The Left and Mullahs in Iran

Share/Save/Bookmark

Jahanshah Rashidian
by Jahanshah Rashidian
26-Mar-2009
 

One may argue over many flaws of Communism and its historical mistakes or ideological non-adaptability to democracy. However, in Iran, Communism has been stained with co-religionists and this is a sticky stain which has not been removed since the 1979 revolution. 

After the Iranian revolution, the most popular leftist movement of contemporary Iranian history, Marxist-Leninist "OIPFG" (People's Organisation of Fedayeen Guerrillas) is a typical example of such stigma. Needless to say, there were leftist intellectuals and small groups who did not bow to the supremacy of Khomeini and heroically opposed the regime right after the first signs of dictatorship. So, in this article, the word "left or leftist" is supposed to imply the pro Soviet political bodies, called Tudeh Party and a faction of the OIPFG, called Majority that supported the regime. They were both orchestrated by the Kremlin to unconditionally support the "anti-American" IRI.

The Majority was created due to a split in 1980 within the OIPFG. The other part, called Minority, continued fighting along with other leftist groups against the "bourgeois" IRI-- Thousands of members and sympathisers of this leftist opposition were systematically imprisoned and slaughtered by the regime. Being inspired by Stalinism and Maoism, they dreamt of another kind of cruel and vindictive dictatorship of "Proletariat", but indeed were the most ardent enemies of the Mullahs' regime.

The OIPFG was founded by some young educated or student revolutionaries at the end of 1960's. It proclaimed its struggle in 1971, when a group of armed Fedayeens captured a rural police station called "Siahkal". Regarding the absolute dictatorship of the Shah's regime, they believed that acquiring freedom and social justice can only occur within armed struggles of the revolutionary vanguard, which in turn will end up with a mass revolution. Other "non-violent" ways were considered complaisant and ineffective, both due to the failed experiences of Tudeh Party and Front National (a large pro- Mossadegh spectrum). Thus these two main opposition groups were not able to mobilise people against the Shah's absolute dictatorship - at that time, terms like terrorism, adventurism, petit bourgeois utopia, etc. were not labels of such armed movements. 

Considering the international unrest of 1960's, France and Germany were overwhelmed by student demonstrations in May 1968, almost causing a revolutionary situation in France. Numerous left-wing groups emerged in Germany, Italy, France and other western countries. Armed groups like IRA in North Ireland and ETA in Basque were involved in armed struggles. Revolutionary activities in Latin America attracted popular support in European youth. Their struggles were considered a "heroic" exercise of people's freedom. Even European states (especially those headed by Socialist or Social Democratic parties) had to consider the sympathy of their intelligentsia for such revolutionary and anti American movements. Castro's idea of "bullets, not ballots, were the way to achieve power" had political sense. Régis Debray became Mitterrand's adviser for Latin America. He was a co-fighter of Che Guevara in Bolivia in 1967 and a revolutionary author whose book" Revolution in Revolution" inspired the Fedayeens.

Needless to say armed struggles then were spared from any connotation of terrorism. A great number of Western youth with leftist or alternative worldview had sympathy for Palestine Liberation Front and hence used to wear a Palestinian scarf as a popular sign of their solidarity with Palestinian militants. The Front represented more than a passing similarity to the today's appealing Islamists of Hamas and Hezbollah. 

Although the socio-economic conditions that favoured armed struggles in Latin America were not similar to those of an Islamic society like Iran, Fedayeens' armed struggle was largely inspired from the revolutionary experiences in Latin America. They theorised that armed struggles would promote a mass revolution in Iran, as happened in Cuba. There is no single page of history from the early founders of Fedayeens dealing with Islam and its role in such a revolution. In their analyses, an important social factor like Islam is completely absent. 

Contrary to some priests in Latin America, Mullahs in Iran could never reconcile with collectivism, socialism and materialism of the left. From Safavid Dynasty to the Shah (except under 16-year Reza Shah's reign), The Iranian clergy or Mullahs have always created a common bond with monarchy. This alliance was later used by colonial powers to keep the status quo. A 16-year period under Reza Shah aside, Mullahs have been growing their socio-political power since the compelling "Shiitisation" of Iran by the Safavids in 16's century. In the 60's, Ayatollah Khomeini opposed the Shah's land reform and right of voting to women, and hence he led an Islamic movement opposing Shah's "un-Islamic reforms."  

