rights.
[4] FakhrAfagh Parsa, in the fourth subject of the publication of Women's World magazine, wrote two articles that created a lot of troubles and problems.
The two articles, titled "The Necessity of Girls' Education" and "Women's Spiritual Tolerance and the Need for Revision of the Marriage law", sparked the anger of the clergy, causing exile and many problems for her and her family.
After her exile, Arak clerics introduced her as the enemy of Islam, so FakhrAfagh, knowing the execution of several people, fled to Qom with her family for a religious cleansing in Arak, and, in coordination with the government officials there, she managed to exile in Qom.