Tehran
All dialog in this strip is quoted from βDark Like Our Futureβ by Deepa Parent in The Guardian. From the article:
Thick black smoke was still rising in the sky, soot covered the streets and cars, balconies filled with black gunk, and the toxic air had filled the lungs as Tehran woke up after a night of airstrikes on the cityβs oil depots on Sunday.
In messages and voice notes sent to the Guardian, people described the situation in their homes and on the streets, some calling it βapocalypticβ. With the sun blotted out, disoriented people in Iranβs capital had to turn on their lights to see through the gloom.
Four oil depots and a petroleum logistics site in and around Tehran were hit.
People in Tehran will be sick from this, and dying earlier from this, for years to come.
Any response to the war on Iran I could make seems so inadequate next to the enormity of the damage weβre doing β and the enormity of our leadershipβs delusions.
But I still felt I should say something. βTheresaβs Daughterβ wrote:
Itβs easy to feel like our voices donβt matter. That without thousands or millions of followers, without a blue checkmark next to our names, what we say wonβt change anything. But thatβs exactly what people in power want us to believe. They want us to think weβre too small to make a difference. They want us to forget that history isnβt just something in books β itβs being written right now. And if we stay silent, they get to write it however they choose.
Our leadership seems completely indifferent to the suffering they cause. Talking about the sinking of an unarmed Iranian military ship, in which over a hundred people died, President Trump said that no effort was made to capture the ship because βItβs more fun to sink them.β
I read Daniel Larisonβs post βThe Poisoning of Tehran,β in which he quoted βNaginβ extensively. (The Guardian described Negin as βan activist and former political prisoner.β) I decided I should do a cartoon amplifying Neginβs voice. Obviously, the amplification I can provide is trivial, compared to a huge outlet like The Guardian or a well-known writer like Larison β but we all do what we can with the tools we have, right?
This obviously isnβt the usual sort of strip I do, so Iβm interested in what people think. Was this good? Or a misstep?
TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON
This cartoon has four panels, all showing a woman in her thirties in a modest but nice apartment.
PANEL 1
The woman pulls back a curtain, looking at the darkness outside.
CAPTION: βNeginβ β not her real name β lives in Tehran.
NEGIN: The situation is so frightening itβs hard to describe. Smoke has covered the city. I have severe shortness of breath and burning in my eyes and throat, and many others feel the same.
PANEL 2
Negin turns away from the window and speaks directly to us.
NEGIN: I ask those who have the ability, especially foreign media, to reflect on this situation. What are people supposed to do under these conditions?
PANEL 3
Negin speaks angrily.
NEGIN: If someone has a problem with the Islamic Republic government, thatβs one thing β But not with us, the people! This is no longer just a human rights violation.
PANEL 4
Negin sits on the sofa, slumping and looking down.
NEGIN: It is truly anti-human behavior.
A footnote below the cartoon says βDialog quoted from βDark Like Our Future,β The Guardian, march 8 2026.β
