Who Rules Iran?
By Christopher de Bellaigue
According to Sadeq Haqiqat, a reform-minded cleric
......
Volume 49, Number 11 • June 27, 2002
Feature
؟Who
Rules Iran
By Christopher de Bellaigue
1.
The Shia seminary town of Qom, seventy-five miles south of Tehran, is
bleak and set in semi-desert, with a dried-up river going through it. It has
few orchards; it is not renowned for any fruit or pickle. Most of the
vegetables you find here have traveled long distances. The townspeople produce
a sickly caramel, sometimes embedded with shards of pistachio, called sohan. To escape the soporific effects of the heat the
seminarians work in subterranean libraries. In the case of bachelor scholars,
widows and impoverished women attend to their physical needs. Some people have
likened Qom to Oxford or Cambridge, for the seminarians wear black gowns and
inhabit cells inside brick-built colleges that look in on themselves. There,
the resemblance ends. Never in English history were the universities as mighty
as the seminaries of Qom are today.
Qom rose to prominence as a modern seminary town after Britain seized
what is now Iraq from the Ottomans at the end of World War I. When the clerics
of Najaf, an important Shia shrine town in southern Iraq, incited revolt
against the British, they were expelled; some of these clerics ended up in Qom,
which a prominent ayatollah was reviving as a center of religious learning.
Qom's development was still not assured; from 1925, the Shah of Iran, Reza
Pahlavi, regarded Islam in general and clerics in particular as hindrances to
his efforts to modernize Iran. He introduced military service for some clerics
and banned all but the senior clergy from wearing the traditional gown and
turban. He came to Qom to horsewhip a senior ayatollah who had criticized the
Queen's immodest mode of dress.
Clerical resentment of the monarchy increased under Reza's son, Mohammad
Reza, but the theologians of Qom were divided on whether Islam required that
they actively oppose tyranny or concentrate on their primary duty: studying
Islamic law and transmitting it to believers. In the 1960s, the activists came
under the influence of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini;
and in 1979, after the Shah fled and Khomeini returned from exile to set up the
modern world's only clerical state, Tehran was its capital but Qom was its
heart.
Since then, Qom has been booming. The clerical population has risen from around
25,000 to more than 45,000, and the nonclerical
population has more than tripled, to about 700,000. It is very hard to
calculate the vast sums of money that flow, in the forms of alms and Islamic
taxes, to Qom's ten senior ayatollahs—called "Objects of Emulation"
because their fellow clerics have pronounced them qualified to act as models
whose behavior and rulings laymen and lesser clerics can follow. (Every
believer is free to choose the "Object of Emulation" he or she
admires most, whether they are inside or outside Iran.) These donations, along
with state help for favored institutions, have pushed up the number of seminary
schools in Qom to fifty-odd, and the number of research institutes and
libraries to around 250. These institutions produce hundreds of books and
journals every year, and they use the Internet to disseminate and publicize
their findings on subjects like Islamic law and history, philosophy and
political economy. The municipal council is buying and destroying buildings
that stand in the path of a grand boulevard that has been projected to lead
from the shrine of the sister of one of Shiism's
twelve imams to a grand modern mosque five kilometers away.[1]
________________________________________
After the revolution, a highway was laid between Qom and Tehran, making
it easy for politicians and bureaucrats to go back and forth; if you have a
reckless driver, the trip from south Tehran will take you barely an hour. This
spring, Syria's foreign minister, on a visit to Iran, made an unpublicized
nocturnal trip to Qom; he wanted clerical support for his request, prompted by
the US and Lebanon, that Iran downgrade its relations with Hezbollah. (He got
an ambiguous answer.) The intelligence ministry is said to have consulted
clerics in Qom on the wisdom of exploring better relations with the US. (Here,
too, the response was vague; Bush, who included Iran in the "axis of
evil," has alarmed many clerics, but some have warned against giving the
impression that Iran is buckling under pressure.) If the US brings down Saddam
Hussein, the thousands of Iraqi clerics currently in exile in Qom will have a
strong influence on their country's future.
The word "Qom" has come to stand for the nationwide clerical
establishment, since other seminary towns are subservient to it; and the
influence of Qom is particularly evident at the center of power in Tehran.
