The
Iranian Revolution (Also known as the
Islamic Revolution or
1979 Islamic
Revolution ,
Persian:
انقلاب اسلامی, Enghelābe Eslāmi) refers to events involving the
overthrow of
Iran's monarchy under
Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi and its replacement with an
Islamic republic under
Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, the leader of the
revolution.
It has been called an event that "made
Islamic fundamentalism a
political force ... from Morocco
to Malaysia
."
The first major
demonstrations against
the Shah began in January 1978. Between August and December 1978
strikes and demonstrations paralyzed the
country.
The Shah left Iran for exile in mid-January
1979, and two weeks later Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Tehran
to a
greeting by several million Iranians. The royal regime
collapsed shortly after on
February 11
when
guerrillas and rebel troops
overwhelmed troops loyal to the Shah in armed street fighting. Iran
voted by national
referendum to become an
Islamic Republic on April 1,
1979, and to
approve a new
theocratic
constitution whereby Khomeini became
Supreme Leader of the country, in
December 1979.
The revolution was unique for the surprise it created throughout
the world: it lacked many of the customary causes of revolution
(defeat at war, a
financial crisis,
peasant rebellion, or disgruntled
military); produced profound change at great speed; was massively
popular; overthrew a regime heavily protected by a lavishly
financed army and security services; and replaced a
monarchy with a
theocracy
based on
Guardianship of the Islamic
Jurists (or
velayat-e faqih).
Its outcome — an
Islamic Republic "under the guidance of an 80-year-old exiled
religious scholar from Qom
" — was, as one scholar put it, "clearly an
occurrence that had to be explained."
Not so unique but more intense is the dispute over the revolution's
results. For some it was an era of heroism and sacrifice that
brought forth nothing less than the nucleus of a world
Islamic state —
"a perfect model of
splendid, humane, and divine life… for all the peoples of the
world." On the other hand, some Iranians explain the
revolution as a time when
"for a few years we all lost our
minds", and which
"promised us heaven, but... created a
hell on earth."
Causes
The revolution was
populist,
nationalist and later
Shi'a Islamic. It was in part a conservative
backlash against the
Westernizing and
secularizing efforts of the
Western-backed Shah, and not-so-conservative
reaction to social injustice and other shortcomings of the
ancien regime.
The Shah was perceived by many as beholden
to — if not a puppet of — a non-Muslim
Western power (the United States
) whose culture was contaminating that of
Iran.
The Shah's regime was seen as oppressive, brutal, corrupt, and
extravagant; it also suffered from basic functional failures — an
overly-ambitious economic program that brought economic
bottlenecks, shortages and inflation. Security forces were unable
to deal with protest and demonstrations; Iran was an overly
centralized royal power structure. The extraordinarily large size
of the anti-shah movement meant that there "were literally too many
protesters to arrest", and that the security forces were
overwhelmed.
That the revolution replaced monarchy and Shah Pahlavi with
Islamism and Khomeini rather than another leader and ideology is
credited in part on the spread of the Shia version of the
Islamic revival that opposed
Westernization, saw
Ayatollah Khomeini as following in the footsteps
of the beloved
Shi'a Imam
Husayn ibn Ali, and the Shah in those of
Husayn's foe, the hated tyrant
Yazid I.Also
thought responsible was the underestimation of Khomeini's Islamist
movement by both the Shah's regime — who considered them a minor
threat compared to the
Marxist and
Islamic socialist — and by the
anti-Shah
secularists — who thought the
Khomeinists could be sidelined.
Historical background
Shi'a clergy (
Ulema) have had a
significant influence on some Iranians, who have tended to be
religious, traditional, and alienated from any process of
Westernization. The clergy first showed themselves to be a powerful
political force in opposition to Iran's monarch with the 1891
Tobacco Protest boycott that
effectively destroyed an unpopular
concession granted by the Shah giving
a British company a monopoly over buying and selling Tobacco in
Iran.
Decades later monarchy and clerics clashed again, this time
monarchy holding the upper hand. Shah Pahlavi's father, army
general
Reza Pahlavi, replaced
Islamic laws with western ones, and forbade traditional
Islamic clothing,
separation
of the sexes and veiling of women (
hijab).
Police forcibly removed and tore
chadors of
women who resisted his ban on public hijab. In 1935 dozens were
killed and hundreds injured when a rebellion by pious Shi'a at the
most holy Shi'a shrine in Iran was crushed on his orders.
In 1941 Reza Shah was deposed and his son,
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, installed by an
invasion of allied British
and Soviet troops. In 1953 foreign powers (American and
British) again came to the Shah's aid.
After the Shah fled
the country an American CIA operative and aided
by the British MI6
organized a military coup d'état to oust
his nationalist and democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh.
Shah
Pahlavi maintained a close relationship with the United States
government, both regimes sharing a fear
of/opposition to the expansion of Soviet/Russian
state,
Iran's powerful northern neighbor. Like his father's regime,
Shah Pahlavi's was known for its
autocracy, its focus on
modernization and
Westernization and for its disregard for
religious and democratic measures in
Iran's constitution. Leftist,
nationalist and Islamist groups attacked his government (often from
outside Iran as they were suppressed within) for violating the
Iranian constitution,
political
corruption, and the political oppression by the
SAVAK (secret police).
Rise of Ayatollah Khomeini

Ayatollah Khomeini
The leader of the Iranian revolution — Shia cleric
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini — first came to
political prominence in 1963 when he led opposition to the Shah and
his "
White Revolution", a program
of reforms to break up landholdings (including those owned by
religious foundations), grant women the right to vote and equality
in marriage, and allow
religious
minorities to hold government office.
