The History of the Undefeated
A few words in commemoration of the 1979 Revolution
Mansoor
Hekmat
It is said that in recent years, a process
of 'review' has been taking place among revolutionaries and the leftist
opposition of Iran. A glance at the numerous publications, which this
grouping publishes particularly outside of Iran, confirms this, though
it is seriously doubtful whether the term 'review' is suitable to describe
this development. In solitude - when pronouncing the truth does not
harm anyone - one could call this a process of repentance. But publicly
where political correctness holds sway especially during these days,
perhaps the term 'new thinking' is a more suitable equivalent. The concept
of revolution and revolutionism in general and the 1979 Iranian revolution
in particular have been the first victims of this 'new thinking'.
Every month, mountains of materials are
published by individuals, circles and groups made up of remnants and
aged revolutionaries of the 1979 revolution. To read and follow all
these and share in the preoccupations and illusory worlds of their writers
is both extremely difficult and futile. It is not difficult, however,
to see the development of this 'new thinking'. One can use the association
method used by psychologists to check the reaction of this literature
to key words such as the very concept of 'revolution'. The picture that
emerges leaves no room for ambiguity. Revolution: excess, revolution:
violence, revolution: oppression, revolution: destruction.
And why not? Who of these survivors of
the 1979 revolution can shut their eyes for a moment, think about the
past 17 [now 24] years and have one pleasant recollection? Millions
of people have been condemned to life under the most reactionary and
brutal social system, a society based on terror, poverty, and lies in
which happiness is forbidden, being a woman is a crime, living is torment
and escape impossible. An entire generation, perhaps more than half
the population, has been born in this hell and has no other recollection
than this. And for many others, the most living memory is that of the
unforgettable faces of admirable human beings who were slaughtered.
Wasn't 1979 - the year of the revolution - the beginning of this nightmare?
Perhaps for some, the tragic fate of
the 1979 revolution plays a role in the development of this 'new thinking'.
Neither the extent of this repentance nor the bitter tone and hysteria
of today's 'new thinkers', however, can be explained by the defeat of
the 1979 revolution. It is as if you are sitting by a bridge and witnessing
the return of a defeated army. It isn't unexpected to find them melancholy,
bewildered, silent, and depressed. This crowd, however, has clenched
their fists. When you listen more carefully, it's as if they are whispering
an anthem. Yes, you are not mistaken; they are going to war - a war
on their own 'land' and 'camp' and 'fortress' or whatever they previously
called it. They are returning to take revenge on 'themselves' and yesterday's
'insiders'. For someone who looks out from within the fortress, this
is definitely a dreadful scene.
Few unsuccessful revolutions and defeated
movements have so bitterly been bidden farewell by their former enthusiasts.
The constitutional revolution, the movement for the nationalisation
of the oil industry, the period during Allende's rule, the Portuguese
revolution and the miners' strike in Britain, for example, have always
received the greatest respect from their own veterans and participants.
The reason for today's 'new thinking' by yesterday's revolutionaries
must be sought elsewhere. The reality is that these years, the years
after the 1979 revolution, coincided with a much more important development
on a global scale. The fall of the Eastern Bloc - only lately called
the 'socialist camp' by the propaganda of the most deceptive spokespersons
of the Warsaw and NATO pacts and their idiotic supporters - was a political
and social earthquake which shook the entire world. The elimination
of one pole from a bipolar world was in itself earth-shattering enough
- a world in which for many decades, everything from economics and production
to science and art took shape based on the confrontation between these
two poles. However, what was decisive in the realm of ideas and thoughts
was the fact that the rulers of the world and their vast herds of spokespersons
and scrounging propagandists in the universities and media were able
to portray the fall of the East as the fall of communism and the end
of socialism and Marxism. All these theatricals did not last more than
six years, and all indications today suggest that this period of deceit
has reached its end. These six years, however, shook the world. This
was not the end of socialism, but was a glimpse of what a nightmare
the end of socialism could really be and what a swamp the world could
become without the herald of socialism, the hope of socialism and the
'dangers' of socialism. It became clear that the world - both ruler
and the ruled - identified socialism with change. The end of socialism
was called the end of history. It became clear that the end of socialism
is the end of the expectation for equality and prosperity, of free thinking
and progressiveness and of hope for a better life for humanity. They
interpreted the end of socialism as the unchallenged rule of the laws
of the jungle and the right of might in economics, politics and culture.
