Posts Tagged ‘Rafsanjani’

Mehdi Karroubi on Taraneh Mousavi

Monday, August 31st, 2009

I provide a translation of that part of Karroubi’s press conference dealing with the Taraneh Mousavi affair. The version published by Tehran Bureau often has more the character of a paraphrase. More seriously, there are major lacunae in it which are not indicated by ellipses. I use the same source Tehran Bureau used.
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Hosein Taeb

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

TaebThe Iran Student Correspondents Association, a pro-government website, on 23/04/1387 [July 14, 2008] published a statement by the Revolutionary Guards’ public relations committee, who had just become the Commander in Chief of the Basij. He had been born in 1342 (1963/4). After his middle education, he became a seminary student. After studying in Tehran, Mashhad, and Qom, he reached a high degree (kharej) in Islamic jurisprudence. He had studied with, among others, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He joined the Revolutionary Guards in 1361 (1982/3). He began his work in Region 10 of Tehran and continued on to Qom and Mashhad. He was for some time the Revolutionary Guards’ coordinator with the Leader as well as the cultural commander of Imam Hosein College. He lost a brother in the Kerbala V operation and is married with three children.

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Karoubi’s July 29th Letter to Rafsanjani

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

What seems to have become the accepted translation of Hojjatoleslam Mehdi Karroubi’s letter to Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani can be traced to a translation published in khordaad88 and picked up (unsourced) in Enduring America. The sense of the original generally comes through, but it is often more in the nature of a paraphrase than a translation, and an entire paragraph is dropped without ellipses. Let the reader read and judge. Given the historical importance of this document, I am submitting my own translation. My source is Aq Bahman, a reputable website.

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Rafsanjani’s Friday Prayer

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Ayatollah Rafsanjani, the Iranian clerical strongman, delivered Friday prayers as scheduled. There was a sense leading up to these prayers that everything was hanging on what he was going to say. Was he going to impose his solution on the crisis, effectively selling it out for his benefit? Was he going to stand against his political rivals and use his power and prestige as one of the few surviving early leaders of the revolution to drive them out of the political arena? We’ll return to these questions later.

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Conclusion

The speech was neither a call for revolution nor submission. But it should be said that the overwhelming majority of his talk was directed at the Ahmadinejad government. He called for an end to the persecution of the press, an end to silencing the grumbling clergy in Qom, the freedom of prisoners arrested in the confrontations which followed the elections, and a general opening of society. It was done in the classical language of sage counsel, with plenty of references to the Koran and the lives of the Prophet and the Shiite Imams. For example, he referred to how Imam Ja`far os-Sadeq, who can be considered the first Shiite scholar, did most of his writing either in prison or having been censored by the Ummayads. This comparison of the reformists to the persecuted Shiite imam and the government to the Ummayads is pretty strong stuff.

What the practical effects of this sermon will be is hard to tell. We will have to leave that to a future post. But on the whole, it has strengthened the hand of the reformists and shown the usurping government its limitations.