Iran will be the Scene of a Mass Anti-Islamic Offensive
Interview with Mansoor Hekmat
Question:
Why did the Worker-communist Party of Iran's Central Committee adopt
a resolution on intensifying the struggle against Islamic currents and
groups? Everyone knows the WPI as an anti-religion organisation; struggling
against reactionary Islamic groups has been one of our characteristics
in recent years. Was this not enough?
Mansoor Hekmat: We are talking about
a different issue here. As you have said, opposition to religion, exposing
religion and efforts for establishing a non-religious society is an
old and characteristic task of communists. However, we have seen another
phenomenon in the last 20-25 years, which is the emergence and considerable
development of political movements that have organised themselves under
the banner of Islam. There are a series of extremely Right-wing, anti-human
and violent movements in North Africa, the Middle East and today, in
all countries in which the so-called official religion is Islam or which
have significant Muslim minorities. Their conduct is primarily in the
form of opposition to the freedom of women, women's civil liberties,
freedom of expression in the cultural and personal domains and the enforcement
of brutal laws and traditions against people, and even killing, beheading,
and genocide of people from young children to the elderly. In Algeria,
there isn't a day that these groups have not murdered someone. In Iran,
your audience doesn't need reminding of what they have done to this
country. We have seen the Taliban in Afghanistan. Violence is inherent
in their definition and their disregard for human dignity. Their enmity
to human happiness and their hostility to any peaceful society and any
free interaction of humanity are clearly apparent.
This is a movement like fascism for example.
Nationalism and racism too are older trends, but when based on these
fascism arises, some people must issue a declaration and proclaim its
consequences, the atrocities that will result from the new fascist movement
which is emerging and that it must be resisted. We are now facing Islam
in this very same manner. Our anti-religious position is in its place;
there are many in the world who are atheists and recognise the oppressive
and noxious role of religion. The people of the world, however, must
rise up and oppose this specifically Right wing, active, genocidal and
murderous movement, which is active in Iran and the Middle East and
has now taken on international dimensions under the banner of Islam.
This is a nightmare, which has fallen on a large part of the world's
population and many are miserable because of it. We have passed a resolution
in this regard. Apart from the exposing and enlightening policies in
opposition to religion that we hold in general, we now need a specific
practical and political position vis-à-vis Islam as a political
movement, as a contemporary reactionary movement which is strongly anti-communist,
anti-socialist, anti-freedom, misogynist and anti-modernism, is even
against happiness and is strongly racist. This requires it own resolution.
This reactionary political movement requires a political approach.
Question: In the WPI literature, we
see a lot of references to political Islam. What is meant by political
Islam? Does it mean fundamentalism? If not, what is the difference?
Mansoor Hekmat: Political Islam is not
necessarily fundamentalism. Of course, different writers might use this
term to mean relatively different things. We are, however, referring
to that which I have stated earlier, that is the political movements,
which endeavour to establish a form of Islamic society under the banner
of Islam. After the 1979 revolution in Iran, an Islamic counter-revolution
that suppressed the revolution and brought the Islamic Republic to power
is one of the earliest manifestations of political Islam in its latest
round. At the beginning of the twentieth century when colonised people
were becoming aware of their undesirable and subjugated situation and
murmurs of anti-colonialism were heightened, Islamic thought and pan-Islamism
was put forth as the basis of a government and form of state in the
former East, but the modernist, parliamentary and liberal movements
were stronger. Nationalism was stronger and Middle Eastern countries
did not follow the path to Islamic societies. That Islamic movement
was an independent phenomenon and belonged to a different era. It was
the period when feudalism and colonialism in those societies went under
question. Political Islam in our era, however, took shape as a new and
Cold War phenomenon. It is a Right wing and an anti-Left, anti-communist
and to some extent anti-Western force. This is a movement, which has
emerged in competition to the West over wealth and power in the Middle
East and North Africa. It wants the state. It is a different ideology
for governing and obtaining a share for segments of the bourgeoisie
of these countries. And this is a new phenomenon in that new Right wing
political parties have been created in the last three decades of the
twentieth century and their aim is to establish a form of Islamic society.