And immediately fascism, racism, chauvinism, ethnocentrism, religion,
and bullying spilled out of every crack in society.
The wave of 'new thinking' that followed
on a global scale was a spectacle. In an international race of repentance
and ingratiation, yesterday's virtues were disdained, principals were
scorned at and ideals were ridiculed. Contemptuousness and submission
became the meaning of life. In the repentant culture of the new world
order's intellectuals, anyone who wanted a better life for human beings,
believed that the current situation could and must change, believed
in people's equality and called them to a better life, spoke of the
necessity for people's collective efforts to influence their fate and
share in the world, and held the state and society responsible for the
individual and their peace of mind and freedom was labelled idealist,
old fashioned, naïve and dim-witted from a thousand and one corners.
Despair became the symbol of wisdom. Forsaking high human ideals was
seen as a sign of realism and insight. It suddenly became evident that
any newly appointed journalist and assistant lecturer or any recently
retired general had ready-made answers to the intellectual giants of
the modern world from Voltaire and Rousseau to Marx and Lenin and that
the entire complexities of freedom and equality seeking and the efforts
of hundreds of millions of people in recent centuries, was nothing more
than a complete waste of time on the road to the grand monument of the
'end of history' that must be forgotten ever so quickly.
It is within this international environment
that yesterday's revolutionaries are engaged in the 'review' of the
1979 revolution and revolutionism in general. Rather than being the
result of the defeat of the 1979 revolution, their conclusions owe themselves
to global trends, which mocked ideals and principals, and became fashionable
for some years.
It is said that history is written by
the victors. It must be added, however, that history, which is written
by the defeated is ever more false and venomous, since this latter is
nothing but the former dressed in mourning, surrender and self-deceit.
If history is the story of change, then real history is the history
of the undefeated - the history of the movement and people who still
want and are struggling for change, the history of those who are not
willing to bury their ideals and hopes of a human society, the history
of people and movements that are not at liberty of choosing their principles
and aims and have no choice but to strive for improvements. In the history
of both the victors and defeated, the 1979 revolution is a step for
the rise of Islam and Islamism and the cause of the current situation
in Iran. In real history, however, the 1979 revolution was a movement
for freedom and prosperity, which was smashed.
The calamities of the period after the
revolution in Iran must be attributed to those responsible. People were
right to reject the monarchy and the discrimination, inequality, oppression
and degradation that went with it and rise up in protest. People were
right to not want a king, SAVAK [the secret police], torturers and torture
chambers at the end of the 20th century. People were right to take up
arms against an army, which massacred them at the earliest manifestations
of their protests. The 1979 revolution was an act for freedom, justice
and human dignity. The Islamic movement and the Islamic government were
not only not the result of this revolution, but were rather a deliberate
means of suppressing the revolution, and brought to the fore when the
fall and failure of the Shah's regime was confirmed. Contrary to commonly
held views, the Islamic Republic did not primarily owe its existence
to the network of mosques and the swarm of petty mullahs. The source
of this regime was not religion's power among the people; it was not
Shiism's power, people's lack of interest in modernism and their hatred
of Western culture, excessively accelerated urbanisation and lack of
'practicing democracy', etc. This nonsense might be useful for the career
of half-wit 'Orientalists' or media commentators, but it does not have
the slightest relation to the truth. The very forces that were supporting
the Shah's regime and training the SAVAK until the day before brought
the Islamic current to the fore of the 1979 revolution - those who recognised
the radicalisation and left leaning potential of the Iranian revolution
and had learnt their lesson from the oil workers' strike; those who
needed a green belt for Cold War rivalries. Money was spent for the
'Islamisation' of the Iranian revolution; plans were drawn up, meetings
were organised. Thousands of people - from Western diplomats and military
attachés, to the ever honourable journalists of the world of
democracy - worked intensely for months until a backward, marginal,
rotten and isolated tradition in the political history of Iran was turned
into the 'revolution's leadership' and a ruling alternative for the
urbanised and newly industrialised society of Iran in 1979. Mr. Khomeini
did not come from Najaf and Qom and as the head of a swarm of donkey-riding
mullahs from en-route villages but from Paris via air. The 1979 revolution
was a manifestation of the genuine protests of the deprived people of
Iran but the 'Islamic revolution' and the Islamic regime were the result
of the Cold War, the result of the most modern political dealings of
the world at the time. The architects of this regime were the strategists
and policy makers of Western powers, the very same ones who today, from
within the swamps of cultural relativism, once again legitimise the
very monster they created as the natural product of 'Islamic and eastern
society' and worthy of the people of the 'Islamic World'. The entire
West's economic, political and propaganda resources were pulled together
for months before and after February 1979 in order to establish and
maintain this regime.