Iran's Supreme Leader, its president, parliament speaker, and top judge are
clerics. So are both the head and half the members of the twelve-man Council of
Guardians, the powerful monitoring group whose clerical members are appointed
by the Supreme Leader; it acts, in effect, as the upper house of parliament and
can annul legislative acts. A significant minority of the thirty-eight members
of the Expediency Council, appointed by the Supreme Leader to resolve disputes
between parliament and the Council of Guardians, are clerics. The Assembly of
Experts, which chooses, appraises, and can, in theory, dismiss the Supreme
Leader, is made up of eighty-six clerics who have been elected by universal
suffrage— but only after candidates first have been vetted by the Council of
Guardians. Although most provincial governors are not clerics, in each province
the assent of the Supreme Leader's representative, invariably a cleric, is
required for most of the important decisions he makes. The same is true of the
heads of universities.
Lower down, clerical dominance is less institutionalized, but nonetheless
striking. The thousands of seminarians who leave Qom after completing the six
years of study that generally qualify them to wear the clerical gown and turban
have a head start in the race for jobs in the bureaucracy. Their children tend
to be granted places at the best schools. If they are suspected of breaking the
law, they are tried by other clerics, usually behind closed doors. In some
parts of the government and bureaucracy, such as the judiciary, an old-boy
network favors appointments from particular seminaries. The senior echelons of
the intelligence ministry and judiciary contain many graduates from Qom's Haqani seminary.
Although the revolution has made the clerical calling more powerful and
more privileged, not all clerics have been happy about this. Far from bringing
about the end of the old debate over clerical involvement in politics,
Khomeini's revolution intensified it. At the revolution's outset, most of the
half-dozen "Objects of Emulation" who were living in Iran and Iraq
either opposed the principle of clerical rule or remained silent about it.
Qom's subsequent resistance to attempts to impose on it a uniform reading of
political Islam has much to do with the pluralistic tradition of the seminary.
Seminarians are free to join the study circles of the "master" they
most admire. He can teach pretty much what he wants, provided he does not
disseminate contentious views outside the seminary.
________________________________________
For the past decade, the prestige of the clerics among most Iranians has
been falling. This is clearly illustrated by the decline in clerical
representation in parliament. In the first parliament after the revolution,
clerics made up 51 percent of the total number of deputies. They now make up 12
percent. In the early 1980s, clerics were generally treated with elaborate
courtesy. Nowadays, clerics are sometimes insulted by schoolchildren and taxi
drivers and they quite often put on normal clothes when venturing outside Qom.
Some are willing to give up the official privileges that, they believe, cause
the public to resent them. I talked in Qom to clerics who said there was now
increasing sympathy for Abdolkarim Soroush, a brilliant lay theologian and philosopher who
argues that religion must sever its links with worldly power if it is to retain
its authority. Far from improving the status of the clergy, these clerics say,
involvement in government has debased it.
A small but important part of George Bush's "axis of evil"
speech seemed aimed at these clerics. In Tehran, people thought it was crass of
the US president to lump Iran together with Saddam Hussein's Iraq; they
remember when America sided with Saddam during the Iran–Iraq War of the 1980s.
Some quite unconvincingly professed astonishment at Bush's suggestion that Iran
sponsors terrorism and is trying to produce weapons of mass destruction. In
Qom, however, reactions were more concerned with the US president's observation
that "an un-elected few repress the Iranian people's hope for
freedom." Although Bush was referring to Iran's malfunctioning democracy
in general, his comments recalled to many people the continuing influence of the
Ayatollah Khomeini and particularly the political sectarianism that Khomeini
used to entrench clerical rule: "the guardianship of the jurist."
As early as the late 1960s, Khomeini was putting forward a novel
interpretation of Shia doctrine, defending a rudimentary version of the kind of
religious government he eventually installed. Using deductive reasoning and a
tendentious interpretation of the sayings attributed to the Prophet and the
twelve imams, Khomeini argued that religious government should not be allowed to
lapse simply because there were no imams to provide it.[2]Instead, he said, Shiism's leading clerics, the senior scholars of Islamic
law, should assume judicial and executive authority, pending the return of the
twelfth imam.