Khomeini was arrested in 1963 after declaring the Shah a "wretched
miserable man" who had "embarked on the destruction of Islam in
Iran." Three days of major riots throughout Iran followed, with
Khomeini supporters claiming 15,000 dead from police fire.
Khomeini
was released after eight months of house arrest and continued his
agitation, condemning the regime's close cooperation with Israel
and its
capitulations, or extension of
diplomatic immunity to American government personnel in
Iran. In November 1964 Khomeini was re-arrested and sent
into exile where he remained for 14 years until the
revolution.
Exile period
In this interim period of "disaffected calm" the budding Islamic
revival began to undermine the idea of Westernization as progress
that was the basis of the Shah's secular regime, and to form the
ideology of the 1979
revolution.
Jalal Al-e-Ahmad's
idea of
Gharbzadegi — that
Western culture was a plague or an intoxication to be eliminated;
Ali Shariati's vision of Islam as the
one true liberator of the
Third World
from oppressive
colonialism,
neo-colonialism, and
capitalism; and
Morteza Motahhari's popularized retellings
of the Shia faith, all spread and gained listeners, readers and
supporters.
Most importantly, Khomeini preached that revolt, and especially
martyrdom, against injustice and tyranny
was part of Shia Islam, and that Muslims should reject the
influence of both
liberal capitalism and
communism
with the slogan
"Neither East, nor West - Islamic
Republic!"
Away from public view, Khomeini developed the ideology of
velayat-e
faqih (guardianship of the jurist) as government, that
Muslims — in fact everyone — required "guardianship," in the form
of rule or supervision by the leading Islamic jurist or jurists.
Such rule was ultimately
"more necessary even than prayer and
fasting" in Islam, as it would protect Islam from deviation
from traditional
sharia law, and in so doing
eliminate poverty, injustice, and the "plundering" of Muslim land
by foreign non-believers.
This idea of rule by Islamic jurists was spread through his book
Islamic
Government, mosque sermons, smuggled cassette speeches by
Khomeini, among Khomeini's opposition network of students
(
talabeh), ex-students (able clerics such as
Morteza Motahhari,
Mohammad Beheshti,
Mohammad-Javad Bahonar,
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and
Mohammad Mofatteh), and
traditional business leaders (
bazaari) inside Iran.
Opposition groups and organizations
Other opposition groups included
constitutionalist liberals — the democratic, reformist Islamic
Freedom Movement of Iran,
headed by
Mehdi Bazargan, and the
more secular
National Front.
They were based in the urban
middle
class, and wanted the Shah to adhere to the
Iranian Constitution of 1906
rather than to replace him with a theocracy, but lacked the
cohesion and organization of Khomeini's forces.
Marxists groups — primarily the communist
Tudeh Party of Iran and the
Fedaian
guerillas — had been weakened considerably by government
repression. Despite this the guerillas did help play an important
part in the final February 1979 overthrowdelivering "the regime its
coup de grace." The most powerful guerilla group — the
People's Mujahedin — was leftist
Islamist and opposed the influence of the clergy as
reactionary.
Many clergy did not follow Khomeini's lead. Popular ayatollah
Mahmoud Taleghani supported the
left, while perhaps the most senior and influential ayatollah in
Iran —
Mohammad Kazem
Shariatmadari — first remained aloof from politics and then
came out in support of a democratic revolution.
Khomeini worked to unite this opposition behind him (with the
exception of the unwanted `atheistic Marxists`), focusing on the
socio-economic problems of the Shah's regime (corruption and
unequal income and development),while avoiding specifics among the
general public that might divide the factions, — particularly his
plan for clerical rule which he believed most Iranians had become
prejudiced against as a result of propaganda campaign by
Western imperialists.
In the post-Shah era, some revolutionaries who clashed with his
theocracy and were suppressed by his movement complained of
deception, but in the meantime anti-Shah unity was
maintained.
1970-1977
Several events in the 1970s set the stage for the 1979
revolution:
The 1971
2,500th
anniversary of the founding of the Persian Empire at Persepolis
, organized by the Shah's regime, was attacked for
its extravagance. "As the foreigners reveled on drink
forbidden by Islam, Iranians were not only excluded from the
festivities, some were starving." Five years later the Shah angered
pious Iranian Muslims by changing the first year of the Iranian
solar calendar from the Islamic
hijri to the ascension to
the throne by
Cyrus the Great. "Iran
jumped overnight from the Muslim year 1355 to the royalist year
2535."
The
oil boom of the 1970s produced
"alarming" increase in inflation and waste and an "accelerating
gap" between the rich and poor, the city and the country, along
with the presence of tens of thousand of unpopular skilled foreign
workers. By mid-1977 economic austerity measures to fight inflation
disproportionately affected the thousands of poor and unskilled
male migrants to the cities working construction. Culturally and
religiously conservative, many went on to form the core of
revolution's demonstrators and "martyrs".
All Iranians were required to join and pay dues to a new political
party, the
Rastakhiz party — all
other parties being banned. That party's attempt to fight inflation
with populist "anti-profiteering" campaigns — fining and jailing
merchants for high prices — angered and politicized merchants while
fueling black markets.
In 1977 the Shah responded to the "polite reminder" of the
importance of political rights by the new American President,
Jimmy Carter, by granting amnesty to
some prisoners and allowing the Red Cross to visit prisons. Through
1977 liberal opposition formed organizations and issued open
letters denouncing the regime.
That year also saw the death of the popular and influential
modernist Islamist leader
Ali Shariati.
This both angered his followers, who considered him a martyr at the
hands of
SAVAK, and removed a potential
revolutionary rival to Khomeini. Finally, in October Khomeini's son
Mostafa died of a heart attack, his death also blamed on SAVAK. A
subsequent memorial service for Mostafa in Tehran put Khomeini back
in the spotlight.
