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Do-e
Khordad(1) and the Specter of Democracy
Kaveh
Ehsani, Guest Editor
A shadow haunts
Iran, the shadow of democracy and popular sovereignty. Twenty years
ago the Islamic Revolution established a polity based on two contradictory
elements: a republic of equal and sovereign citizens, and a hierarchical
theocracy of pastoral power descending from an unelected religious
leader (Vali-e Faqih, the Supreme Leader), which represented
an innovation in Shi'i Islam. The inevitable tensions between these
irreconcilable elements are now coming to a head.(2)
Increasing
tensions are largely due to the dramatic changes of the past two
decades. Iran is now a more self-confident nation, having endured
a brutal war while developing necessary self-reliance in response
to an international embargo and diplomatic isolation. Yet Iran also
confronts momentous social and economic problems. The population
has doubled since the 1979 Revolution, while relative resources
have significantly dwindled. The country's overwhelmingly young
population is urban and educated; its aspirations are fundamentally
modern, secular and "middle class." But a rigid ideological
system frustrates young people's material aspirations and desires
for a "normal life," which, in local parlance, bespeaks
the profound alienation of the Revolution's second generation.
A chronic economic
recession poses the greatest challenge to Iran's population. The
prevailing consensus holds that structural economic problems cannot
be properly addressed until the underlying political impasse is
resolved. That is why, despite their repeated attacks on his government's
economic record, Khatami's conservative critics have been trounced
in successive elections. Iran's economic malaise stems from a pervasive
sense of insecurity. Multiple centers of authority disrupt plans
and decisions, appoint incompetent managers and consolidate the
domination of Mafia-like clans over every institution. The Judiciary,
a conservative stronghold, consistently acts in an arbitrary manner,
violating the constitutional rights of individuals and the press.
Politicized selection processes in the bloated state sector, from
universities to industries, have sharpened distinctions between
first- and second-class citizens.
The widespread
sense that Iran had reached a political dead-end mobilized the heterogeneous
Do-e Khordad Movement in the run-up to the 1997 presidential
elections. Since then, society's aspirations for democratic reform
have been invested in the administration of President Mohammed Khatami.
The embattled
conservative establishment has created successive crises in an attempt
to block political reforms and protect its own privileges. During
1999, three major events defined Iran's turbulent political landscape.
In January, Khatami stunned the nation by forcing the exposure of
a gang of Intelligence Ministry high officials' involvement in the
assassinations of intellectuals and opposition figures and their
attempt to mastermind a wave of political and cultural repression.
In February, Khatami delivered on his campaign promise to hold Iran's
first local elections. At one stroke, 200,000 democratically elected
officials entered the country's political structure, despite conservative
parliamentarians' frantic efforts to block the candidacy of the
Do-e Khordad candidates. It became clear that, in a relatively
open electoral game, the reform movement would continue to win hands-down.
Riding the
wave of this electoral victory, Iran's reformist camp announced
its short term strategy: to capture the majlis (parliament) in the
scheduled February 2000 elections in order to legislate reforms,
and to launch a national referendum to purge and reform the Judiciary.
By March of this year, rumors began circulating that extremist conservatives
planned to provoke major urban disturbances and eliminate (perhaps
physically) a couple of hundred key reformist figures in the process.
The motive behind this rumored plan seemed to be conservatives'
belief that Do-e Khordad was not a social movement but a
plot devised by intellectuals, journalist and strategists close
to Khatami. The widespread exposure of this plan in the independent
press momentarily threw the extremists into disarray.
By summer,
however, a conservative backlash had led to the imprisonment of
Tehran's mayor, the closure of the daily paper Zan, the impeachment
of the Minister of Culture and proposed legislation to seriously
curtail press freedoms. Responding to this crackdown and the closure
of the newspaper Salam, student protests erupted on the Tehran University
campus. Security forces and paramilitary thugs quickly moved in
to brutally suppress the students, and central Tehran was engulfed
in street violence. After the disturbances were put down a secret
letter surfaced in which 24 Revolutionary Guard generals threatened
President Khatami for failing to maintain law and order.