The "guardianship of the jurist" proposed by Khomeini can be
understood as an expansion of the "guardianship" that Islam proposes
in the case of orphaned minors, with the whole Islamic community in the role of
orphan and the ruling jurist in the role of the adoptive parent. On his return
from exile, following the Shah's flight in 1979, Khomeini said he was invoking
"the guardianship that I have from the holy lawgiver [the Prophet]"
to appoint an interim government. He announced that opposition to this
government would be "blasphemy."
Khomeini, many people believe, may have abhorred electoral democracy; but
he was forced to compromise with nonclerical
Islamists who had been influenced by modern democratic notions. According to
Daniel Brumberg, the author of a meticulous
examination of Khomeini's legacy,[3] the 1979 constitution, which turned Iran
from a monarchy into an "Islamic republic," was "an ideological
mishmash ...probably unmatched in the history of constitutionalism." It
provided for the direct election of a president and a parliament, and separated
the legislative, judicial, and executive branches. But it made all officials
answerable to the appointed Supreme Leader and made no clear provision for the
settlement of disputes between the elected lower house of parliament and the appointed
upper house, the Council of Guardians. The constitution was marred by what Brumberg describes as a "chaotic division of
powers" between different institutions and organs of government, and it
was silent on how these competing institutions should coexist. According to
some articles of the constitution, sovereignty belonged to God; but the
principle of holding elections suggested a recognition of popular sovereignty
as well.
________________________________________
Khomeini dominated the patchwork government of Iran until his death in
1989. He alone had the theological expertise, political flair, and popularity
that he himself had laid down as criteria for Islamic leadership. Sometimes
contemptuous of Western-style elections, he could claim that he had a popular
mandate, illustrated by the vast numbers of people who greeted and visited him
after he returned from exile. This reminds Baqer Moin, his excellent biographer, of a pledge of
allegiance.[4] Khomeini's appeal was exploited by his entourage. They
attributed to him a pseudo-divinity that, in turn, endowed his pronouncements
with binding authority, allowing him to interfere in public life wherever he
wanted. Khomeini was able slowly to discredit a very senior dissident
ayatollah, Kazem Shariatmadari,
even though Shariatmadari's theological standing was
equal to his own. A word from Khomeini obliged the Council of Guardians to lift
their veto on any law he favored. His "decree" led to the execution,
without due process, of thousands of political prisoners.
It was clear that the aura of authority surrounding the guardianship of
the jurist would diminish with his passing. Already, in 1988, the creation of
the Expediency Council had relieved future Supreme Leaders of the burden of
adjudicating disputes between parliament and the Council of Guardians. (On May
26, for example, the Expediency Council ended a long process of mediation
between parliament and the Council of Guardians on a foreign investment bill,
which has now become law.) A few weeks before Khomeini died, a special assembly
convened at his behest removed the constitutional stipulation that the Supreme
Leader had to be a theologian of the highest rank, i.e., an Object of
Emulation. From now on, hundreds of lesser clerics were theoretically eligible
to be the Supreme Leader, provided they had the necessary piety, courage, and
"good managerial skills." The requirement of popular recognition and
approval—the pledge of allegiance, as it were—was dropped as a criterion.
Having been the preserve of a revered divine whom millions believed to be an
intermediary between themselves and God, the guardianship of the jurist could
now be conferred on a middle-ranking theologian who had much less popular
support.
The changes were designed to prepare the way for the appointment of Ali
Khamenei, the president, as Khomeini's successor. Barely two months before he
died, Khomeini had dismissed Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, the well-known and much-respected cleric whom he
had earlier designated as his successor. Apparently Khomeini felt that Montazeri was too independent in his thinking and too
pluralistic in his outlook. Many in Qom were dismayed by Ali Khamenei's
appointment. Although he was known to be an experienced politician and to have
shared many of Khomeini's views, he was only in the upper-middle rank of
clerics and had been hastily named an ayatollah. Many Iranians were troubled by
the idea that a man they had elected to the mundane office of the presidency,
knowing they could oust him, had become the unchallengeable vice-regent of God.
