Encyclopedia > Khomeni

  Article Content

Ruhollah Khomeini

Redirected from Khomeni

The neutrality of this page is disputed.

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (May 17, 1900 - June 30, 1989) was an Iranian Shiite fundamentalist cleric[?] and spiritual leader of the 1979 revolution that overthrew Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the then Shah of Iran. He is considered to be the founder of the modern Shiite State[?].


The Ayatollah Khomeini

He was born in the town of Khomein[?] as Ruhollah Mousavi in 1900. Khomeini was named an ayatollah in the 1950s. In 1964 he was exiled from Iran for his constant criticisms of the government. He fled to Iraq, where he stayed until being forced to leave in 1978, after which he went to France. He returned to Iran on February 1, 1979, invited by a revolution already in progress against the Shah, and seized power on February 11 (it was later claimed by his supporters that over 98% of the population were in favour of it, though independent observers question the number). From then on an Islamic Republic was formed in which a president is elected every 4 years. Only those candidates approved by the ayatollahs may run for the office.

On February 4, 1980 Khomeini named Abolhassan Bani-Sadr[?] as president of Iran.

Khomeini's rule quickly ended the westernized society that had existed under the Shah. Stict JafariLaw was instituted, women were forced to wear chadors[?], and freedom of speech was greatly curtailed. Torture and politicized arrests and executions became widespread, as the government staged a massive crackdown on anti-Shiite and anti-revolutionary behavoir.

Early in the revolution in the years of 1979 - 1981, Khomeini's followers held 52 Americans captive in Tehran's US embassy, holding them hostage for 444 days. Khomeini stated on February 23, 1980 that Iran's parliament would decide the fate of the American embassy hostages. President Jimmy Carter attempted to rescue the hostages, but this failed when the helicopters sent on this mission failed under desert conditions. Some Iranians considered this to be a miracle. Many commentators point to this failure as a major cause of Carter's loss in the following elections to Ronald Reagan.

Shortly after taking power, Khomeini began calling for similar Islamic revolutions across the Middle East. Fearful of the threat of the spread of Khomeini's militant brand of Shiism, the republic of Iraq, led by Saddam Hussein, invaded Iran, effectively starting what would become a decade-long Iran-Iraq war.

In early 1989 Khomeini ordered the killing of Salman Rushdie for blasphemy (the religious crime of prohibited speech). The Satanic Verses, Rushdie's novelistic examination of the integration of Indian characters into modern Western culture, contains passages which can be read as implying, amongst other things, that the Koran has not been preserved perfectly. This event caused many Western leftists, who had been generally in favor of the revolution against the Shah, to reconsider their support of Khomeini.

After eleven days in a hospital for an operation to stop internal bleeding, Khomeini died. A crowd of more than a million Iranians gathered around the burial location which was not supposed to be revealed at the time. Khomeini is considered by some as one of the most influential men (for good or bad) of the 20th century, and was name Time Magazine's Man of the Year in 1980.

Quotes concerning Ayatollah Khomeini and the Islamic revolution

  • Michel Foucault speculated at the time of the Iranian revolution[?] that "Islamic government" could initiate a new "political spirituality" and herald a "transfiguration" of the world, the sort unknown in the West since the rise of modernity.
  • "The Islamic Revolution of Iran presented a new example of perfect human beings and society... This is the reason behind the West's enmity towards it. Khomeini gave a new meaning to the lives of the Iranians." - Roger Garaudy[?], French intellectual and Holocaust denier
  • "Imam Khomeini and the Iranian nation performed a great historical act. In my opinion, as a western and non-Muslim person, I believe, it is a miracle that a divine revolution in today's world takes place in such a manner." - Robert Kalson, Canadian scientist
  • "The Islamic Revolution of Iran is honourable for it is the cry which has its origin in Ayatullah Khomeini's conscience." - William Wersey, American author and journalist
  • "One should express his viewpoint regarding what he performed in his country and in a vast part of the world with great respect and deep thought." - Pope John Paul II
  • "The name of Khomeini will always remain in the new chapter of Iranian history." - Erich Honecker, East German Communist Leader
  • "What he [Stalin] did in Russia we have to do in Iran. We, too, have to do a lot of killing. A lot." - Behzad, Iranian interpreter for Western journalist V.S. Naipaul
  • "Khomeini has offered us the opportunity to regain our frail religion ... faith in the power of words." - Norman Mailer, at a meeting of authors regarding the fatwa, New York City, February 1989
  • "The freedom-lovers of the world mourn the sad demise of Imam Khomeini." - Ernesto Cardinal, Nicaraguan combatant scholar
  • "I thought using the Ayatollah's money to support the Nicaraguan resistance was a neat idea." - Oliver North

Quotes from Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini

  • "Americans are the great Satan, the wounded snake. "
  • "In Islam, the legislative power and competence to establish laws belong exclusively to God Almighty."
  • "The author of the Satanic Verses book, which is against Islam, the Prophet and the Koran, and all those involved in its publication who were aware of its content, are sentenced to death. I ask all Moslems to execute them wherever they find them."
  • "If one permits an infidel to continue in his role as a corrupter of the earth, his moral suffering will be all the worse. If one kills the infidel, and this stops him from perpetrating his misdeeds, his death will be a blessing to him."
  • "Familiarize the people with the truth of Islam so that the young generation may not think that the men of religion in the mosques of Qum and al-Najaf believe in the separation of church from state, that they study nothing other than menstruation and childbirth and that they have nothing to do with politics. The colonialists have spread in school curricula the need to separate church from the state and have deluded people into believing that the ulema [religious experts] of Islam are not qualified to interfere in the political and social affairs. The lackeys and followers of the colonialists have reiterated these words. In the prophet's time, was the church separated from the state? Were there at the time theologians and politicians? At the time of the caliphs and the time of Ali, the amir of the faithful, was the state separated from the church? Was there an agency for the church and another for the state?
    The difference between the Islamic government and the constitutional governments, both monarchic and republican, lies in the fact that the people's representatives or the king's representatives are the ones who codify and legislate, whereas the power of legislation is confined to God, may He be praised, and nobody else has the right to legislate and nobody may rule by that which has not been given power by God. This is why Islam replaces the legislative council by a planning council that works to run the affairs and work of the ministries so that they may offer their services in all spheres.
    Christian, Jewish and Baha'i missionary centers are spread in Tehran to deceive people and to lead them away from the teachings and principles of religion. Isn't it a duty to destroy these centers?"
  • "All those against the revolution must disappear and quickly be executed" (as reported (http://www.shianews.com/hi/asia/news_id/0000573.php) by dissident cleric Agha Hossein Ali Montazeri, once in line to be Iran's supreme leader)

External Link



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Monaco Grand Prix

... it perhaps the most demanding and probably one of the most dangerous tracks still in use in Formula One racing. In many ways, the Monaco course is an anachronism ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 28.3 ms