Neither the Tudeh party, a pro-USSR party, nor Marxist-Leninist OIPFG, could introduce Marx's "Religion is people's opiate" into their social analyses--instead, they considered "anti-imperialist" Muslim movements as their strategic allies. No wonder that after the Iranian revolution, both (the Tudeh Party and the Majority), despite their mutual friction before the split in the OIPFG) came together to unconditionally support "anti imperialist" Khomeini and his Islamist movement-- until these two "profane atheists",  like other leftists freed from the bonds of the Kremlin, succumbed under Khomeini's Islamic sword in 1982.  

Their blind support of the Islamic regime reached a treacherous level of collaboration with the repressive organisations and right-wing paramilitary thugs of the regime which were nationwide identifying and arresting "agents of imperialism". Many thousands of these "agents", including a number of minors, were arrested, and summarily executed for demanding basic democracy. 

Working class, that these pseudo- leftists pretended to support, lost the little rights they had won during the revolution and in vain attempted to keep after the revolution. Their new independent trade unions were banned and replaced by Islamic societies formed by the Ministry of Labour. Their profit share and bonuses which were established under the Shah were nullified. The right of strike was rejected. Wages stayed low, many factories were shut down; and their workers were fired without any unemployment benefit.  Because of protests, many workers were arrested, jailed, and executed by the Islamic regime, whereas the "leftist" Tudeh and Majority continued supporting the Mullahs' regime.  

For this body of the Iranian left, terms like human rights, individual freedom, women's rights, Islamic hijab, secularism, and modernity did not belong to their preoccupation. There have been divisions based on class, ideology, and any class related antagonistic factors. In this perspective, they argued that domestic capitalists consistently represented the interests of Imperialists, but the role of Mullahs and its traditional ties with feudalism and traditional capitalism has been selectively ignored.

In his famous book (History of Thirty Years), Bijan Jazani, a founder of Marxist-Leninist OIPFG, gave an overwhelmingly credit to Ayatollah Khomeini, as a "revolutionary" Mullah of "petite bourgeoisie". The 14 century-old Islamic laws, Sharia, under Khomeini's "Velayt-e-Faghih" (God's state which was described in Khomeini's book was amazingly ignored by the left from then on). Khomeini wrote these fascist, misogynistic, and anti- socialist ideas long before the 1979 revolution, but his ideas were blindly praised as "revolutionary" by a spectrum of the left. To conclude, Islam as a divisive or a monolithic factor was not taken by the left into consideration. 

By contrast, religion has been used by colonial or key powers as a dam to discourage democracy and modernity. Although, to some extent in the Middle East and North Africa, Islamic movements were a factor of unity, but they were tolerated by colonialists to prevent democratic alternatives. The Islamist movements had no effective solutions for the objective problems. The state of economic dependence, with or without Islamic solutions, cannot be removed. There can always be commercial monopolies, supported by colonial powers. The only solution to guarantee economic independence is rapid development under a democratic and secular state--otherwise Islamic states like Pakistan, Afghanistan, Somalia, or Iran, economically remain (dependent) client states of foreign powers. 

Colonial powers have respected and even propagated religion in Iran, as a means of conspiracy.  Shiite Mullahs in Iran, like Christian missionaries in Africa, are known for being protégés of the British colonial administrators; they both have been preaching to bring people closer to God, but not closer to freedom and progress. Colonialism would keep their colonies the most undeveloped, the most illiterate, and superstitious. Such backward attitudes are at hand through religion. Plundering and looting of the colonies, without such social preconditions, could not be easily committed in the history of colonialism. 

