www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Mansoor Hekmat--Iranian Marxist

Mansoor Hekmat (Zhoobin Razani) passed away at the age of 51 in London on July 4. His was a strong and confidant voice for working class liberation in Iran and throughout the Middle East. The constellation of radical activist organizations he helped fashion spans from Pakistan, Turkey, and Iraq to most of western Europe and North America.

Hekmat first became well-known in the early 1980s for his critiques of “populism” in the Iranian Left, for having tail-ended the Islamists. Implicit in this was a theory of state capitalism. His theory of state capitalism developed later in the mid-1980s was different than that of Marxist-Humanism, in that he argued the origins of Russian state capitalism was rooted in the 1921 NEP programs and sided more with Bukharin in those debates.

After going underground in Iran Hekmat joined forces with Kurdish revolutionaries to form a non-Stalinist Communist Party, distancing from guerrilla foco theories of the New Left. Hekmat demanded that his colleagues engage workers’, immigrants’, and civil rights struggles in whatever country they lived. This was a breath of fresh air in the 1980s compared to most of the rest of the Iranian Left who were isolated and self-absorbed.

The numerous publications Hekmat helped found and wrote for, gave a boost to a lively debate on Marxism and socialism, while engaging in support activities internationally for refugees and for dissidents in Iran.

In the late 1980s I wrote an article in NEWS & LETTERS about one of his colleagues, Gholam Keshavarz, who was assassinated in Cyprus by Khomeini’s death squads. During that time I worked with several of his colleagues in Los Angeles in numerous labor and immigrant activities.

In the early 1990s with the collapse of Communism in Russia and East Europe, a new split emerged among Hekmat’s colleagues. He wrote a new series of articles calling for the establishment of “Workers’ Communism” as opposed to “bourgeois communism.” The split also involved tensions with the Kurdish revolutionaries who did not want to be fully subsumed under an Iranian organization.

Unfortunately as a theoretician Hekmat never engaged Marxist-Humanism, or Marx’s humanism, which could have illuminated many of the dilemmas. Nevertheless he was a serious and worthy figure. His political stands on the need for revolution, the need for an independent working class movement, and the need to break from the fetishism of unity, were correct. He was the most prolific Iranian Marxist revolutionary theoretician. After September 11 Hekmat was among a handful to quickly single out the need to confront both fundamentalist terrorism and Bush’s imperial moves.

Hekmat was a strong voice for liberation that emerged out of the contradictions of the 1979 Iranian Revolution. It is sad that he will not be there when the new generation of Iranians confront the present oppressive regime and overthrow it. But the legacy of his vision of a genuine socialism will keep his memory alive.

--Cyrus Noveen

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons