Standing: Mehr'angiz Eskandari, Banu Chanāni, Haiedeh Afshār, Abbaseh Pāyvar, Ghodsiyyeh Moshiri.
Their objective was "to emphasize [the] continuous respect for the laws and rituals of Islam; to promote the education and moral upbringing of girls; to encourage national industries; to spread literacy among adult women; to provide care for orphaned girls; to set up hospitals for poor women; to organise co-operatives as a means of developing national industries; and to give material and moral support to the defenders of the country in the event of war.
[3][1] Following Eskandari's death in 1925, Mastoureh Afshar, assumed Eskandari's role as the League’s president with the support of prominent figures such as Nur-al-Hoda Mangana, Homa Mahmudi, Fakhr-Ozma Arghun, Sadiqa Dawlatabadi, and Fakr Afaq Parsa.
[6] In the year 1922, the Patriotic Women’s Association was established with the esteemed work of Mohtaram Eskandari, Nurolhouda Mangeneh, Mastureh Afshar and Madam Fakhr Afagh.
The Nasvan Watan Khaw Newspaper published eleven issues over three years (from 1923 to 1926) and attracted many liberal women.