In the Islamic colonies, the missionary's role was in fact replaced by the Islamic Ulama, which could be adjusted better with the long-term colonial aims. The colonial officials did not intervene in matters pertaining to Islam or Islamic traditional practices. However, the separation of religion from the practical affairs of government and law was a colonists' wish. It was, in itself, interference in matters pertaining to Islam. In the case of Iran, it is believed that all through the 20th century, the British Empire had to deal with a number of influential clergy to mutually help each other's influence. The peak of this mutual help was the 1953 coup which was planned by US / UK against the Iranian PM, Dr. Mossadegh, who by nationalising the Iranian oil industry, was challenging the British oil interests in Iran. They utilised the most thuggish and reactionary Muslim elements of the "Bazaar" (traditional business, closed to the clergy), and the leading clergy to help the coup. Dr. Mossadegh is the only democratic PM of the Iranian recent history and because of this coup the US / UK reinstalled the Shah as a despot. 

Even after the first successful Iranian constitutional revolution in Middle East history, Iran could not free itself from the influence of Mullahs. Soon, the written constitution that predicted power in an elective authority lost its sense. With the support of the Mullahs, the power remained as a divine gift in the hands of kings who were considered since the Safavids "representatives of Hidden Twelfth Imam, the Mahdi, on the earth" and since his occultation, Mullahs were considered the only interpreters of the Imam.  

Despite division of Iran into "spheres of interest" between England and Russia, Iran was not officially colonised, but the country lost a natural way of progress, democracy, secularism, and independence. As documented in F. William Engdahl's book A Century of War - Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order, Britain's interest in the Middle East was piqued when her leaders realised that oil would replace coal as the energy source of the future. At the turn of the century Britain had no first-hand access to oil and was dependant upon America, Russia or Mexico for her supplies. This was quickly understood as an unacceptable situation and through intrigues involving British spy Sidney Reilly and Australian geologist and engineer William Knox d'Arcy, Britain was able to secure drilling rights to Persian oil from Persian monarch Reza Khan. D'Arcy paid what amounted to $20,000 cash for rights to tap Persian oil until 1961, with a 16% royalty from all sales going to the Shah.

The British company that Reilly persuaded d'Arcy to ally with then became known as the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, a forerunner of the mighty British Petroleum. To put an end to this plundering, Iranian oil was nationalised by the Iranian popular PM Dr. Mossadegh. Two years later in 1953, Mossadegh was overthrown by a US / British coup and, with the help of the leading clergy led by mighty Ayatollah Kashani-an influential Mullah, who had already sworn to let topple the democratically elected government of Mossadegh. 

More than the institutions, like army, the civil service and the judiciary, which have systematically been set up in the colonies, British colonialism needed religion to better control the vast territories they had acquired during the nineteenth century. Sects and cults furthermore were created. Sectarian conflicts were incited. All these measures paved the way for keeping the state of economic dependence, event after their physical departure. An example of such a "decolonisation" is the independence of India in 1947, which turned into a division of the Indian subcontinent into two and then three countries based on religious conflicts. This finally gave birth to an Islamic state in Pakistan under President Ayub Khan at the end of 1960. 

The establishment of communist states in the 20th century was for some Muslim activists like MEK (People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran) a pole of anti-colonialism, a political alliance to bolster an anti-West, whereas for Shiite Mullahs (like Khomeini), "communism represents before anything the atheism" and hence was demonised as a "Kufr" (profanity).

The emergence of Marxism was seen by Islamic movements, especially by the Iranian Mullahs, as an alien demon which must be kept away from the mental and physical presence of Shiite society. Although Islamist political entities have Stalinist methods of organisation, they have practically shown their distinctive sentiments of anti-communism rather than anti-Occidentalism. After all, the legacy of communism reminds them that the problem of atheist culture will be more dangerous than the western secularism. Communism has always remained the main challenge to any Islamic political body in the favour of the colonial power of British Empire or US hegemony. 

Despite fundamental antagonism between Islam and any secular or socialist idea, the most significant expectation of Mullahs short after the inception of their God's state in Iran was not the worshipping of Allah but the carving out of their political establishments and a regime that was protected from being defiled. The anti-socialist character of Islamic movements in general and particularly that of Shiite Mullahs in Iran seemed to be underestimated by the docile left. It fell into the Mullahs' tramp, what finally cost them thousands of lives besides a bad reputation. Today, the leftovers of the Tudeh Party abroad, not being overwhelmed with shame for their wrong-doing in the past, still support one or another faction of the IRI.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Recently by Jahanshah RashidianCommentsDate
Journée Internationale des Femmes
-
Mar 08, 2010
Stop Indian Gasoline for Mullahs’ Repressive Machinery
13
Feb 04, 2010
Iran Fails United Opposition
5
Jan 20, 2010
more from Jahanshah Rashidian
 
Jahanshah Rashidian

Ebi jan, thank you for your

by Jahanshah Rashidian on

Ebi jan, thank you for your friendly expression. Happy Norooz to you too!

