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March 2001


Passion for change runs deep in Iran

On the 22nd anniversary of the fall of the monarchy in Iran hundreds of opposition rallies were held Feb. 22 throughout the country protesting the lack of freedoms. The recent conservative backlash against the reformist movement, its newspapers, and its spokespeople, seems to have only helped intensify the protest movements.

In January hardline judges handed down a series of harsh jail sentences to ten writers, feminists, journalists, and student leaders who had participated in a conference in Berlin last year. The conference organizers, the German Green Party and a liberal research institute, had invited independent human rights activists as well as government-connected reformists to discuss recent developments in the country.

But protests by Iranian exiles and vehement denunciations of the regime for its inhuman policies and practices turned the conference into an international public relations disaster for the government. Ten conference participants were arrested upon return and were charged with "threatening national security." A major media campaign to incriminate them was also unleashed. These developments have coincided with an all-out war atmosphere created by the regime in its supposed "defense" of the Palestinian Intifada.

One of those arrested was Mehrangiz Kar, an articulate feminist jurist and legal scholar who has written several major popular works critical of the inhumanity of Islamic legal codes and norms practiced in Iran, used by women in daily legal battles.

Other defendants include Shahla Lahiji, the editor of a feminist women's magazine, and Akbar Ganji, a former insider turned investigative journalist who has exposed government assassination squads. The sentences seemed to have only backfired because the accused have now become major opposition figures with widespread support at home and abroad.

In one of her moving speeches in Berlin, Kar remarked that the reformist majority in the parliament elected last year can not do otherwise but to decisively move to dismantle the oppressive political and legal system set in place by the Islamic constitution. Anything short of that, she warned, will quickly bring the movement to a dead-end and lead to a strengthening of the conservatives.

She was not optimistic that such a decisive move by the reformists would actually take place. The present constitution was first shoved down the throat of Iranians by Ayatollah Khomeini in 1980 during the hostage crisis, and was specifically designed to frustrate any future attempts to democratize.

The Islamic reformists have thus far had to submit to the powers of the Faqih--the supreme leader--and the judiciary, but tensions are beginning to split this movement. On the one hand, in February a reformist--Islamic student group staged a sit-in in front of the Majlis (parliament) and issued an open letter to Ayatollah Khamenei, obliquely accusing him of ordering the killing of opposition figures, attacking the university dorms, and covering up the affair. On the other hand, Khatami and other executive branch officials are condemning anyone who questions the constitution.

Both outside the country, where millions of Iranians live in exile, and inside, a growing number yearn for the overthrow of both the rule of the clergy and an end to the involvement of religion in state affairs. The reformists do not speak for this large segment.

The major political shift, up to this moment, has been that some "true believers," once supporters of the Islamic Republic, have been moving away from demagoguery and towards becoming serious freedom fighters.

Reform ideologists, however, have also sown many illusions about the possibilities of achieving freedom within the present framework. They have exerted their influence on more radical elements such as during the summer 1999 student protests.

Unfortunately many Iranian Marxists consider the reformists to be a greater threat than the hardline conservatives, blinding them to the important developments of the present moment.

The closure of 30 or more newspapers last year has not stemmed the tidal wave of ideas and struggles coming. Serious debates are taking place in smaller papers, in more radical circles, and in undergound groups on the relationship of revolutionary theory, Marx's ideas, and the process of struggle for freedom.

Iran is awash in talk and protests by students, by workers, by national and ethnic minorities, and by women's liberationists. How can we ensure that these voices of revolt can be heard unseparated from the articulation of a philosophy of revolution?

--Cyrus Noveen

For more on Marxist-Humanism in the Iranian revolution, see "Women and revolution in Iran," From the Writings of Raya Dunayevskaya: Marxist-Humanist Archives in NEWS & LETTERS, March 2001.
--Editor
--Editor

** The letter, "Iran: Unfoldment of, and Contradiction in, Revolution," can be found in THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA COLLECTION, 6019 (English) and 6066 (Farsi).-Editor





PERSIAN TRANSLATIONS OF RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA'S WORKS PUBLISHED BY ANJOMAN AZADI, IRANIAN MARXIST-HUMANIST ORGANIZATION FROM 1979 TO TODAY

"Iran: Unfoldment of, and Contradictions in, Revolution." (1979)

"Worker and Intellectual at a Turning Point in History." From Chapter 4 of MARXISM AND FREEDOM. On the 1848 Revolutions and Marx's critique of Ferdinand Lassalle. (1979, 1989)

"The Two Russian Revolutions and Once Again, The Theory of Permanent Revolution." (1979)

Woman as Reason and as Force of Revolution. From PHILOSOPHY AND REVOLUTION and other works. Published on the first anniversary of the 1979 International Women's Day protests in Iran. (1980)

Special Introduction to the First Persian Translation of Marx's 1844 ECONOMIC AND PHILOSOPHY MANUSCRIPTS. (1980)

REVOLUTION AND COUNTER-REVOLUTION IN IRAN: POLITICAL AND PHILOSOPHIC LETTERS. (1982)

"Intellectuals in the Age of State-Capitalism: A Critique of Herbert Marcuse." (1982)

NATIONALISM, COMMUNISM, MARXIST-HUMANISM AND THE AFR0-ASIAN REVOLUTIONS. Translated by Nahal. Preface to the Farsi edition by the author. (1983)

"The Paris Commune Illuminates and Deepens the Content of Capital." From chapter 5 of MARXISM AND FREEDOM. Includes an unpublished essay by Karl Marx on the Paris Commune. (1984)

"The Last Writings of Marx Point a Trail to the 1980s." From ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION, AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION. (1989)

"The Shock of Recognition and the Philosophic Ambivalence of Lenin." Translation of essay in TELOS, Spring 1970. (1992)

ENGELAB VA AZADI (Revolution and Freedom). Newspaper includes Dunayevskaya's lecture on the Marx Centenary in 1983 to Center for Iranian Research and Analysis. (1981-1984)

SOKHAN AZADI (Freedom Forum). Journal includes Dunayevskaya on Hegel's Absolutes and on Marx's CAPITAL. (1992-1994)

For more information, contact AnjomanAzadi@aol.com or News & Letters, 36 South Wabash, Room 1440, Chicago IL 60603.




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