The death of Khomeini would have been a good time to trim the Supreme
Leader's powers and require that he be elected. But Khomeini's eleventh-hour
constitutional amendments pointed the other way; the revised constitution increased
the Supreme Leader's formal powers, and described his authority, with an
explicitness absent from the original, as "absolute." Furthermore,
Khomeini, in some of his last statements, implied that the Supreme Leader could
make any decision he considered to be in "the interests of Islam and the
country." In the eyes of some, this gave him the authority to create
divine injunctions.
2.
Ayatollah Montazeri's house in Qom is a few
hundred yards from the city's shrine, but he hasn't visited the shrine for years.
He is not allowed to see people, except his family, and cannot leave home
except in an emergency. His allies talk to him on the telephone; they can also
ring the front doorbell and chat with him over the intercom. Through these
contacts, Montazeri keeps abreast of current
theological debates as well as rulings that have been issued by other senior
clerics and the political situation in Tehran. He issues his own rulings on
religious matters, and replies to theological questions posed by his followers,
whether through the Internet or through cassettes that are distributed by his
sons. Last year, he posted a long memoir on the Internet. It was immediately
denounced by the conservative establishment, and around a dozen of his
supporters were arrested for helping him prepare it.
Montazeri is a ruddy-faced man with the accent of his native Najafabad. His modesty is such that, if you get into casual
conversation with him, you might mistake him for an itinerant preacher. In
fact, Montazeri is an Object of Emulation who is
acknowledged to be brilliant, even by those who disapprove of him; as a young
seminarian, he was well known for his ability to recall, word for word,
lectures that he had heard weeks before. He talks bluntly, lives plainly, and
equates Islam with social justice. Not for him is the political plotting for
which some other clerics are known. Before his social life was restricted, he
would happily share his bread and cheese with, say, a farmer who had come from Najafabad to complain about a venal official. Once the
farmer had gone, Montazeri would send off an angry
letter to the official's superior.
This, at least, is the portrait drawn by his supporters. It is meant to
counter the derogatory claims of some of his peers, particularly the Book of
Pain, which was written by Ahmad Khomeini, the Ayatollah Khomeini's now
deceased son, after Montazeri's dismissal by his
father.[5] According to Ahmad, Montazeri's
stubbornness and naiveté were his downfall. At the height of the Iran–Iraq War,
he argued for reconciliation with internal enemies, and this was said to have
benefited counterrevolutionary groups like the Peoples' Mujahideen,
called "the Hypocrites" by the followers of the Ayatollah Khomeini.
"My intention in this letter," wrote Ahmad, "is not—God forbid!—to
suggest that you accepted the ideas and ideology of Hypocrites and
Liberals." Of course, Ahmad wanted to suggest just that.
________________________________________
By the standards of revolutionary Iran, Montazeri
is considered a democrat. That wasn't always the case. In the days following
the revolution, he argued that Shia Islam should be named the state religion,
despite Iran's large Sunni minority. He had an important part in making the
principle of the guardianship of the jurist part of the constitution—which he
demanded be "far removed from every Western principle," and he did
not defend Ayatollah Shariatmadari when Khomeini
humiliated him for criticizing the institution of the guardianship of the
jurist. Before his dismissal, his supporters intimidated people with the slogan
"Opposition to Montazeri is opposition to
God." One of them, Mehdi Hashemi, upset
officials by maintaining his own connections with the Lebanese Hezbollah and
the Afghan Mujahideen. In 1986, Hashemi
disclosed secret efforts by Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,
who was running Iran's war effort against Iraq, to buy arms from Iran's sworn
enemy, the US, through the good offices of a second enemy, Israel. Rafsanjani
got his revenge, and Hashemi was executed.
For all that, one can find a strain of pluralism and compassion running
through Montazeri's career. He sent private letters
to Khomeini in 1988, protesting the summary execution of thousands of
imprisoned supporters of the People's Mujahideen. His
criticism of Rafsanjani for prolonging the war seems to have arisen from
genuine anger at the appalling loss of life. As Khomeini's dauphin, he tried to
pierce the wall that Khomeini's possessive entourage had erected around him.
According to Gholam-Hossein Nadi,
a fellow cleric and longstanding ally, "other people would go before
Khomeini and flatter him." Montazeri, on the
other hand, "told the truth and passed on the complaints of the people."