Dear Excellent: besides the book proposed by Pars, Modern Iran from Nikki R Keddie is another unbiased work about the recent hiostory of Iran.Long ago in France I read a book in French (J'accuse). Try if you find a translation,I accuse (?). The book is written by Keshavarz, one of the leaders and one of the Tudehi ministers under PM Ghavamsaltaneh in 1328 (the period where Tudeh Party was struggling to hand over the North Oil concession to Russia. Keshaverz left the party and wrote this book, he passed away several years ago in Switzerland, but his wife Fatemeh Keshvarz is still alive and continues writing. Also, you can google Tudeh Party; there are many articles on it  


ebi amirhosseini

عید شما مبارک

ebi amirhosseini


Happy Nowruz

Ebi aka Haaji


default

A Must-Read Book

by Pars (not verified) on

If I may... a book that ALL IRANIANS must read is the classic masterpiece by Ervand Abrahimian:

Iran Between Two Revolutions.

It is truly a masterpiece and should be read by all pontificating Iranians who think they know all there is to know before reaching puberty.

In it, you will get to appreciate the tretcherous role of the left, and specifically, the Tudeh, in overthrowing Mossadegh and the Shah, both of whom they viewed with particular disdain (as land-owning bourgeouis aristocrats).

Cyrus Ghani's book: The Rise of Reza Shah

is also a classic, to be read, in my opinion, by every Iranian.


default

JR: can you recommend a book

by excellent (not verified) on

JR: can you recommend a book in English on the Toudeh party in Iran? Thanks.


Jahanshah Rashidian

Fred

by Jahanshah Rashidian on

Thank you for the timely link.


Fred

The dizzy heads

by Fred on

Confirmation straight from the horse's mouth. The embodiment of lifetime of failure recommends continuation of the failed path to nowhere.

//www.bbc.co.uk/persian/tv/2008/12/000000_ptv_hardtalk.shtml


Jahanshah Rashidian

Dear Mitra

by Jahanshah Rashidian on

Dear Mitra: thank you for encouraging words.

Excellent: Thanks for your nice words.

PL and XerXes: Thank you for your long comments.

Pars: I will check your pint, thanks for it 


Jahanshah Rashidian

Dear Surna

by Jahanshah Rashidian on

Yes, our right to survive stands over any ideology and religion. Furthermore, our rich culture can safeguard and prolong our survival.

Undoubtedly, in this period of national catastrophe, when our country is occupied by a thuggish clique of Ghadessieh’s leftovers, a sense of patriotism is a common weapon of struggle. In our case, patriotism is like an instinct of self-perseverance which is by the way given under different forms to all living creatures, whatever their territory or degree of evolution; in some it is purely mechanical, in others it is allied to reason. In human species, it is allied to reason as long as, according to my views, does not render into a blind nationalism because this latter will mislead patriotism into both inner and outer problems. 

Semitic Religions do not present a positive perspective to human being. They cannot even prove the existence of their monopolised God. The adehrents of such religions naively implanted God with their archaic ideals and primitive way of life. They believe God gifted them all privileges, for them, He endowed the earth with a capacity of production sufficient to furnish all its inhabitants with the all necessities of life, so they became lazy and inactive and less productive. Look at the early Arabs in the desert; they always found enough to live upon, because they did not create for themselves factitious needs; but when half the products of the clan were wasted in satisfying fanciful desires, they killed and robbed the members of the neighbour tribe. Semitic Religions brought thousands of years of delay, if not stagnation, to man to enter the path of progress and to achieve a humanitarian, moral and splendid civilisation.

