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Dara and Sara -
Iran's Islamic alternative to Ken and Barbie
 
Meet Dara and Sara, Iran's answer
to Ken and Barbie.
The Muslim dolls have been
developed by a government agency to promote traditional values, with their
modest clothing and pro-family backgrounds.
They are widely seen as an effort
to counter the American dolls and accessories that have flooded the Iranian
market
Toy seller Masoumeh Rahimi
welcomed the dolls, saying Barbie was "foreign to Iran's culture"
because some of the buxom, blonde dolls have revealing clothing.
She said young girls who play with
Barbie, a doll she sees as wanton, could grow into women who reject Iranian
values.
"I think every Barbie doll is
more harmful than an American missile," Ms Rahimi said.
Dara and Sara were born as
characters in school books and their lives have also grown in stories that are
being sold on cassette along with the dolls.
They have been developed and are
being marketed by the Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and
Young Adults, a government agency affiliated with the Ministry of Education.
Toy sellers are welcoming the new characters
The siblings help each other solve
problems and turn to their loving parents for guidance.
The children are supposed to be
eight years old, young enough under Islamic law for Sara to appear in public
without a headscarf.
But each of the four models of
Sara comes with a white scarf to cover her brown or black hair.
Another toy seller, Mehdi Hedayat,
said: "Dara and Sara are strategic products to preserve our national
identity.
"And of course, it is an
answer to Barbie and Ken, which have dominated Iran's toy market."
Some 100,000 dolls have been
manufactured - in China - and each will sell for 125,000 rials ($15) compared
with 332,000 rials for a genuine Barbie and 25,000 rials for a copy.

http://www.daraandsara.com/
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