Private complaint could perhaps be tolerated, but Montazeri
went public after the end of the war with Iraq, criticizing the regime's
"mismanagement" and "the denial of people's rights." There
is, he said, "a great distance between what we have promised and what we
have achieved." He accepted his dismissal with grace, perhaps relief, but
it came as a shock to people who associated him with revolutionary ideals.
During the early and mid-1990s, Rafsanjani, who had succeeded Khamenei as
president, carried out economic reforms apparently designed to benefit people
who were already privileged. At the same time, the politically influential
people around Khamenei were putting slavish emphasis on the Supreme Leader's
"absolute" authority.
In 1997, Mohammad Khatami, a cleric advocating increased democracy, was
elected president by a large majority. Word got around that the Supreme Leader,
who was said to have lent veiled support to Khatami's conservative rival during
the campaign, was imposing his influence on the composition of the new
government. At the same time, some clerics were suggesting that Khamenei be declared
an Object of Emulation. Invoking his authority as author of the 1979
constitution, Montazeri, in a speech that created a
sensation, asserted that the Supreme Leader's duty was not "to interfere
in everything," but "to oversee the country." He attacked Iran's
"monarchical set-up." He openly suggested that Khamenei was
unqualified to be an Object of Emulation, and unqualified to be Supreme Leader
as well.[6]
The speech confirmed Montazeri's status as the
senior theological advocate of democracy within the Islamic republic. At the
same time, it ruined him politically; his private college in Qom was closed,
his office ransacked, and he was put under house arrest. With one exception, Montazeri's fellow Objects of Emulation were too timid to
defend him. His enforced isolation ended hopes that he and Khatami might join
forces; the elected president could hardly come out in support of the man who
had been attacked and dismissed from public life by the Supreme Leader.
The cause of reform suffered as a result. Montazeri's
disgrace made it impossible for reformers in Tehran to call on him for support
in their struggle with the Council of Guardians, which routinely humiliates
them by disqualifying Khatami supporters from seeking office, and by vetoing
all legislation that would increase democracy or protect rights. Montazeri would have made a useful ally in the continuous
confrontations between Khatami's supporters and the judges, who have jailed
scores of reformists, including editors, writers, economists, and mayors, among
others; virtually all of the top judges are anti-reform clerics and all of them
Montazeri's theological inferiors. If Montazeri had been free to argue with Khamenei in 2000, he
might have tried to dissuade him from ordering the closing of more than a dozen
reform-minded publications, and from suppressing parliamentary discussion of
plans to make the press freer.
In April of this year, Ali-Reza Amini, a
conservative cleric in Qom, told me dryly that some of the reformers who argue
today for a referendum on limiting the Supreme Leader's powers were, in
Khomeini's time, convinced of the Supreme Leader's absolute authority. Amini's comment reminded me of a nagging question that
occurs to me as I observe some of Iran's reformers. Are they driven by a desire
to reduce the power of the Supreme Leader, or are they mainly concerned to
limit the power of Ali Khamenei?
3.
For several weeks after Bush's speech, Iran was overcome by an irrational
fear of imminent US attack. People talked of little else. There was renewed
debate about the merits of reopening relations with the US. (This has now
ended, amid claims by reformers that secret contacts with US officials had been
initiated by influential members of the regime, without the government's
knowledge.) In the face of the external threat, a temporary understanding was
reached between reformers and conservatives. Fewer newspapers were closed. Some
jailed reformers—including all but one of Montazeri's
imprisoned allies —were set free. It was said that the head of the clergy court
had promised Montazeri that he would regain his
freedom if only he would stop issuing controversial statements.
The immediate fear has passed. Montazeri is
still under house arrest. (He may have upset conservatives with a statement
that was published in newspapers on April 22, in which he implicitly
dissociated himself from Khamenei's insistence that Israel be eliminated and
endorsed the coexistence of Palestinian and Israeli states.) Reform-minded
newspapers are now being closed down again. Despite a constitutional clause
that guarantees parliamentary immunity, a senior deputy in parliament who had
been demanding more press freedom, among other reforms, has been sentenced to a
six months in prison. Playing chicken with the judge, he has refused to appeal
his sentence.