Outbreak
Start of demonstrations in late 1977
The first militant anti-Shah demonstrations were in October 1977,
after the death of Khomeini's son Mostafa. Khomeini's activists
numbered "perhaps a few hundred in total", but over the coming
months they grew to a mass of several thousand demonstrators in
most cities of Iran.
The first casualties suffered in major demonstrations against the
Shah came in January 1978.
Hundreds of Islamist students and religious
leaders in the city of Qom
were furious over a story in the
government-controlled press they felt was libelous. The army was sent in, dispersing the
demonstrations and killing several students (two to nine according
to the government, 70 or more according to the opposition).
According to the Shi'ite customs,
memorial
services (called
Arba'een) are held forty
days after a person's death. In mosques across the nation, calls
were made to honour the dead students. Thus on
February 18 groups in a number of cities marched
to honour the fallen and protest against the rule of the Shah.
This
time, violence erupted in Tabriz
, where five
hundred demonstrators were killed according to the opposition, ten
according to the government. The cycle repeated itself, and
on
March 29, a new round of protests began
across the nation. Luxury hotels, cinemas, banks, government
offices, and other symbols of the Shah regime were destroyed; again
security forces intervened, killing many. On
May
10 the same occurred.
In May, government commandos burst into the home of
Ayatollah Kazem Shariatmadari,
a leading cleric and political moderate, and shot dead one of his
followers right in front of him. Shariatmadari abandoned his
quietist stance and joined the opposition to the Shah.
Shah and the United States
Facing a
revolution, the Shah appealed to
the United States for support. Because of Iran's history and
strategic location, it was important to the
United States.
Iran
shared a long border with America's cold war rival, the Soviet Union
, and was the largest, most powerful country in the
oil-rich Persian Gulf. The Shah had long been pro-American,
but the Pahlavi regimvjjfjugb nkj nm n n n had also recently
garnered unfavorable publicity in the West for its human rights
record. In the United States, Iran was not considered in danger of
revolution. A CIA analysis in August 1978, just six onths before
the Shah fled Iran, had concluded that the country "is not in a
revolutionary or even a pre-revolutionary situation."
According to historian
Nikki Keddie,
the administration of then President Carter followed "no clear
policy" on Iran. The U.S. ambassador to Iran,
William H. Sullivan, recalls that the
U.S. National Security Advisor
Zbigniew Brzezinski “repeatedly
assured Pahlavi that the U.S. backed him fully." On November 4,
1978, Brzezinski called the Shah to tell him that the United States
would "back him to the hilt."
But at the same time, certain high-level
officials in the State
Department
believed the revolution was unstoppable.
After visiting the Shah in summer of 1978, Secretary of the
Treasury
W. Michael Blumenthal complained of the
Shah's emotional collapse, reporting, "You've got a zombie out
there." Brzezinski and
Energy
Secretary James Schlesinger
were adamant in their assurances that the Shah would receive
military support.One scholar (sociologist
Charles Kurzman), argues that rather than
being indecisive, or sympathetic to the revolution, the Carter
administration was consistently supportive of the Shah and urged
the Iranian military to stage a "last-resort coup d'etat" even
after the regime's cause was hopeless.
Many Iranians believe the lack of intervention and sympathetic
remarks about the revolution by high-level American officials
indicate the U.S. "was responsible for Khomeini's victory." A more
extreme position asserts that the Shah's overthrow was the result
of a "sinister plot to topple a nationalist, progressive, and
independent-minded monarch."
Summer
By summer
1978 the level of protest had been at a steady state for four
months — about ten thousand participants in each major city (with
the exception of Isfahan
where protests were larger and Tehran
where they
were smaller). This amounted to an "almost fully mobilized
`mosque network,`" of pious Iranian Muslims, but a small minority
of the "more than 15 million" adults in Iran. Worse for the
momentum of the movement, on June 17 1978 the
40-day mourning cycle of mobilization of protest —
where demonstrators were killed every 40-days as they mourned the
dead of earlier demonstrations — ended with a call for calm and a
stay-at-home strike by moderate religious leader Shariatmadari. In
an attempt to appease discontent the Shah made appeals to the
moderate clergy, firing his head of SAVAK and promising free
elections the next June.
But by August protests had "kick[ed] ... into high gear," and the
number of demonstrators mushroomed to hundreds of thousands. Two
factors were blamed.
In an attempt to dampen inflation the Shah's regime cut spending,
but the cutbacks led to a sharp rise in layoffs — particularly
among young, unskilled, male workers living in city slums. By
summer 1978, these workers, often from traditional rural
backgrounds, joined the street protests in massive numbers.
Abadan cinema fire
The other factor was the August 1978
Cinema Rex Fire in Abadan where over 400
people died. Movie theaters had been a common target of Islamist
demonstrators but such was the distrust of the regime and
effectiveness of its enemies' communication skills that the public
believed SAVAK had set the fire in an attempt to frame the
opposition. The next day 10,000 relatives and sympathizers gathered
for a mass funeral and march shouting, ‘burn the Shah’, and ‘the
Shah is the guilty one.’
Black Friday and its aftermath
A new prime minister,
Jafar
Sharif-Emami, was installed in late August and reversed some of
the Shah's policies. Casinos were closed, the imperial calendar
abolished, activity by political parties legalized — to no avail.
By September, the nation was rapidly destabilizing, and major
protests were becoming a regular occurrence. The Shah introduced
martial law, and banned all
demonstrations but on September 8 thousands of protesters gathered
in Tehran. Security forces shot and killed dozens, in what became
known as
Black Friday.
