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- <text id=89TT1525>
- <title>
- June 12, 1989: Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini:1900-1989
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 12, 1989 Massacre In Beijing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 36
- IRAN
- Sword of a Relentless Revolution
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini: 1900-1989
- </p>
- <p> He came to symbolize everything the West found
- incomprehensible and baffling about the East: his intense,
- ascetic spirituality and air of otherworldly detachment; his
- medieval, theocratic mind-set, which drew its parallels and
- precedents from the Islamic world of the 7th century; the
- mystical certitude that he spoke in the name of God, his country
- and Muslims everywhere.
- </p>
- <p> Yet when Tehran Radio announced early this week that the
- Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran's revolutionary zealot, was
- dead at 89, millions of his countrymen mourned the loss. They
- did so even though the movement he led plunged them into a
- devastating war with Iraq and left a legacy of turbulence at
- home and terrorism abroad. To his people, the patriarch with the
- baleful dark eyes and white beard had been the heart and sword
- of their revolution, the icon of implacable opposition--first
- to the dictatorship of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and then to
- the U.S., which the Ayatullah relentlessly denounced as the
- Great Satan.
- </p>
- <p> He translated his hatred of America into acts of terrorism
- and defiance that helped undermine one U.S. presidency and led
- a second into scandal. His followers held 52 Americans captive
- in the U.S. embassy in Tehran from November 1979 to January
- 1981, thus dealing a severe blow to the re-election chances of
- Jimmy Carter. Then, in what began as an effort to secure the
- release of American hostages held in Lebanon, the Reagan
- Administration became enmeshed in the Iran-contra affair, its
- gravest foreign policy blunder.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini vowed to pursue the conflict with Iraq to the
- "frontiers of martyrdom," and sent an estimated 900,000
- Iranians, many of them not yet teenagers, beyond that frontier.
- But in August 1988, the loss of key positions forced Tehran to
- accept a United Nations-sponsored cease-fire in the eight-year
- war. It was, said the Ayatullah, a decision "more deadly than
- drinking poison."
- </p>
- <p> Tehran's utter isolation in the world of nations had become
- apparent just two weeks before the cease-fire decision, when a
- U.S. frigate mistakenly shot down an Iranian jetliner with 290
- people aboard: international response was notably muted. In the
- following months, leading Iranian politicians such as
- Parliamentary Speaker Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, 54,
- attempted to soften their country's radical image. But Khomeini
- would have none of it. Last February he prompted a worldwide
- outcry when he demanded the death of Salman Rushdie, the
- Indian-born, British author of The Satanic Verses, a book many
- regard as blasphemous to Islam. "It is incumbent on every Muslim
- to do everything possible to send him to hell," declared the
- Imam. An angry Britain broke off diplomatic relations with Iran,
- and many Western ambassadors were temporarily recalled from
- Tehran.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini's reassertion of radical Islamic rejectionism soon
- claimed his appointed successor, Ayatullah Ali Montazeri, 65,
- as a victim. Montazeri had harshly criticized the war with Iraq
- and did not endorse the killing of Rushdie. In late March he was
- forced to resign.
- </p>
- <p> How was it possible for an obscure religious fanatic to
- lead one of the great revolutionary upheavals of this century?
- To begin with, the time was ripe. The Shah had pushed his feudal
- and devout country into the modern, secular world too far and
- too fast, using torture and execution to suppress dissent. In
- addition, Khomeini's place in the world of Shi`ite theology gave
- him a platform. Unlike Sunni Muslims, members of Islam's other,
- much larger branch, Shi`ites believe in an intermediary between
- God and man. In Shi`ism's first centuries, this role of mediator
- was played by the Twelve Imams, who were thought to be the
- rightful successors to the Prophet Muhammad and who combined
- religious and secular authority. Most Shi`ites continue to
- believe that the Twelfth Imam, who disappeared in A.D. 940, will
- one day emerge from hiding to establish a purified Islamic
- state. Some Iranians hailed Khomeini as an Imam qualified to be
- the deputy for the Shi`ite messiah.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini was educated as a scholar in Qum, the holy city
- where he worked as a teacher, married and reared a family of
- six children. An excellent instructor, he was fascinated by the
- Greek philosophers, especially Plato, whose Republic provided
- the Ayatullah with a model for his own concept of the ideal
- state, in which the philosopher-king was replaced by the Islamic
- theologian.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini's long rise to power began with a series of
- confrontations with the regime of the Shah. In 1962 he led a
- general strike of the clergy to protest reforms allowing
- witnesses in court to swear by any "divine book," instead of the
- Koran alone. By the spring of 1963 he was under house arrest for
- telling huge crowds at Qum that just a "flick of the finger"
- could sweep away the Shah. Soon after his release a few months
- later, Khomeini was arrested again, this time for fomenting
- riots against a modernization program that included land reform.
