Thomas Erdbrink writes for The Washington Post:
Hidden in a corner of the atrium of the tiny Feresteh shopping center, right behind Tehran’s only Victoria’s Secret and a traditional pastry seller, the high-end Lime coffee shop is only for those who know where to find it.
The music of pop singer Ricky Martin filled the air as customers ordered $4 shots of espresso and connected to the shop’s wireless Internet with their cellphones. Girls with long hair spilling out from under their obligatory Islamic head scarves giggled shyly as they held hands with their boyfriends.
“People should feel at ease here in Lime,” said the cafe’s owner, Joobin Gharaei. “We want to create a private atmosphere.”
Surrounded by Lime’s art-covered walls, customers could almost forget that they live in the Islamic Republic, where Shiite Muslim clerics advocate a separation of the sexes and pop music and clubs are strictly forbidden.
Iranian law prescribes what people are allowed to do, wear and say in public. Women’s hair must be covered, and showing affection is illegal. Although many people openly voice criticism of Iran’s leaders, there is always the fear that someone will overhear. So most people create their own worlds, at home and at the homes of their friends.
Nonetheless, coffee shops are mushrooming in Iran’s cities, providing small retreats from busy streets and prying eyes.
Tehran’s coffee shops numbered just a handful 10 years ago. But now hundreds dot the city,with a new one popping up every few days it seems, even in places such as car washes and movie theaters. They are among the very few semi-public places where young people meet and artists and intellectuals debate.
But reality is never far away. On a recent evening, just outside the shopping center where Lime opened its doors in 2009, officers with Iran’s morality police — a unit that controls the streets to “promote virtue and prevent vice” — were stopping cars filled with boys and girls.
They arrested some — almost arbitrarily it seemed — for wearing tight clothes or sitting in a car with someone they were not married to. But none of the young people appeared to be married, and they were all dressed similarly.
It’s better not to be on the streets, said one unmarried couple who are regular customers of the Star, a cafe in an up-and-coming middle-class neighborhood.
“The coffee shops are our hideaways,” said Nima Manzouri, 24, who was there with his girlfriend. “If we hold hands on the streets, we can be arrested. So we come here, spend 10,000 tomans” — about $8 — “and chat.”
But in no way are the coffee shops official free zones, nor are they off limits to the morality police. They are tolerated, but they can easily be closed down.