The very fact that this social engineering
became possible in Iran, however, owes itself to the situation and condition
of the political and social forces within Iran. There was enough material
available for this task. Islamic currents existed in all countries of
the region. Until the events in Iran, however, this movement did not
at any point become a notable political force and a main player on the
political scene of these countries. The Islamic (counter) revolution
was not constructed on the insignificant force of the Islamic current,
but rather on primary political traditions of the Iranian opposition.
The Islamic counter-revolution was built on the nationalist and so-called
liberal tradition of the 'National Front', which more than anything
else feared workers and communists and had spent its entire life biting
its nails under the monarchy's cape and religion's robe. It was a tradition,
which in its entire history had been unable to organise even a semi-secular
offensive against religion in Iran's politics and culture. It was a
tradition in which its leaders and personalities were among the first
to swear allegiance to the Islamic movement. The Islamic counter-revolution
was built on the Tudeh Party's tradition in which anti-Americanism and
strengthening its international camp at any price, made up the philosophy
of its existence and which saw the Islamic regime, irrespective of its
consequences for the people and freedom, as a playground for manoeuvre
and manipulation. The Islamic counter- revolution was built on a corrupt
anti-modernist, anti 'westernisation', xenophobic and Islam-ridden tradition
dominant in a majority of the intellectual and cultural segments of
society in Iran, which shaped the initial environment of the youth and
student protests. Khomeini triumphed not because superstitious people
saw his reflection on the moon, but rather because the traditional opposition
and this corrupt nationalist and regressive culture saw him - who was
the most imported and manufactured personage of Iranian contemporary
political history - as 'made in Iran', anti-Western and one of their
own and thus rose to praise him. The Islamic counter-revolution was
the result of the fact that the modernist-socialist oil industry and
big industries' workers lost the initiative in the protest scene to
the traditional opposition of Iran. It was they who received Khomeini's
personage and the Islamic revolution scenario from the West and sold
it to the protesting masses of people.
Despite all this, the Islamic theatrics
only created a delay in the development of the 1979 revolution. The
events immediately following the February uprising showed that the dynamics
of the revolution was still there. Irrespective of what was said, it
showed that people had nevertheless come to and remained at the fore
for freedom and social prosperity not for Islam. Eventually, the 1979
revolution, like most revolutions, was defeated not by deceit and lies,
but by an extremely bloody suppression. During February 11, 1979 and
June 20, 1981 was all the opportunity Islam and the Islamic movement
managed to obtain for the guardians of the Shah's regime. And of course,
that's all they needed. In the real history of Iran, June 20, 1981 is
joined to September 8, 1978 and is the next link in the chain. Khomeini,
Bazargan, Sanjabi, Madani, Forouhar, Yazdi, Banisadr, Rajaie and Beheshti
are the names which must follow Mohamad Reza Pahlavi, Amouzgar, Sharif
Emami, Bakhtiar, Oveisi, Azhari, and Rahimi as characters that came
to the fore one after the other to block the revolution and people's
protests. The continuous blows of the protest movement defeated the
monarchist regime and its various characters. In contrast, the Islamic
government managed to buy time, restore the forces of reaction and smash
the people's revolution in the bloodiest form. The agenda of both regimes
was one and the same.
More than half of the people of Iran
are too young to hold even a vague recollection of the 1979 revolution.
Their connection to the events of that period is not unlike the connection
of the 1979 revolutionary generation with events during the Mossadegh
period and 1953 coup - a spent and inaccessible period, which is only
in the minds of and regarded as important by its own contemporary generation.
Interpretations of that period are many and numerous, but more than
saying anything about an historical truth, they pass judgement on the
narrator and their place in today's world. Human beings always look
at the past from a contemporary perspective and seek justifications
for their current will and deeds. In looking at the 1979 revolution,
our 'new thinkers' are looking to raise a banner in today's Iran. This
banner, however, has always existed. Each time, who, and through which
ceremony, and by reciting which verses assembles under this banner is
secondary.
This above is a translated summary
of an article first published in Persian in 1995. The English version
is a reprint from WPI Briefing.