- He was imprisoned for half a year, then exiled to Turkey. He
- soon moved to the Iraqi city of An Najaf, one of Shi`ism's
- holiest shrines. There for 14 years he taught, meditated and
- taped messages of hate against the Shah that were distributed
- on cassettes to mosques back in Iran.
- </p>
- <p> Then the Shah's government made the crucial mistake of
- asking Iraq to expel Khomeini. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
- complied, thereby earning Khomeini's abiding hostility. In
- October 1978 the Ayatullah went to France and settled in
- Neauphle-le-Chateau, a Paris suburb, where for the first time
- he enjoyed the full glare of Western press attention. Shortly
- after his arrival, the continuing massive street demonstrations
- and battles between the Iranian soldiers and protesters turned
- the tide against the regime and led, within three months, to the
- Shah's exile. In February 1979 Khomeini made his triumphant
- return to Iran, where ecstatic million-strong crowds greeted
- him.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini's ascent to power worked a remarkable change in a
- man who had once seemed a gentle, if extraordinarily zealous,
- cleric. During the upheaval that toppled the Shah, Khomeini
- urged his followers to remain nonviolent. In part, this was a
- shrewd wish to avoid harsh military reprisals, but his caution
- also reflected Khomeini's temperament at that time. Abolhassan
- Banisadr, whom Khomeini ousted as President in 1981, notes that
- in the final weeks of Khomeini's exile the Ayatullah "would not
- even kill a fly." Yet after Khomeini became Iran's ruler, he
- exhorted his countrymen to kill, burn and destroy.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini and his followers attempted to stifle every
- vestige of opposition to the imposition of a Muslim theocracy.
- In so doing they set standards for brutality and injustice that
- at least equaled--and probably surpassed--the worst excesses
- of the Shah's regime. A clergy-dominated security system soon
- rivaled SAVAK, the Shah's secret police, in terror and
- bloodthirstiness.
- </p>
- <p> As the military underwent repeated purges and came under
- the influence of the clerics, its force was swiftly applied to
- suppress ethnic minorities that had supported the revolution in
- hopes of gaining greater cultural and political autonomy. The
- excesses led to nearly 10,000 executions--some put the actual
- figure as high as 20,000--and tens of thousands of arrests.
- This provoked a campaign of assassination by dissident Islamic
- guerrillas that eliminated hundreds of top members of the
- Ayatullah's regime.
- </p>
- <p> While he was consolidating his revolution at home, Khomeini
- was seeking to extend it to other nations. Iraq attacked Iran
- across the Shatt al-Arab in September 1980 after Khomeini
- called for an uprising of Iraqi Shi`ites and fomented skirmishes
- along the border. Iranian forces blunted the Iraqi offensive,
- and two months after the war began, the conflict was largely
- stalemated. After years of fighting, Tehran lost all hope of
- victory when Iraq stopped an Iranian drive for the port city of
- Basra in early 1987; a year later, Iraq began the offensive that
- eventually brought Iran to the peace table. The fighting
- reportedly cost both countries an estimated $500 billion. More
- than 900,000 Iranian lives were lost; 300,000 Iraqis died during
- the war.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini's ability to hold together the squabbling factions
- that produced Iran's revolution was one of his major
- achievements. After first setting the direction of the nation
- through proclamations and statements, Khomeini left it to his
- followers to forge specific policies. Still, he remained the
- pivotal figure of Iranian politics, even toward the end, when
- his various illnesses made it impossible for him to follow
- events closely. The dismissal of Montazeri, in the opinion of
- many experts, put increased power in the hands of the pragmatic
- Rafsanjani, who is also Commander in Chief of the Iranian armed
- forces. In the final months of Khomeini's life, the spotlight
- also turned on his son, Ahmed Khomeini, 43, who has lately been
- increasingly visible in public life. In his zeal and rigid
- ideology, Ahmed appears to be very much his father's son.
- </p>
- <p> For whoever succeeds the Ayatullah, many fruits of the
- revolution will remain bitter. Unbending militance has turned
- Iran into an international pariah, and most Muslims have
- resisted Khomeini's call for the spread of Islamic
- fundamentalism. It is possible, though, to compare his role with
- that of the 20th century's other great revolutionaries. Like the
- Soviet Union's Vladimir Lenin, he fomented a revolution from
- distant exile, then returned to try to bend it to his will. Like
- India's Mohandas Gandhi, he mobilized spiritual forces for
- political ends. Like China's Mao Zedong, he attempted to push
- beyond nationalism to ideological and cultural revolution,
- believing that by destroying the old order, he could create the
- conditions for the emergence of a utopia. As it turned out,
- however, Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini could destroy but he could
- not build, and his legacy is a country in chaos.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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