If the conservatives'
ploy was meant to intimidate, it backfired badly. Public outcry
over the security forces' ferocious attacks on the students and
the barely veiled threats of a military coup by the generals suddenly
brought Iran's Revolutionary Guards, the basij militia and the security
forces (3) under intense public scrutiny and criticism, thus neutralizing
them for now. In his second public speech after these violent events,
Khatami emphasized that violence was a double-edged sword. He declared
that his agenda to implement the rule of law as articulated in the
constitution while expanding citizens' participation in the political
domain remained unchanged.
The events
of July were nonetheless shocking to reformists and conservatives
alike. The speed with which events spun out of control revealed
that neither faction decisively commands Iranian society, thus serving
notice that any small excuse can detonate the country's pent-up
frustrations. The volatility of these frustrations was highlighted
by the fact that no organizations emerged to represent students'
collective demands. The students seemed unwilling or unable to formulate
consistent and reasonable goals or to forge alliances with other
political forces.
Iran has become
a fragmented society over the last 20 years. The Islamic regime
has tried to dominate all public space and every autonomous public
institution for the past two decades. In the words of a young working
class student employed as an industrial designer in the military,
"we have been denied a normal life. We cannot even have an
ordinary conversation with the opposite sex. Getting a job or entering
the university depends on your connections and "Islamic"
credentials. It has little to do with your abilities or motivation.
It is such a sham!" When asked why he does not join forces
with fellow thinkers in his neighborhood or work place to call for
change, he appeared confused and commented that "everyone is
so cynical. All I can do is to write up what I think and distribute
it in the streets at night. But what if I get caught?"
In such an
atomized society, repressed needs and demands burst forth at the
first opportunity, yet without being able to coalesce into a coherent
movement. The only common point reiterated by student protestors
in July was their support for Khatami. This is a dangerous situation
for all concerned. Many conservatives appeared convinced of the
need for relative moderation. The newly appointed heads of the Judiciary
and the Foundation of the Oppressed seemed to show greater accountability
and began to initiate long-needed reforms in their respective institutions.
By early September,
however, the new Judiciary appeared to have caved in to conservative
pressures. The independent daily, Neshat, was shut down and
discussions of violence being permitted in Islam had moved out of
the dark corners of extremist discourse and into the public pulpit
of Friday prayers. Reckoning that the upcoming parliamentary elections
will pose a grave threat to their interests, the extremists are
mounting the next wave of their offensive. More alarming, they appear
to be swaying the more moderate elements of the conservative faction.
In this tense context, the Do-e Khordad movement's most urgent
task is to nurture autonomous institutions capable of channeling
and articulating public frustrations, consolidating public participation
in the political process, and strengthening the democratic and republican
side of Iran's conflicted dual polity.
This issue
of Middle East Report marks the 20th anniversary of the Iranian
Revolution, an event that redrew the political map of Iran and the
entire Middle East. For twenty years, most analyses of Iran have
focused on Islam's political role in the regime. This one-sided
focus has led to the neglect of the inner dynamics of this complex
society and polity. In this issue we have tried to redress this
analytical imbalance by bringing together two groups of contributors:
scholars who have recently conducted qualitative and quantitative
field research in Iran on the key social trends that culminated
in the Do-e Khordad movement; and key allies, advisers and
sympathetic secular critics of President Khatami, who provide a
unique critical analysis of the reform movement. Although we could
have presented brief overviews of a variety of minor socio-political
trends, we have decided to focus on one group within Iran's diverse
spectrum: an emerging faction that describes itself as a democratic
and Islamic New Left. We hope this issue of Middle East Report will
illuminate the fascinating inner dynamics of a complex, evolving
Revolution while opening a constructive dialogue between interested
observers inside and outside of Iran.
Endnotes
1 Khordad
2, or May 23, the day of Khatami's election to the presidency in
1997, is also the name of the social movement that has spearheaded
reformism in Iran.
2 This duality
frequently engenders bizarre and seemingly irresolvable contradictions,
involving repression as well as innovative forms of subversion and
resistance. For instance, last March the Ministry of Culture and
Islamic Guidance finally granted permission for James Joyce's Ulysses
to be published in Persian after having been banned for years. The
translator, who had refused to publish the book in a truncated form,
reached a compromise with the Ministry, which refused to allow any
of the book's more objectionable passages to be published in Persian.
Vetoing the use of English for these passages, since many people
would actually be able to read them, the two sides eventually struck
a compromise to publish the racier passages in Italian.
3 A few years
ago the police and gendarmerie were integrated to create a united
force called the security forces.
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