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Iranian
Revolutionary: Ayatollah Khomeini
O Westerners, his hooded
eyes and severe demeanor, his unkempt gray beard and his black turban and robes
conveyed an avenger's wrath.
The image is the man.
Ruhollah Khomeini, the
dour cleric who led an Islamic revolution in Iran, perceived himself above all
as an avenger of the
humiliations that the West had for more than a
century
inflicted on the Muslims of the Middle East.
He was among many Muslim
autocrats in this century to embrace a mission designed as a corrective to the
West. Kemal Ataturk, the most daring of them, introduced Turkey, after the fall
of the Ottoman Empire in World War I, to Western-style secularism in order to
toughen his society against Europe's imperial designs. In the 1950s, Egypt's
Gamal Abdel Nasser, more intemperately, initiated a fierce campaign of Arab
nationalism aimed at eradicating the vestiges of Western colonialism from the
Arab world.
Khomeini took a different
course. All three, at their apogee, were rulers of once great empires that had
fallen into political and social disarray. But Ataturk and Nasser were committed
to resurrection by beating the West at its own game of building strong secular
states. Khomeini's strategy was to reject Western ways, keeping Iran close to
its Islamic roots.
Some ask, focusing on this
strategy, whether Khomeini was riding a popular wave in global affairs. In the
late 20th century, Muslims were not
alone in organizing to restore religious belief to government. Christians in
America, Jews in Israel,
even Hindus in India were
promoting the same end. As a revolutionary, Khomeini sought to bring down not
just the Shah's Western-oriented state but also the secular Weltanschauung that
stood behind it. Did Khomeini's triumph augur an intellectual shift of global
magnitude?
While historians ponder this
question, it is enough to say that Khomeini presided brilliantly over the
overthrow of a wounded regime. He was merciless and cunning. His well-advertised
piety complemented a prodigious skill in grasping and shaping Iran's complex
politics. Most important, he knew how to exploit the feelings of nationalist
resentment that characterized his time.
Ruhollah Khomeini —
his
given name means "inspired of God" — was born to a family of Shi'ite scholars in
a village near Tehran in 1902. Shi'ism, a minority sect in Islam, is Iran's
official religion. Like his father, he moved from theological studies to a
career as an Islamic jurist. Throughout his life, he was acclaimed for the depth
of his religious learning.
As a young seminary teacher,
Khomeini was no activist. From the 1920s to the 1940s, he watched passively as
Reza Shah, a monarch who took Ataturk as his model, promoted secularization and
narrowed clerical powers. Similarly, Khomeini was detached from the great crisis
of the 1950s in which Reza Shah's son Mohammed Reza Pahlavi turned to America
to save himself from demonstrators on Tehran's streets who were clamoring for
democratic reform
Khomeini was then the
disciple of Iran's
pre-eminent cleric, Ayatullah Mohammed Boroujerdi, a defender of the tradition
of clerical deference to established power. But in 1962, after Boroujerdi's
death, Khomeini revealed his long-hidden wrath and acquired a substantial
following as a sharp-tongued antagonist of the Shah's.
Khomeini was clearly at home
with populist demagogy. He taunted the Shah for his ties with Israel, warning
that the Jews were seeking to take over Iran.
He denounced as non-Islamic a bill to grant the vote to women. He called a
proposal to permit American servicemen based in Iran
to be tried in U.S. military courts "a document for Iran's
enslavement." In 1964 he was banished by the Shah to Turkey, then was permitted
to relocate in the Shi'ite holy city of An Najaf
in Iraq. But the Shah erred in thinking Khomeini would be forgotten. In An Najaf,
he received Iranians of every station and sent home tape cassettes of sermons to
be peddled in the bazaars. In exile, Khomeini became the acknowledged leader of
the opposition.
In An Najaf, Khomeini also
shaped a revolutionary doctrine. Shi'ism, historically, demanded of the state
only that it keep itself open to clerical guidance. Though relations between
clergy and state were often tense, they were rarely belligerent. Khomeini,
condemning the Shah's servility to America and his secularism, deviated from
accepted tenets to attack the regime's legitimacy, calling for a clerical state,
which had no Islamic precedent.
In late 1978 huge street
demonstrations calling for the Shah's abdication ignited the government's
implosion. Students, the middle class, bazaar merchants, workers, the army — the
pillars of society — successively abandoned the regime. The Shah had nowhere to
turn for help but to Washington. Yet the more he did, the more isolated he
became. In January 1979 he fled to the West. Two weeks later, Khomeini returned
home in triumph.
Popularly acclaimed as
leader, Khomeini set out to confirm his authority and lay the groundwork for a
clerical state. With revolutionary fervor riding high, armed vigilante bands and
kangaroo courts made bloody work of the Shah's last partisans. Khomeini canceled
an experiment with parliamentarism and ordered an Assembly of Experts to draft
an Islamic constitution. Overriding reservations from the Shi'ite hierarchy, the
delegates designed a state that Khomeini would command and the clergy would run,
enforcing religious law. In November, Khomeini partisans, with anti-American
passions still rising, seized the U.S. embassy and held 52 hostages.
Over the remaining decade of
his life, Khomeini consolidated his rule. He had thousands killed while stamping out a rebellion of the
secular left. He stacked the state bureaucracies with faithful clerics and
drenched the schools and the media with his personal doctrines. After purging
the military and security services, he rebuilt them to ensure their loyalty to
the clerical state.
Khomeini also launched a
campaign to "export" — the term was his — the revolution to surrounding Muslim
countries. His provocations of Iraq in 1980 helped start a war that lasted eight
years, at the cost of a million lives, and that ended only after America
intervened to sink several Iranian warships in the Persian Gulf.
Iranians asked whether God had revoked his blessing of the revolution. Khomeini
described the defeat as "more deadly than taking poison."
To rally his demoralized
supporters, he issued the celebrated fatwa condemning to death the writer Salman
Rushdie for heresies contained in his novel The Satanic Verses. Though born a
Muslim, Rushdie was not a Shi'ite; a British subject, he had no ties to Iran.
The fatwa, an audacious claim of authority over Muslims everywhere, was the
revolution's ultimate export. Khomeini died a few months later. But the fatwa
lived on, a source of bitterness — as he intended it to be — between Iran and
the West.
Beside the fatwa, what is
Khomeini's legacy? The revolution, no longer at risk, still revels in having
repeatedly, with impunity, defied the American Satan. The Islamic state was
proof to the faithful — as the Soviet Union
was to generations of communists — that the Western system need not be a
universal model.
Yet Khomeini rejected a
parallel between his doctrines and the fundamentalism propounded by other Muslim
dissidents. He never described himself as fundamentalist. He often said that
Islam is not for 14 centuries ago in Arabia but for all time.
Since Khomeini's death, the
popular appeal of an Islamic state — and of fundamentalism — has surely dimmed.
Thinkers still debate and warriors kill, but no country seems prepared to
emulate Iran. Perhaps revolutions happen only under majestic leaders, and no one
like Khomeini has since appeared.
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