The clerical leadership declared that "thousands have been
massacred by Zionist troops," but in retrospect it has been said
that "the main casualty" of the shooting was "any hope for
compromise" between the protest movement and the Shah's regime. The
troops were actually ethnic Kurds who had been fired on by snipers,
and post revolutionary tally by the Martyrs Foundation of people
killed as a result of demonstrations throughout the city on that
day found a total of 84 dead. In the mean time however, the
appearance of government brutality alienated much of the rest of
the Iranian people and the Shah's allies abroad.
By late summer 1978 the movement to overthrow had become "`viable`
in the minds of many Iranians," boosting support that much more. A
general strike in October resulted in
the paralysis of the economy, with vital industries being shut
down, "sealing the Shah's fate". By autumn popular support for the
revolution was so powerful that those who still opposed it became
reluctant to speak out, According to one source "victory may be
dated to mid-November 1978." A military government headed by
General
Gholam Reza Azhari
replaced conciliatory prime minister Sharif Emami.

Ayatollah Khomeini at Neauphle-le
Chateau surrounded by journalists
In an
attempt to weaken Ayatollah Khomeini's ability to communicate with
his supporters, the Shah urged Iraq
to deport
Khomeini. The Iraqi government cooperated and on
October 3, Khomeini left Iraq for Kuwait
, but was
refused entry. Three days later he left for Paris and took
up residence in the suburb of Neauphle-le-Château
. Though farther from Iran, telephone
connections with the home country and access to the international
press were far better than in Iraq.
Muharram protests
On
December 2, during the Islamic month
of
Muharram, over two million people filled
the streets of Tehran's
Azadi Square
(then Shahyad Square), to demand the removal of the Shah and return
of Khomeini.

Mass demonstration in Tehran
A week later on December 10 and 11, a "total of 6 to 9 million"
anti-shah demonstrators marched throughout Iran. According to one
historian, "even discounting for exaggeration, these figures may
represent the largest protest event in history."
By late 1978 the shah was in search of a prime minister and offered
the job to a series of liberal oppositionists. While "several
months earlier they would have considered the appointment a dream
come true," they now "considered it futile". Finally, in the last
days of 1978, Dr.
Shapour Bakhtiar,
a long time opposition leader, accepted the post and was promptly
expelled from the oppositional movement."l
Victory of revolution and fall of monarchy
Shah leaves
By mid-December the shah's position had deteriorated to the point
where he "wanted only to be allowed to stay in Iran." He was turned
down by the opposition. In late December, "he agreed to leave the
country temporarily; still he was turned down." On January 16, 1979
the Shah and the empress left Iran. Scenes of spontaneous joy
followed and "within hours of almost every sign of the Pahlavi
dynasty" was destroyed.
Bakhtiar dissolved SAVAK, freed political prisoners, ordered the
army to allow mass demonstrations, promised free elections and
invited Khomeinists and other revolutionaries into a government of
"national unity".
After stalling for a few days Bakhtiar
allowed Ayatollah Khomeini to
return to Iran, asking him to create a Vatican
-like state in Qom
and calling
upon the opposition to help preserve the constitution.
Khomeini's return and fall of the monarchy
On February 1, 1979
Ayatollah
Khomeini returned to Tehran in a chartered Air France
Boeing 747. The welcoming crowd of several
million Iranians was so large he was forced to take a helicopter
from the airport. Khomeini was now not only the undisputed leader
of the revolution, he had become what some called a "semi-divine"
figure, greeted as he descended from his airplane with cries of
'Khomeini, O Imam, we salute you, peace be upon you.' Crowds were
now known to chant "Islam, Islam, Khomeini, We Will Follow You,"
and even "Khomeini for King."
On the day of his arrival Khomeini made clear his fierce rejection
of Bakhtiar's regime in a speech promising 'I shall kick their
teeth in.'
Khomeini appointed his own competing interim prime minister
Mehdi Bazargan on February 4, 'with
the support of the nation' and commanded Iranians to obey Bazargan
as a religious duty.
As Khomeini's movement gained momentum, soldiers began to defect to
his side. On February 9 about 10 P.M. a fight broke out between
loyal
Immortal Guards and
pro-Khomeini rebel
Homafaran of Iran Air
Force, with Khomeini declaring jihad on loyal soldiers who did not
surrender. Revolutionaries and rebel soldiers gained the upper hand
and began to take over police stations and military installations,
distributing arms to the public. The final collapse of the
provisional non-Islamist government came at 2 p.m. February 11 when
the Supreme Military Council declared itself "neutral in the
current political disputes… in order to prevent further disorder
and bloodshed." Revolutionaries took over government buildings, TV
and Radio stations, and palaces of
Pahlavi dynasty.
This period, from February 1 to 11, is celebrated every year in
Iran as the "
Decade of Fajr."
February 11 is "Islamic Revolution's Victory Day", a national
holiday with state sponsored demonstrations in every city.
Consolidation of power by Khomeini
From 1979 to 1982 or 83 Iran was in a "revolutionary crisis mode".
The economy and the apparatus of government had collapsed, military
and security forces were in disarray. But by 1982 Khomeini and his
supporters had crushed the rival factions and consolidated power.
Events that made up both the crisis and its resolution were the
Iran Hostage Crisis, the
invasion of Iran by
Saddam Hussein's Iraq, and the presidency of
Abolhassan Banisadr.
Conflicts among revolutionaries
Some observers believe "what began as an authentic and
anti-dictatorial popular revolution based on a broad coalition of
all anti-Shah forces was soon transformed into an Islamic
fundamentalist power-grab," that except for his core supporters,
the members of the coalition thought Khomeini intended to be more a
spiritual guide than a ruler — Khomeini being in his mid-70s,
having never held public office, been out of Iran for more than a
decade, and having told questioners things like "the religious
dignitaries do not want to rule."