By the way, Happy New Year!


default

Reza Khan and Knox D'Arcy

by Pars (not verified) on

Most of what you write is well known, but you make a rather pedestrian error when you write that Knox D'Arcy of England secured Iranian oil rights through Reza Khan. In fact, D'Arcy and crew discovered oil in Iran in 1908, well before Reza Khan became king, and these abusive rights that you speak of were secured during the reign of Ahmad Shah, NOT Reza Shah. I wonder if your anti-Pahlavi mindset did not cause you to make this error???


Jahanshah Rashidian

دوست عزیز فدایی

Jahanshah Rashidian



تشکر از ارسال کلیپس. اسناد حماسه و سرکوب یک ملت چراغ راه دمکراسی
 و ترفیع انسانیت و برقراری عدالت اجتماعیست. بگذار جنایات این رژیم در
 این سی سال وایدئولوژی ان در ان چهارده قرن را هرگز فراموش نکنیم.
ولی برای جلوگیری از حمام خون لازم است بعد از سقوط رژیم و ایدئولوژی ان
 حتی مقدور بخشنده بود. بجز مسببین اصلی جنایت و خیانت به ملت، دیگر
 ایادی، مبلغین، و پادو های رژیم را باید شامل عف عمومی کرد. همانکاری
 که در افریقای جنوبی با موقیت صورت گرفت .
 
کدام ایرانی روشنفکر، غیر مذهبی، و ازاده نسل ما در مرحله ای هوادار و
 یا فعال یک سارمان چپ  بورژه چریکها نبود است؟ 


default

In their Memory...

by Fadaee (not verified) on


default

Good analysis

by Surna (not verified) on

Our culture is much richer than so-called left or right-wing. The real struggle is between the Aryan's culture of hard work, humanity and respect for Mother Nature against the Semitic’s culture of superstitious, laziness, lying and thievery.


default

How about

by XerXes (not verified) on

Sentencing the bad guys today and send them to hanging so when we are in power we can save time and focus on the current enemies? That would be the most efficient way to bring democracy to Iran. We kill all those bastards and traitors.

Thanks for another democratically minded blog.


default

According to Struass phlosophy Khamenie is a puppet of Neocons

by Pl (not verified) on

That is exactly what neocons believe too. The do not like Secular democracy.

According to Drury, Strauss had a "huge contempt" for secular democracy.
Nazism, he believed, was a nihilistic reaction to the irreligious and liberal
nature of the Weimar Republic. Among other neoconservatives, Irving Kristol has
long argued for a much greater role for religion in the public sphere, even
suggesting that the Founding Fathers of the American Republic made a major major
mistake
by insisting on the separation of church and state. And why? Because Strauss
viewed religion as absolutely essential in order to [manipulate] the masses
who otherwise would be out of control.

At the same time, he stressed that religion was for the masses alone; the
rulers need not be bound by it. Indeed, it would be absurd if they were, since
the truths proclaimed by religion were "a pious fraud." As Ronald Bailey,
science correspondent for Reason magazine points out, "Neoconservatives are
pro-religion even though they themselves may not be believers."
"Secular society in their view is the worst possible thing,'' Drury says,
because it leads to individualism, liberalism, and relativism, precisely those
traits that may promote dissent that in turn could dangerously weaken society's
ability to cope with external threats. Bailey argues that it is this firm
belief in the political utility of religion as an "opiate of the masses" that helps explain why secular Jews like Kristol in 'Commentary' magazine and other
neoconservative journals have allied themselves with the Christian Right and
even
taken on Darwin's theory of evolution.
Third Principle: Aggressive Nationalism
Like Thomas Hobbes, Strauss believed that the inherently aggressive nature of
human beings could only be restrained by a powerful nationalistic state.
"Because mankind is intrinsically wicked, he has to be governed," he once ...

//www.mail-archive.com/ctrl@listserv.aol.com/...


default

I agree with Mitra.

by excellent (not verified) on

I agree with Mitra. Excellent and original.

I think the Toudeh memebers are all traitors and should be charged for treason. Their alligiance has always been to Russia. Basically, they are Russian agents interfering in all aspects of Iranian politics.


default

You did it again,

by Mitra Khuzestani (not verified) on

You did it again, another most intersting and informative blog. Thanks for taking the time to share your knowlegde with us, I look forward to reading them. Also, I would like to wish you and your family the best and happiest Norouz.