| May 2004 / Guest Editorial – Abu Dharr | |||||||||
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The threat of sectarianism and nationalism to the line of the ImamIn order to properly understand the achievement of the late Imam Khomeini (r.a.) and the Islamic Revolution in Iran, we need to understand them as being simultaneously located within four concentric circles: the oppressed peoples, the Islamic peoples, the Shi’i peoples, and the Iranian peoples. Note that each of these categories are referred to as "peoples" rather than a single people, as none of them has an over-riding homogeneity that can justify their reduction to a single "people". This may be considered quite obvious when we speak of the oppressed, the Muslims and the Shi’is. But some Iranian nationalists will have a serious problem with us referring to the Iranian peoples. This is only to be expected, considering the extent to which the Euro-secular issue of nationalism has imposed itself not only on Muslim peoples, including not only Iranians, but also on Turks, Arabs, Indians, Pakistanis, Malays and so on. If we accept and operate within the definition of Iranians as "one people", we accept as a historical fait accompli the creation by European colonialism and the forces of European imperial geopolitics of a nation-state cobbled out of historic Persia. This is the origin of the name "Iran" and the "Iranian nation," and we should not accept the imposition of such definitions on us by the force of imperial power and the imperialists’ determination to create colonialist "facts on the ground" in the same way as the zionists are today striving to create "facts on the ground" in occupied Palestine. Such a definition of Iranian nationhood and nation-statehood is wholly unfounded, as well as being contrary to the contemporary historic reality that throughout the Middle East and the Muslim world, people’s convictions, grievances, principles and divine commitments transcend the geopolitical infrastructure of nation-states by which we understand the Middle East. Be that as it may, the Islamic Revolution – whether we like it or not – was anchored within these four spheres: the world of the oppressed, the Islamic context, the Shi’i domain, and the Iranian reality. While Imam Khomeini provided the defining and guiding leadership of the Revolution, the centrality and importance of the oppressed and Islamic elements of these concentric spheres were clear for all to see, particularly of course the oppressed and struggling peoples of the rest of the Muslim world. The Shi’i and Iranian elements, on the other hand, integral and inseparable as they were, were never emphasised or even overtly displayed in any public or official sense. They were implicit in the forms and structures established by the Revolution, inevitably considering the Shi’i and Iranian nature of the society that brought the Revolution about, but were never flaunted or boasted of. It may have been a unconscious reflection of the tone and style implicit in the example set by the Imam, with his constant dwelling on the plight of all oppressed peoples and the common issues facing all Muslims, that virtually all leaders and officials of the new Islamic state understood and expressed their policies and decisions in terms of the global and inclusive spheres of the oppressed and the Muslim Ummah. Imam Khomeini repeatedly told us, after all, that the future belongs to the oppressed. Among the key mottos of the Islamic Revolution was the Qur’anic ayah: "And We want to confer privilege on those who are oppressed in the land and make them leaders and make them heirs" (Surah al-Qasas, 28:5). Imam Khomeini constantly referred and appealed to the downtrodden, the barefooted and the impoverished of the world. The evidence of this ethos in the shaping of the Islamic Revolution was instrumental in the allegiance and support that Iran and Imam Khomeini attracted among Muslims from the tropical areas of southeast Asia to the equatorial areas of Africa. It became the norm for both ordinary Muslims and Islamic movements to wait for the Imam to present his convictions on the issues of the day – be they the Palestinian issue, the Afghan issue, the Salman Rushdie fitna, or whatever – before determining their own positions. It was this natural affinity felt for the Imam by the dispossessed the world over that most scared the world powers and those committed to the maintenance of the existing unjust, exploitative, international order and social orders. Ironically, however, it was precisely this global and general commitment to the Imam within the spheres of the oppressed and the global Muslim Ummah, that prompted an unintended backlash among some Shi’is – the sectarian or ‘Safavid’ Shi’is, as Ali Shari’ati called them – and nationalist Iranians. These trends have been among the most damaging and dangerous to the spirit and progress of the Islamic Revolution. These two elements were clever enough to ride the wave of the Imam and the Revolution, but later began to interpret the emphasis on the oppressed and global Muslim ummah as a de-emphasis of their peculiar understanding of Shi’ism and a rejection of their Western-imposed sense of nationalism. For them, the pendulum had swung too far into the spheres of the oppressed and the Muslims; something had to be done. The most obvious and first hint of their resurgence was the gradual removal from the discourse of the Islamic Revolution and State of public references to the oppressed of the world and the larger Islamic Ummah; hence the once-common references to the mustad’afeen and millet-e-Islam have all but disappeared. Another clue has been the increased emphasis on nationalist symbols, such as the Iranian flag and the national anthem. Increasingly, Muslims notice that Iranian officials and institutions seem to favour relations with other Shi’is, rather than treating all Muslims alike. The anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, marked in February each year, is no longer an occasion for bringing together members of all four concentric circles of society within which the Imam located the Islamic Revolution; instead, over recent years, it has increasingly become a conclave of Shi’is – and mainly Iranian Shi’is at that. Little wonder, then, that many of the oppressed Muslims in the world, who pledged their support to the leadership of Imam Khomeini and set out to follow the example of his movement in their own countries and societies, have long since concluded that the Islamic Republic now operates only in the Shi’i and Iranian spheres. The positions and example of the current Rahbar, Imam Khomeini’s successor Ayatullah al-Udhma Sayyid Ali Khamenei, indicate that the breadth of vision of Imam Khomeini lives on in Islamic Iran; but the behaviour and statements of many officials of Islamic Iran fail to live up to the standards set by the late Imam and by those who are still following his lead. All to often, it appears that there is little understanding of his ethos or commitment to maintaining it. The sectarian and nationalist model of Iran that they project plays into the hands of the US, Israel and other western powers who remain committed to subverting the Islamic State and undermining the model it offers for mustad’afeen elsewhere. This is a peril to which the Revolutionaries of Islamic Iran must awake before it is too late and the Islamic State remains so in name but loses its essence in practice. Abu Dharr. |
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