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- <text id=89TT1584>
- <title>
- June 19, 1989: Iran:A Frenzied Farewell
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 19, 1989 Revolt Against Communism
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- IRAN
- A Frenzied Farewell
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Imam is gone, and his power is up for grabs
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe
- </p>
- <p> He did not go gentle into that good night. The funeral of
- the Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini ignited an emotional outpouring
- from his fanatical followers that Westerners found as bizarre,
- frightening -- and ultimately incomprehensible -- as the
- passions he stirred during ten turbulent years as leader of
- Iran. Even after his burial, Khomeini excoriated his enemies in
- the outside world, raging in his will against "the atheist East"
- and "the infidel West," branding Jordan's King Hussein a
- "criminal tramp," accusing the leaders of Egypt and Morocco of
- "treason," and denouncing the U.S. as an "inborn terrorist"
- organization.
- </p>
- <p> While the Ayatullah's body lay in state inside a
- refrigerated glass box, the crowd of mourners in Tehran became
- so thick that eight were reportedly crushed to death. The next
- day, as a helicopter brought the open wooden coffin containing
- Khomeini's remains to the city's Behesht-e Zahra cemetery,
- nearly a million mourners thrust forward in the blistering heat
- and choking dust, many wailing and pounding their heads as they
- groped to touch the body and snatch a piece of the linen burial
- shroud.
- </p>
- <p> Some managed to surge past a force of Revolutionary Guards,
- clambering into the casket to plant kisses on the Imam's face.
- The corpse spilled to the ground, bare feet protruding from
- beneath the white shroud. As the Guards beat back the crowds,
- firing shots in the air and spraying fire hoses, other soldiers
- shoved the body and coffin back into the chopper. It lifted off
- with the casket hanging precariously out the door.
- </p>
- <p> Some five hours passed before there was another, successful
- attempt to deliver the body to its final resting place, this
- time encased in a metal coffin. Again arms flailed and chants
- of "Death to America!" filled the air as the helicopter touched
- down. Although barricades held most of the crowd at bay, the
- Guards were forced to make a frantic push past the outstretched
- hands to deliver the coffin to the grave site. At the last
- instant, the metal lid of the casket was ripped off, and the
- body was rolled into the grave, in keeping with an Islamic
- tradition that requires that the dead be interred in only a
- shroud. The grave was quickly covered with concrete slabs and
- a large freight container to prevent delirious mourners from
- exhuming the corpse. By the end of the ceremony, more than 440
- people had been hospitalized and an additional 10,800 had been
- treated for injuries.
- </p>
- <p> That frenzied send-off seemed a fitting coda for a man who
- returned a decade ago from exile in Paris to an equally
- hysterical welcome. But it gave little indication of what will
- follow. Khomeini was the glue that held together Iran's
- political radicals and religious extremists. Many Iranians fear
- that their country will now be torn asunder by bitter factional
- struggles. "All the people say things will be worse now," warned
- a 23-year-old student. "We were united when Khomeini was alive."
- </p>
- <p> One potential source of conflict is outside interference
- from such groups as the Iraq-based People's Mujahedin of Iran.
- There is also the danger of a new burst of Iran-sponsored
- international terrorism as rival organizations contend for
- power. "As the factionalism builds up, there will be more
- free-lance terrorism and less control from the center," warns
- Gary Sick, who monitored Iran for the National Security Council
- under the Carter Administration.
- </p>
- <p> Iran's clerics may have thwarted those threats, at least
- temporarily, by moving swiftly to fill the power vacuum created
- by Khomeini's passing. Less than 24 hours after his death, the
- 83-member Council of Experts designated President Ali Khamenei
- the country's new spiritual leader. While it is uncertain that
- Khamenei can retain the post, his quick appointment headed off
- the ascent of more radical potential successors. The
- Revolutionary Guards, the regular army and several of Iran's
- leading political figures, including Parliamentary Speaker Ali
- Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, quickly closed ranks behind the new
- leader. "For the moment," says Bernard Hourcade, a French expert
- on Iran, "the clerics have shown exemplary moderation."
- </p>
- <p> Khamsnei, 49, who upon his selection was apparently
- elevated from a lower clerical rank to the status of ayatullah,
- was a compromise choice. During his career, he has played the
- role of both hard-line mullah and political pragmatist. A
- moralistic religious scholar who comes from a family of
- religious scholars, Khamenei has gained public renown by
- delivering fiery speeches at Friday prayers. Arrested at least
- six times during the Shah's reign, Khamenei has also been the
- target of the opposition People's Mujahedin. In 1981 he was
- seriously injured by a bomb. His right arm was permanently
- crippled, and his vocal cords were damaged. Since that year,
- Khamenei has held the post of President and has seesawed between
- denouncing the West and seeking to renew Iran's ties with it.
- </p>
- <p> Khamenei, however, is no Khomeini. In the months ahead, he
- could be vulnerable to power grabs by other contenders to the
- throne. They probably do not include Ahmed Khomeini, a radical
- cleric who played an increasingly visible role in the months
- his father lay dying. Although revered by some, the younger
- Khomeini is ridiculed by others, who perceive him as a weakling.
- </p>
- <p> But Speaker Rafsanjani, who is also Commander in Chief of
- the armed forces, is definitely somebody to watch. Last week he
- announced his candidacy for the presidency, and he is expected
- to win the contest, scheduled for August. Though he is a leader
- of the relative pragmatists within the government, Rafsanjani's
- reputation for moderation has yet to be tested. On those
- occasions when the political winds in Iran have blown toward
- less hostile relations, Rafsanjani has expressed a desire to
- improve ties with the outside world.
- </p>
- <p> Western leaders are wisely remaining cautious about the
- fickle mullahs. It is unlikely that Iran's attitude toward its
- enemies will take a pronounced turn for the better anytime soon.
- While some Western analysts detect signs that Iran's foreign
- policy will eventually moderate, others warn that none of
- Khomeini's heirs can run the risk of appearing to betray the
- Ayatullah's revolution. "They believe that challenging the West
- is what gives them legitimacy," says former U.S. Secretary of
- State Henry Kissinger.
- </p>
- <p> That bodes ill for the 13 Western hostages, nine of them
- Americans, currently being held in Lebanon. Last week President
- Bush adopted a wait-and-see stance. He called on Iran to help
- seek the hostages' release and dismissed the prospect of any
- overtures toward Tehran's new leadership. "They have been a
- terrorist state," Bush said. "As soon as they move away from
- oppression and extremism of that nature, we will review our
- relationship." Iran, meanwhile, announced that it will not
- assist in seeking the hostages' freedom until frozen Iranian
- assets are released by the U.S. and unless Washington helps
- locate four Iranians missing in Lebanon.
- </p>
- <p> The first reliable indications of Iran's future course are
- not likely to emerge until after the presidential election,
- scheduled for Aug. 18. At that time, voters will also be
- presented with a referendum proposing constitutional changes
- that would strengthen the presidency. If Rafsanjani wins as
- expected, he will be faced with reviving an economy so
- dysfunctional that only a thriving black market prevents
- widespread shortages of basic commodities. If Khamenei proves
- to be a weak leader, he could be toppled at that time. Once its
- new leadership is in place, Iran will confront a fundamental
- decision: whether to remain in a medieval morass or re-enter the
- modern world that the Imam so breathtakingly defied.
- </p>
- <p>--David S. Jackson/Tehran and Frank Melville/London
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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