Another view is Khomeini had "overwhelming ideological, political
and organizational hegemony," and non-theocratic groups never
seriously challenged Khomeini's movement in popular support. Regime
supporters themselves have claimed that Iranians who opposed
Khomeini were "fifth columnists" led by foreign countries
attempting to overthrow the Iranian government.
Khomeini and his loyalists in the
revolutionary
organizations implemented Khomeini's
velayat-e
faqih design for an Islamic Republic led by himself as
Supreme Leader by exploiting temporarily
allies, (such as Mehdi Bazargan's
Provisional Government of
Iran), and eliminating from Iran's political stage both them
and their adversaries one-by-one.
Organizations of the revolution
The most important bodies of the revolution were the
Revolutionary Council,
the
Revolutionary
Guards,
Revolutionary
Tribunals,
Islamic
Republican Party, and Revolutionary Committees
(
komitehs).
While the moderate Bazargan and his government (temporarily)
reassured the middle class, it became apparent they did not have
power over the "Khomeinist" revolutionary bodies, particularly the
Revolutionary Council (the "real power" in the revolutionary
state), and later the
Islamic
Republican Party. Inevitably the overlapping authority of the
Revolutionary Council (which had the power to pass laws) and
Bazargan's government was a source of conflict, despite the fact
that both had been approved by and/or put in place by
Khomeini.
This conflict lasted only a few months however. The provisional
government fell shortly after American Embassy officials were taken
hostage on November 4, 1979.
Bazargan's resignation was received by Khomeini without complaint,
saying "Mr. Bazargan ... was a little tired and preferred to stay
on the sidelines for a while." Khomeini later described his
appointment of Bazargan as a "mistake."
The
Revolutionary
Guard, or
Pasdaran-e Enqelab, was established by
Khomeini on May 5, 1979 as a counterweight both to the armed groups
of the left, and to the Shah's military. The guard eventually grew
into "a full-scale" military force and "the strongest institution
of the revolution."
Serving under the Pasdaran were/are the
Baseej-e Mostaz'afin, ("Oppressed Mobilization")
volunteers in everything from earthquake emergency management to
attacking opposition demonstrators and newspaper offices.
The
Islamic Republican
Party fought to establish theocratic government by
velayat-e faqih.
Thousands of
komiteh or Revolutionary Committees served as
"the eyes and ears" of the new regime, and are credited by critics
with "many arbitrary arrests, executions and confiscations of
property".
Also enforcing the will of the regime were the
Hezbollahi (followers of the Party of
God), "strong-arm thugs" who attacked demonstrators and offices of
newspapers critical of Khomeini.
Non-Khomeini groups
Two major political groups formed after the fall of the shah that
clashed with, and were eventually suppressed by, pro-Khomeini
groups were the moderate religious
Muslim People's Republican
Party (MPRP) which was associated with Grand Ayatollah
Mohammad Kazem Shariatmadari,
and the secular leftist
National Democratic Front
(NDF).
Establishment of Islamic republic government
Referendum of 12 Farvardin
On March 30 and 31 (Farvardin 10, 11) a referendum was held over
whether to replace the monarchy with an "Islamic Republic" — a term
not defined on the ballot. Khomeini called for a massive turnout
and only the
National
Democratic Front,
Fadayan,
and several Kurdish parties opposed the vote. It was announced that
98.2% had voted in favor.
Writing of the constitution
In June 1979, the Freedom Movement released its draft constitution
for the Islamic Republic that it had been working on since Khomeini
was in exile. It included a Guardian Council to veto unIslamic
legislation, but had no guardian jurist ruler. Leftists found the
draft too conservative and in need of major changes but Khomeini
declared it `correct`. To approve the new constitution and prevent
leftist alterations, a relatively small seventy-three-member
Assembly of Experts for
Constitution was elected that summer. Critics complained that
"vote-rigging, violence against undesirable candidates and the
dissemination of false information" was used to "produce an
assembly overwhelmingly dominated by clergy loyal to
Khomeini."
Khomeini (and the assembly) now rejected the constitution — its
correctness notwithstanding — and Khomeini declared that the new
government should be based "100% on Islam."
In addition to the president, the new constitution included a more
powerful post of guardian jurist ruler intended for Khomeini, with
control of the military and security services, and power to appoint
several top government and judicial officials. It increased the
power and number of clerics on the
Council of Guardians and gave it
control over elections as well as laws passed by the
legislature.
The new constitution was also reportedly approved overwhelmingly by
referendum, but with more opposition and smaller turnout.
Hostage Crisis

Iranian militants with a U.S.
hostage
Helping to pass the constitution, suppress moderates and otherwise
radicalize the revolution was the holding of 52 American diplomats
hostage for over a year. In late October 1979, the exiled and dying
Shah was admitted into the United States for cancer treatment. In
Iran there was an immediate outcry and both Khomeini and leftist
groups demanding the Shah's return to Iran for trial and execution.
On 4 November 1979 youthful Islamists, calling themselves
Muslim Student
Followers of the Imam's Line, invaded the embassy compound and
seized its staff.
Revolutionaries were reminded of how 26 years earlier the Shah had
fled abroad while the Embassy-based American CIA and British
intelligence organized a
coup d'état to overthrow his
nationalist opponent.
The holding of hostages was very popular and continued for months
even after the death of the Shah. As Khomeini explained to his
future President
Banisadr,
With great publicity
the students
released documents from the American embassy — or "nest of spies" —
showing moderate Iranian leaders had met with U.S. officials. Among
the casualties of the hostage crisis was Prime Minister Bazargan
and his government who resigned in November unable to enforce the
government's order to release the hostages.
