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- <text id=91TT0943>
- <title>
- May 06, 1991: Iran:A Revolution Loses Its Zeal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 06, 1991 Scientology
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- IRAN
- A Revolution Loses Its Zeal
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Faced with a population tired of hardship, Khomeini's successor
- signals his desire to soften some Islamic strictures and attract
- more foreign investment
- </p>
- <p>By EDWARD W. DESMOND/TEHRAN
- </p>
- <p> The icons of Iran's Islamic revolution are not what they
- used to be. The former U.S. embassy in downtown Tehran, where
- radical students held 52 U.S. hostages for 444 days, retains
- only the faintest echo of those angry days. The anti-U.S.
- slogans on the compound's walls are faded, and the Revolutionary
- Guards standing outside are definitely part of a new generation.
- A bearded, young guardsman asks of a passing foreigner, "Are
- you American?" To a nod, he responds with a big smile and says,
- "Very good."
- </p>
- <p> Outside the city, a huge gold-domed shrine marking the
- tomb of Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini, who died in 1989, is all
- but complete, and on weekends families flock there. But apart
- from a few offering fervent prayers near his tomb, most of the
- visitors chat and play with their children, unawed by the
- presence of the revolutionary imam's earthly remains.
- </p>
- <p> Twelve years after Khomeini came to power, Iran's Islamic
- revolution has finally softened around the edges. The signs of
- fitful change are everywhere. On Tehran's streets women still
- observe hijab (the veil), the Islamic injunction that women keep
- themselves covered save for their faces and hands. But some have
- exchanged their shapeless black chadors for slightly fitted
- raincoats in colors like green and purple. Veils that are
- supposed to completely cover a woman's hair are inching back to
- reveal hints of the lush coiffures underneath. Women's lips and
- fingernails are beginning to sport glosses for the first time
- in years, though in appropriately muted shades.
- </p>
- <p> Much of that change, dramatic by the standards of
- revolutionary Iran, has been at least indirectly endorsed by
- President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who came to power two
- months after Khomeini's death. Rafsanjani has not actually
- called for a reversal of strict Islamic injunctions, but in
- oblique ways he is signaling that he favors a more relaxed
- approach, especially in the enforcement of hijab. In a much
- publicized sermon last November, for example, Rafsanjani chided
- fellow clerics who make a virtue of "austerity" and argued that
- "appreciating beauty and seeking embellishment are serious
- feelings. To fight them is not God's desire."
- </p>
- <p> The remarks ignited a debate among the country's mullahs
- that is still blazing. Two weeks ago, Ayatullah Abdul Karim
- Mousavi Ardebili, a conservative religious figure and former
- chief justice, said in a televised sermon that he was ashamed
- by the way hijab was being flouted and that "the revolution was
- headed for destruction" if the people did not step forward.
- Within a few days the Revolutionary Guards, who sometimes act
- independently of government wishes, began rounding up young
- women in the street whose dress they found objectionable. On
- Vali Asr Avenue, the capital's main shopping boulevard, a
- guardsman tried halfheartedly to capture a young woman by
- throwing a blanket over her. Surprisingly enough, she fought
- back and escaped.
- </p>
- <p> That small incident, as much as the debate between
- Rafsanjani and the conservative stalwarts, illustrates a
- revolution running low on zeal. Today Rafsanjani faces a
- population exhausted by eight years of war with Iraq, domestic
- political turmoil and a severe economic slump. The President
- seems to realize he must respond to those hardships, and thus
- has tried to ease the harsh enforcement of hijab. More
- important, Rafsanjani wants to end Iran's pariah status in the
- world community and gain desperately needed aid. "We are in a
- period of reconstruction," says Rajaie Khorassani, chairman of
- the Foreign Affairs Committee in the Majlis (parliament). In a
- more terse analysis, a Western diplomat concludes, "The
- revolution is over."
- </p>
- <p> The cost of living seems as much on people's minds as
- anything in the Koran. A well-paid government worker makes about
- $100 a month, but that is less than the monthly rent of a
- squalid flat in Tehran. Many men have at least two jobs, and
- working-class Iranians have taken to muttering that "life was
- better under the Shah."
- </p>
- <p> Rafsanjani wants to rescue the economy by returning the
- nationalized industries to private hands and attracting foreign
- investment and technology. His government has also initiated
- talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in hopes of
- eventually obtaining loans. Those steps, however, depart from
- the revolution's commitment to reject outside influence (the
- Islamic republic's constitution explicitly forbids foreign
- investment), and his adversaries in the Majlis will not go
- along.
- </p>
- <p> So far, Rafsanjani has succeeded on one major front: he
- has shed much of Iran's ultraconservative image and upgraded or
- restored ties with many European and Middle Eastern countries as
- well as Canada. Rafsanjani's opposition to Iraq's seizure of
- Kuwait, despite calls in the Majlis for Iran to back Saddam
- Hussein, earned Tehran considerable credit in foreign capitals.
- </p>
- <p> Rafsanjani is quietly eager to improve ties with
- Washington, at least in part to get back $11 billion in
- American-held assets frozen in 1979. But Rafsanjani cannot
- easily reverse 12 years of violent rhetoric directed against the
- "Great Satan." So while government officials have toned down the
- diatribes against the U.S. in the hope of better relations, they
- still lash out now and again lest the contradictions become too
- obvious. Two weeks ago, Ayatullah Ali Khamenei, the country's
- new spiritual leader, declared, "The U.S. will never have normal
- relations with a system that has made Islamic values its most
- cherished desire."
- </p>
- <p> Rafsanjani's rise as a pragmatist is possible only because
- his credentials as an Islamic revolutionary are impeccable. Yet
- he has consistently shown political acumen and moderation
- throughout his government career. Several times he won popular
- elections to posts, and in Friday prayers his easy manner is
- refreshing to a country tired of harangues from harsh-tongued
- mullahs. In his famous November sermon, for example, Rafsanjani
- argued that young people were being asked to deny the "sexual
- urge" for too long, and that "temporary marriage," a Shi`ite
- institution endorsing sexual liaisons for fixed periods of time,
- ought to be more widely accepted. Says a Western diplomat: "His
- main weapon is that he speaks the same language as ordinary
- people, and he talks directly about their difficulties."
- </p>
- <p> Rafsanjani's greatest problem will be to consolidate his
- power. But the system, which is fairly democratic within the
- terms of the Islamic constitution, makes it hard for him to
- circumvent the Majlis. The deputies, for example, recently fired
- his Health Minister for being inadequately "Islamic," and last
- week a similar motion against his Education Minister was under
- discussion. Still, Rafsanjani is gradually consolidating his
- authority. The Komiteh, the police equivalent of the
- Revolutionary Guard, is being merged with the regular police,
- which should limit their ability to act as independent enforcers
- of hijab.
- </p>
- <p> Iran may be emerging from the long night of a bloody
- revolution, but as a Persian proverb says, the apple turns many
- times before it falls. There are still severe human rights
- abuses, due to a combination of poor accountability in the
- courts and Islamic injunctions and punishments, including the
- widespread use of the death sentence for offenses like drug
- trafficking. Iranians are still scared, even as they dare to
- test the limits of hijab. Says a young woman who strongly
- opposes the Islamic regime: "If this is a transitional stage,
- if we have learned from past mistakes, this may be the beginning
- of something good." The challenge for Rafsanjani is to turn a
- revolutionary regime into a popular one.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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