Bush's shadow remains. Unease over his intentions, and the politicians'
calculations of gain that may result from provoking or mollifying him, will
complicate next year's parliamentary elections—which the Council of Guardians
might easily spoil by disqualifying scores of sitting members. Uncertainty
about US policy will complicate the search, already beginning, for a suitable
reform candidate to replace Khatami, who must step down after his second term
ends, in three years. It may lend urgency to the underlying national debate
about the power of unelected clerics who have defied the expressed will of the
voters.
When I was in Qom this spring, a friend there observed that it is hard to
find a conservative cleric who hasn't changed his views on the legitimacy of
the guardianship of the jurist. To one degree or another they all now felt the
office should change so as to reflect a society that is seeking a less
paternalistic sort of government. According to Sadeq Haqiqat, a reform-minded cleric, "as democratic
thoughts gain ground, it's impossible" for the religious authorities to
resist efforts to modify the principle of the guardianship of the jurist.
"It must evolve." Even conservatives like Ali-Reza Amini agree it can change. He seems exasperated,
furthermore, by the obstructionism of the Council of Guardians; "its
political coloring," he says, "has weakened the guardianship of the
jurist."
________________________________________
Four years ago, a friend of Haqiqat's, Mohsen Kadivar, published a book in Iran, Government of the
Guardian, that opened new perspectives in the debate over theologically based
power.[7] Kadivar examined the ten sayings attributed
to the Prophet and to the imams that are commonly presented as documentary
evidence for the necessity of clerical rule. According to Kadivar,
a well-regarded scholar, eight of these sayings may not be authentic. Even the
two sayings he considers "authoritative" cannot, he argues, be used
to justify the clerics' assumption of political power. Rather, they confer on
jurists the responsibility to "propagate, publicize, and teach Islamic
rulings.... There is no authoritative evidence for the absolute guardianship of
the appointed jurist."
It said something for the openness of Iranian society that Kadivar's book could be published. Many Iranians agree that
the guardianship must change. And yet it does not. "In order to
change," Ali-Reza Amini says, "there needs
to be consensus, and there is no consensus." As much as conflicting ideas,
the problem comes down to people who loathe one another; their personal hatred
precludes the emergence of workable compromises. The recent war in Afghanistan
provided an example of the current internal political conflict. The fall of the
Taliban was openly celebrated throughout Iran. Khatami's government cooperated
with the US-led coalition, providing it with intelligence and also providing
considerable help to the Northern Alliance; it is now enthusiastically trying
to help in Afghanistan's reconstruction. Its efforts, however, were undermined
by a small number of hard-line conservatives who apparently helped al-Qaeda and
tried to undermine Hamid Karzai's government in Kabul.
In this poisonous atmosphere, it is hard to imagine that the reformers
can persuade the conservatives voluntarily to give up power. A popular
explosion remains a distant prospect; most people do not want another
revolution, and the police and revolutionary guard are disciplined and loyal.
Unless the reformers can muster allies in the conservative establishment, or
find new ways to bring public pressure on it, Iran seems fated to an unyielding
form of Islamic rule.
—May 29, 2002
Notes
[1] The twelve imams were all
male descendants of the Prophet, through Ali, the Prophet's nephew and
son-in-law. Shias believe that the imams were entrusted the leadership of the
Islamic community, and that the twelfth of them, who disappeared in 874, would
later miraculously return to establish an era of divine justice and truth.
[2] Khomeini's lectures while in
exile in Najaf were transcribed by his students, and brought out in book form
in 1971. A version of these lectures, entitled Velayat-e
Faqih (Guardianship of the Jurist), is available in
Tehran, published by the Institute for the Codification and Publication of the
Works of Imam Khomeini.
[3] Reinventing Khomeini: The
Struggle for Reform in Iran (University of Chicago Press, 2001).
[4] Baqer Moin,
Khomeini: Life of the Ayatollah (I.B. Tauris, 1999).
[5] Ahmad Khomeini, Ranj-nameh (Book of Pain; Tehran, 1989).
[6] The text of Montazeri's speech was published in a special issue of a
magazine, Arzeshha (Values), dated February 1998,
that attempted to damage Montazeri's reputation.
[7] Mohsen Kadivar,
Hukumat-e Velayi
(Government of the Guardian; Nashrani, 1998).
________________________________________
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