The prestige of Khomeini and the hostage taking was further
enhanced with the failure of a hostage rescue attempt, widely
credited to divine intervention.
Iran-Iraq War
In September 1980, the
Arab
Nationalist and
Sunni Muslim-dominated
regime of
Saddam Hussein in
neighboring Iraq
invaded Iran in an
attempt to take advantage of revolutionary chaos and destroy the
revolution in its infancy. Iran was "galvanized" and Iranians
rallied behind their new government helping to stop and then
reversing the Iraqi advance. By early 1982 Iran regained almost all
the territory lost to the invasion.
Like the hostage crisis, the war served in part as an opportunity
for the regime to strengthen Islamic revolutionary ardour and
revolutionary groups. such as the
Revolutionary
Guard and committees at the expense of its remaining
allies-turned-opponents, such as the MEK. While enormously costly
and destructive, the war "rejuvenate[d] the drive for national
unity and Islamic revolution" and "inhibited fractious debate and
dispute" in Iran.
Suppression of opposition
In early March, Khomeini announced, "do not use this term,
‘democratic.’ That is the Western style," giving pro-democracy
liberals (and later leftists) a taste of disappointments to
come.
In succession the
National Democratic Front
was banned in August 1979, the provisional government was
disempowered in November, the
Muslim People's Republican
Party banned in January 1980, the
People's Mujahedin of Iran
guerillas came under attack in February 1980, a purge of
universities was begun in March 1980, and leftist Islamist
Abolhassan Banisadr was impeached in
June 1981.
Newspaper closings
In mid August, shortly after the election of the
constitution-writing assembly, several dozen newspapers and
magazines opposing Khomeini's idea of theocratic rule by jurists
were shut down. When protests were organized by the
National Democratic Front
(NDF), Khomeini angrily denounced them saying, "we thought we were
dealing with human beings. It is evident we are not."
Hundreds were injured by "rocks, clubs, chains and iron bars" when
Hezbollahi attacked the
protesters, and shortly after, a warrant was issued for the arrest
of the NDF's leader.
Muslim People's Republican Party

Kazem Shariatmadari
In December the moderate Islamic party
Muslim People's Republican
Party (MPRP), and its spiritual leader
Mohammad Kazem Shariatmadari
had become a rallying point for Iranians who wanted democracy not
theocracy.
Riots broke out in Shariatmadari's Azeri
home region with members of the MPRP and Shariatmadari's followers
seizing the Tabriz
television
station, and using it to "broadcast demands and grievances."
The regime reacted quickly, sending Revolutionary Guards to retake
the TV station, mediators to diffuse complaints and activists to
stage a massive pro-Khomeini counter-demonstration. The party was
suppressed and in 1982 Shari'atmadari was "demoted" from the rank
of Grand Ayatollah and many of his clerical followers purged.
Islamist left
In January 1980
Abolhassan
Banisadr was elected president of Iran. Though an adviser to
Khomeini, he was a leftist who clashed with another ally of
Khomeini, the theocratic
Islamic
Republic Party (IRP) — the controlling power in the new
parliament.

Banisadr in 1958
At the same time, erstwhile revolutionary allies of Khomeini — the
Islamist modernist guerrilla group
People's Mujahedin of Iran (or
MEK) — were being suppressed by Khomeinis revolutionary
organizations. Khomeini attacked the MEK as
monafeqin (hypocrites) and
kafer (unbelievers).
Hezbollahi thugs
attacked meeting places, bookstores, newsstands of Mujahideen and
other leftists driving them underground. Universities were closed
to purge them of opponents of theocratic rule as a part of the
"
Cultural
Revolution", and 20,000 teachers and nearly 8,000 military
officers deemed too "Westernized" were dismissed.
By mid-1981 matters came to a head. An attempt by Khomeini to forge
a reconciliation between Banisadr and IRP leaders had failed and
now it was Banisadr who was the rallying point "for all doubters
and dissidents" of the theocracy, including the MEK.
When leaders of the
National
Front called for a demonstration in June 1981 in favor of
Banisadr, Khomeini threatened its leaders with the death penalty
for apostasy "if they did not repent." Leaders of the
Freedom Movement of Iran were
compelled to make and publicly broadcast apologies for supporting
the Front's appeal. Those attending the rally were menaced by
Hezbollahi and Revolutionary Guards and intimidated into
silence.
The MEK retaliated with a campaign of terror against the IRP. On
the 28 June 1981, a bombing of the office of the IRP killed around
70 high-ranking officials, cabinet members and members of
parliament, including
Mohammad
Beheshti, the secretary-general of the party and head of the
Islamic Republic's judicial system. The regime responded with
thousands of arrests and hundreds of executions. Despite these and
other assassinations the hoped-for mass uprising and armed struggle
against the Khomeiniists was crushed.
The MEK bombings were not the only violent opposition to the
Khomeinist regime. In May 1979, the Furqan Group (
Guruh-i
Furqan) assassinated an important lieutenant of Khomeini,
Morteza Motahhari.
Marxist guerrillas
and federalist parties revolted in some regions comprising Khuzistan
, Kurdistan
and Gonbad-e Qabus
which resulted in fighting among them and
revolutionary forces. These revolts began in April 1979 and
lasted for several months or years depending on the region.
