I partially recreated your page using a different symbol font and confirmed the same functionality bug on iOS. I was able to get the symbol font to render on iOS making this change:
<li><a class="" href="#">Mail</a></li>
change to
<li><a class="ss-mail" href="#"></a></li>
I am using symbolset because I already have a copy of all the font files, but the functionality bug was similar. In the case of symbolset, using your line of code actually showed the word 'Mail' where the symbol should be on iOS, while the symbol font rendered correctly on desktop browsers. When I switched the code to use the class name, the symbol works on iOS.
Here's a link to my example with the symbol font working on iOS (note: I didn't spend the time to make all the other fonts and javascript work).
Maybe your font has a similar problem rendering the symbols on iOS. If there is an alternative way to apply the font, via a CSS class similar to symbolset, you can try that and see if you get the same results. If not you can always use symbolset or a different symbol font.