A familiar slogan has in recent days: “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon, I sacrifice my life for Iran.”
That phrase has been chanted at protests that have . The spark of the uprising and has been economic hardship and government mismanagement.
But as an , I believe the slogan’s presence signals that protests go deeper than economic frustration alone. When people in Iran chant “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon,” they are, I believe, rejecting the theocratic system in Iran entirely. In other words, the current crisis isn’t just about bread and jobs, it’s about who decides what Iran stands for.
The origins of the slogan
The phrase “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon, I sacrifice my life for Iran” first gained prominence during , when hundreds of thousands of people protested a disputed presidential election in Iran.
It has since appeared in successive major demonstrations, from the to the . It was also prominent during the 2022 “, sparked by the death of an , following her detention by Iran’s morality police for not wearing a “proper” hijab.
The phrase ties together two key aspects of successive Iranian protest movements: domestic economic, political or social grievances and an explicit rejection of the government’s justification for that hardship — namely, that sacrifice at home is necessary to fulfill ideological goals of “resistance” abroad.
In particular, the slogan targets the Islamic Republic’s decades-long .
Estimates suggest that the regime has channeled annually to regional allies since the 1980s — funds that many Iranians argue should instead address domestic infrastructure, health care and education.
From alliance to resentment
Understanding the full meaning of the slogan requires historical context. Under the U.S.-aligned , which ruled from 1925 to 1979, Iran maintained diplomatic and economic ties with Israel while pursuing modernization.
The Shah’s opponents, particularly leftist groups, exploited these connections, using slogans like “Iran’s become Palestine, why sit still, O people?” to mobilize against the monarchy.
Indeed, many of the Islamic revolutionary leaders that had ties with Palestinian groups.
After the revolution, the Islamic Republic inverted both its ties to the U.S. and Iran’s relationship with Israel, making anti-Israel rhetoric and support for Palestinian causes central to its identity.
Ruhollah Khomeini, the leader of the Islamic Revolution, declared solidarity with oppressed Muslims worldwide, positioning Iran as the vanguard of resistance against “Western imperialism and Zionism.”
But this ideological commitment came with substantial costs for Iranians.
Iran’s support for Hezbollah , its in the Palestinian group’s fight against Israel, and its involvement in Syrian and Iraqi conflicts have contributed to international sanctions, diplomatic isolation and economic pressure on Iran. And these burdens have fallen disproportionately on ordinary citizens rather than the ruling elite.
Economic crisis and political defiance
“Down with the Islamic Republic” is also chanted alongside “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon” in the current uprising — the most serious that the Iranian government has faced in years.
But neither lethal force — at least 1,203 arrests thus far — nor supreme leader Ali Khamenei’s Jan. 3 order for a harsher crackdown has quelled the unrest.
Instead, protests to .
The demonstrations illustrate how economic and political grievances intersect in Iran. When demonstrators chant “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon” while protesting bread prices and unemployment, they are not compartmentalizing issues — they are drawing a direct line between foreign policy choices and domestic suffering.
The slogan makes three simultaneous arguments.
First, it rejects imposed solidarity. Many Iranians, including those sympathetic to Palestinian rights, resent being conscripted into conflicts that are not their own. And the government’s insistence that Iranians must make sacrifices for distant causes breeds resentment rather than unity. Take the government’s effort to portray the 12-day war with Israel in June 2025 as a moment of national resistance. Rather, many Iranians instead for either provoking the conflict or failing to meaningfully defend the country from Israeli — or American — bombs.
The slogan also demands accountability for resource allocation. When state media in Syria or Yemen , the disconnect between rhetoric and reality becomes glaring.
And finally, the protest message reclaims political belonging rooted in Iranian national history — and not just the ideological concerns of the Islamic Republic. By invoking Iran specifically, “I sacrifice my life for Iran,” protesters assert that their primary allegiance is to their own country, not to transnational ideological movements, regional proxies or the ruling government’s ideology.
The limits of solidarity
For all its longevity, however, the slogan has proven divisive. While some see it as a necessary assertion of self-determination after decades of enforced sacrifice, others — including some Iranian leftist intellectuals and activists — view it as abandoning solidarity with oppressed peoples.
But it doesn’t need to be an either/or. Many protesters risking bullets to demand “Iran first” are not expressing indifference to the suffering of Palestinians. Rather, they are insisting that effective solidarity requires a functioning state capable of supporting its own citizens, and that genuine liberation begins at home.
Regardless, the Islamic Republic’s response has been to , suggesting that those who question support for Gaza or Lebanon are complicit with imperialism — a narrative enforced through a mix of rhetoric and coercion.
But this framing increasingly fails to persuade a population that has watched while billions of dollars flow to foreign conflicts. The effects of sanctions and shrinking foreign-currency revenues have pushed the Iranian state to raise taxes on households while shielding military and ideological spending. Meanwhile, the dollar’s daily surge and the have accelerated inflation and eroded purchasing power.
Authoring one’s own story
Undoubtedly, economic grievances underpin the current protests in Iran. However, the slogans used in Iranian protests — be they over election disputes, economic crises or women’s rights — indicate a broader critique of the Islamic Republic’s governing philosophy.
In the current wave of protests, demonstrators articulate through slogans both what they reject — “Down with the Islamic Republic” — and what many now seek to happen: “This is the final battle; Pahlavi will return,” a reference to the exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi.
The “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon” chant asks: What does it mean for a government to prioritize foreign conflicts over domestic welfare? How long can imposed solidarity substitute for actual prosperity? And who has the right to determine which causes are worth sacrifice?
Such questions extend beyond Iran. They challenge assumptions about how governments invoke international causes to justify domestic policies and when citizens have the right to say, “Our story comes first.”
As such, the chant “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon, I sacrifice my life for Iran” is, I believe, both protest and reclamation. It rejects the Iranian state’s narrative of mandatory sacrifice while asserting the right of people to author a national story focused on Iran’s own needs, challenges and aspirations.
, Professor of Near Eastern Studies,
This article is republished fromunder a Creative Commons license. Read the .