Casualties

Ayatollah Sadeq Khalkhali
The number of protesters and revolutionaries killed during the
Iranian Revolution range between 3,000 to 60,000. Ayatollah
Khomeini stated that "60,000 men, women and children were martyred
by the Shah's regime," but estimates compiled by a researcher (Emad
al-Din Baghi) at the Martyrs Foundation (Bonyad Shahid) come to
only 2,781 killed in the 1978 and 1979 clashes between
demonstrators and the Shah's army and security forces, which if
true mean that Iran suffered remarkably few casualties compared to
contemporary events such as the South African anti-apartheid
movement.
After the revolution human rights groups estimated the number of
casualties suffered by protesters and prisoners of the new Islamic
regime to be several thousand. The first to be executed were
Members of the old regime - senior generals, followed by over 200
of the Shah's senior civilian officials - as punishment and to
eliminate the danger of coup d’État. Brief trials lacking defense
attorneys, juries, transparency or opportunity for the accused to
defend themselves were held by revolutionary judges such as
Sadegh Khalkhali, the
Sharia judge. By January 1980 "at least 582
persons had been executed." Among those executed was
Amir Abbas Hoveida, former Prime Minister
of Iran.Between January 1980 and June 1981, when Bani-Sadr was
impeached, at least 900 executions took place, for everything from
drug and sexual offenses to `corruption on earth,` from plotting
counter-revolution and spying for Israel to membership in
opposition groups. In the 12 months following that Amnesty
International documented 2,946 executions, with several thousand
more killed in the next two years according to the anti-regime
guerillas
People's Mujahedin
of Iran.
Impact
International
Internationally, the initial impact of the Islamic revolution was
immense.In the non-Muslim world it changed the image of Islam,
generating much interest in Islam — both sympathetic and hostile —
and even speculation that the revolution might change "the world
balance of power more than any political event since Hitler's
conquest of Europe."
The Islamic Republic positioned itself as a revolutionary beacon
under the slogan "neither East nor West" (i.e. neither Soviet nor
American/West European models), and called for the overthrow of
capitalism, American influence, and social injustice in the Middle
East and the rest of the world.
Revolutionary leaders in Iran gave and
sought support from non-Muslim causes in the Third World — e.g. the Sandinistas in Nicaragua
, IRA in Ireland and
anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa — even to the point of favoring
non-Muslim revolutionaries over more conservative Islamic causes
such as the neighboring Afghan
Mujahideen.
Persian Gulf and the Iran–Iraq War
In its
region, Iranian Islamic revolutionaries called specifically for the
overthrow of monarchies and their replacement with Islamic
republics, much to the alarm of its smaller Sunni-run Arab
neighbors Iraq
, Saudi Arabia
, Kuwait
, and the
other Persian Gulf States — most
of whom were monarchies and all of whom had sizable Shi'a populations. It was with one of these
regimes that the
Iran–Iraq War
— which killed hundreds of thousands and dominated life in the
Islamic Republic for the next eight years — was fought. Although
Iraq invaded Iran, most of the war was fought after Iran had
regained most of its land back and after the Iraqi regime had
offered a truce. Khomeini rejected it, announcing the only
condition for peace was that "the regime in Baghdad must fall and
must be replaced by an Islamic Republic," but ultimately the war
ended with no Islamic revolution in Iraq. Iraq also used chemical
weapons against Iran and other anti-peace tactics.
Western/U.S.-Iranian relations
Other countries
In the Mideast and Muslim world, particularly in its early years,
it triggered enormous enthusiasm and redoubled opposition to
western intervention and influence.
Islamist insurgents rose in Saudi Arabia , Egypt , Syria , and Lebanon
.
Although ultimately only the Lebanese Islamists succeeded, other
activities have had more long term impact. The Ayatollah Khomeini's
1989 fatwa calling for the killing of British citizen
Salman Rushdie had international impact. The
Islamic revolutionary government itself is credited with helping
establish
Hezbollah in Lebanon and the
Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
On the other side of the ledger, at least one observer argues that
despite great effort and expense the only countries outside Iran
the revolution had a "measure of lasting influence" on are Lebanon
and Iraq.Others claim the devastating
Iran–Iraq War "mortally wounded ...
the ideal of spreading the Islamic revolution," or that the Islamic
Republic's pursuit of an ideological rather than a "nationalist,
pragmatic" foreign policy has weakened Iran's "place as a great
regional power".
Domestic
Internally, the revolution has brought a broadening of education
and health care for the poor, and particularly
governmental promotion of Islam,
and the elimination of
secularism and
American influence in
government. Fewer changes have occurred in terms of
political freedom, governmental
honesty and
efficiency,
economic equality and
self-sufficiency, or even popular religious
devotion. Opinion polls and observers report widespread
dissatisfaction, including a "rift" between the revolutionary
generation and younger Iranians who find it "impossible to
understand what their parents were so passionate about."
Human development
Literacy has continued to increase under the Islamic Republic which
uses Islamic principles, By 2002 illiteracy rates dropped by more
than half. Maternal and infant mortality rates have also been cut
significantly. Population growth was first encouraged, but
discouraged after 1988. Overall, Iran's Human development Index
rating has climbed significantly from 0.569 in 1980 to 0.732 in
2002, on par with neighbour Turkey.
Politics and government
Iran has elected governmental bodies at the national, provincial
and local levels. Although these bodies are subordinate to
theocracy — which has veto power over who can run for parliament
(or
Islamic Consultative
Assembly) and whether its bills can become law — they have more
power than equivalent organs in the Shah's government.Iran's Sunni
minority (about 8%) has seen some unrest. While Iran's small
non-Muslim minorities do not have equal rights, five of the 290
parliamentary seats are allocated to their communities.
Definitely not protected have been members of the
Bahá'í Faith, which has
been declared heretical and subversive. More than 200 Bahá'ís have
been executed or killed, and many more have been imprisoned,
deprived of jobs, pensions, businesses, and educational
opportunities. Bahá'í holy places have been confiscated,
vandalized, or destroyed. More recently, Bahá'ís in Iran have been
deprived of education and work. Several thousand young Bahá'ís
between the ages of 17 and 24 have been expelled from universities
for no particular reason.
Whether the Islamic Republic has brought more or less severe
political repression is disputed. Grumbling once done about the
tyranny and corruption of the Shah and his court is now directed
against "the Mullahs." Fear of
SAVAK has been
replaced by fear of
Revolutionary
Guards, and other religious revolutionary enforcers. Violations
of
human rights by the theocratic
regime is said by some to be worse than during the monarchy, and in
any case extremely grave. Reports of
torture, imprisonment of dissidents, and the murder
of prominent critics have been made by human rights
groups.Censorship is handled by the
Ministry of Culture and
Islamic Guidance, without whose official permission, "no books
or magazines are published, no audiotapes are distributed, no
movies are shown and no cultural organization is
established."
Women
Women — especially those from traditional backgrounds —
participated on a large scale in demonstrations leading up to the
revolution. Since the revolution university enrollment and the
number of women in the civil service and higher education has risen
(to the alarm of some regime authorities), and several women have
been elected to the
Iranian parliament.
Nonetheless the ideology of the revolution opposes equal rights for
women. Within months of the founding of the Islamic Republic the
1967 Family Protection Law was repealed, female government workers
were forced to observe Islamic dress code, women were barred from
becoming judges, beaches and sports were sex-segregated, the
marriage age for girls was reduced to 13 and married women were
barred from attending regular schools.Women began almost
immediately to protest and have won some reversals of policies in
the years since. Inequality for women in inheritance and other
areas of
the civil
code remain. Segregation of the sexes, from "schoolrooms to ski
slopes to public buses", is strictly enforced. Females caught by
revolutionary officials in a mixed-sex situation can be subject to
virginity tests.
Economy
Iran's economy has seen mixed fortunes. Dependence on petroleum
exports is still strong. Per capita income fluctuates with the
price of oil — reportedly falling at one point to 1/4 of what it
was prior to the revolution and has still not reached
pre-revolution levels. Unemployment among Iran's population of
young has steadily risen as job creation has failed to keep up, a
high level of corruption being blamed in part, but mostly due to
western sanctions which prevents companies from investing in Iran.
Problems manifest themselves in international travel, were one
Iranian complained to an expatriate journalist: "What has come of
us. Our currency is worthless. Those backward Arabs go to Europe
with rials, and we can barely visit Turkey with our worthless
tomans!"
Gharbzadegi ("westoxification")
or western cultural influence stubbornly remains, brought by music
recordings, videos, and satellite dishes. One post-revolutionary
opinion poll found 61% of students in Tehran chose "Western
artists" as their role models with only 17% choosing "Iran's
officials."
See also
References and notes
Bibliography
Further reading
- Ryszard
Kapuściński. Shah of
Shahs. Translated from Polish by William R. Brand and
Katarzyna Mroczkowska-Brand. New York: Vintage International,
1992.
- Charles Kurzman. The
Unthinkable Revolution. Cambridge, MA & London: Harvard
University Press, 2004.
- Habib Ladjevardi (editor),
Memoirs of Shapour Bakhtiar, Harvard University Press,
1996.
- Kraft, Joseph. "Letter from Iran", The New Yorker,
Vol. LIV, #44, Dec. 18, 1978.
- Legum, Colin, et al., eds. Middle East Contemporary Survey:
Volume III, 1978–79. New York: Holmes & Meier Publishers,
1980. + *Legum, Colin, et al., eds. Middle East Conte
- Milani, Abbas, The Persian
Sphinx: Amir Abbas Hoveyda and the Riddle of the Iranian
Revolution, Mage Publishers, 2000, ISBN 0-934211-61-2.
- Munson, Henry, Jr. Islam and Revolution in the Middle
East. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988.
- Nafisi, Azar. "Reading Lolita in Tehran." New York: Random
House, 2003.
- Nobari, Ali Reza, ed. Iran
Erupts: Independence: News and Analysis of the Iranian National
Movement. Stanford: Iran-America Documentation Group,
1978.
- Nomani, Farhad & Sohrab Behdad, Class and Labor in
Iran; Did the Revolution Matter? Syracuse University Press.
2006. ISBN 0-8156-3094-8
- Pahlavi, Mohammad Reza,
Response to History, Stein & Day Pub, 1980, ISBN
0-8128-2755-4.
- Rahnema, Saeed & Sohrab Behdad, eds. Iran After the
Revolution: Crisis of an Islamic State. London: I.B. Tauris,
1995.
- Sick, Gary. All Fall Down: America's Tragic Encounter with
Iran. New York: Penguin Books, 1986.
- Shawcross, William, The
Shah's last ride: The death of an ally, Touchstone, 1989, ISBN
0-671-68745-X.
- Smith, Frank E. The Iranian
Revolution. 1998.
- Society for Iranian Studies, Iranian Revolution in
Perspective. Special volume of Iranian Studies, 1980. Volume
13, nos. 1–4.
- Time magazine, January 7, 1980.
Man of the Year (Ayatollah Khomeini).
- U.S. Department of State, American Foreign Policy Basic
Documents, 1977–1980. Washington, DC: GPO, 1983. JX 1417 A56
1977–80 REF - 67 pages on Iran.
- Yapp, M.E. The Near East Since the First World War: A
History to 1995. London: Longman, 1996. Chapter 13: Iran,
1960–1989.
External links
Historical articles
Analytical articles
In pictures and videos