Islam in both Shiism and Sunnism has not traditionally always had this
relationship with the state. The state's domain has usually been recognised
as a domain supported by religion which has in turn provided services
to religion. The Imam and Caliph were on one side and the Sultan and
Shah on the other. The Shah and the Sultan would receive their confirmation
from the religious hierarchy. They would provide an environment for
religious taxation and Islamic jurisprudence. They were themselves the
sword of Islam, although the ruler himself did not usually have any
position in the religious hierarchy. The government, state, and army
were in the hands of the Sultan who had reached a compromise with the
religious hierarchy. The political Islam we are speaking of sets forth
a different ideology and that is that the state and government can be
Islamic in the same manner that was implemented in Iran. In Saudi Arabia,
the government is not Islamic; Islam is dominant, but the government
is in the hands of that specific tribe which is using its sword to serve
Islam and they share in the fruits. In this regard, this political Islam
is different from Islam in its usual meaning that clearly interferes
in all aspects of people's lives because it wants to specifically organise
the state domain on the basis of Islamic ideology. In this manner, it
is a new phenomenon. I don't want to say that it is absolutely new in
the history of the 20th century, but we are witnessing its new round
and it is clear that this phenomenon does not have the same role which
it had at the beginning of the 20th century. It is extremely anti- communist
and anti-worker. It's a movement within the context of the bourgeoisie's
competition in the region and internationally; it's a banner that has
been raised by segments of society, which rely on despicable religious
traditions to obtain power. As I said earlier, we are faced with these
apart from the fact that we are faced with Islam and religion in general.
As a group of freethinking people and supporters of freedom of choice
and thought we are opposed to these groups as Right wing, violent and
inhuman groups. Political Islam in the manner we refer to it is this
movement, which wants to obtain power.
Question: This resolution also specifically
intensifies our activities against Islam or is it just limited to these
groups?
Mansoor Hekmat: You cannot only fight
the political Islamic movements in question and build a firm barricade
against them without further challenging their thoughts. Nevertheless
it's evident that we are ourselves as a communist party against Islam
as a thought, system of thought and way of life. What is clear is that
when you come face to face with movements, which threaten freethinkers
like Taslima Nasrin with death, you are obliged to once again refer
to the Koran and say that this reaction is feeding from a well, which
exactly formulates all this backwardness. The Koran could have been
a historical book like many other historical books; people could look
at it and not show much sensitivity but when a movement makes it the
banner of a contemporary political struggle, then people are forced
to take its banner from it, review it, look at it and throw it away.
Otherwise, suppose it was for example like Ferdowsi's Shahnameh that
could be put in a corner and most likely not referred to much. If you
refer to any old book, you will definitely find much reaction. But when
the movement itself, at the end of the 20th century, is adamant to use
this Koran in its war against socialist parties, trade unions and women's
organisations, then in my opinion women, workers and socialists are
obliged to take its banner from it and discredit it.
Question: Where does political Islam
originate from? Is political Islam the result of the establishment of
the Islamic Republic of Iran or did it also exist before?
Mansoor Hekmat: In my opinion, resistance
against the West is an old phenomenon in the Middle East and countries
we call Islam-ridden because the West entered these countries within
a colonial framework. The West's arrival was accompanied by immense
violence and exploitation. It wasn't as if Western civilisation or for
example Western parliament, art, literature and culture reached the
East in a free relationship and flow, but through arms, violence, abduction,
imprisonment, and massacres. It is, therefore, obvious that there is
resistance against it and that local nationalism and the struggle against
colonization take hold of any means available locally. Islam, then,
was the banner of a specific resistance against the West in the same
way nationalism in these countries was the banner of specific resistance
against the West during one period. The contemporary Islamic movement,
however, originates from and belongs to another era. It belongs to an
era in which the world has truly merged; the world's economy is interdependent.
This banner is a specific claim on its share by sections of the ruling
class of these countries. For example, in Iran itself there were many
who thought that Iran must have a special place. They did not achieve
this through the Shah but by means of the Islamic regime. They are glad
to be part of the ruling class of this country. It was the Islamic Republic
that for example made the president of the United States sensitive to
Iran and the 'commands' of the religious leader of Iran. It was the
Islamic Republic that allowed Iran to intervene in the region to this
extent and further Iran's expansionist ambitions and Iranian supremacy
within this framework. Whatever its defects for the Iranian bourgeoisie,
this Islam became a banner for claiming a share and competing for power
in the region, between the ruling class and the bourgeoisie and imperialism
internationally. Many view this Islamic movement as a political means.
In the Arab-Israeli war, the Islamic banner is one of the Arab world's
devices against Israel. And I think it is a useful device and they can
utilise it whenever they require. This Islam also has its usefulness
for suppressing the Left. For example, the Shah's regime could not massacre
workers and communists the way that the Islamic Republic has. It would
have been impossible to go to war against the freedom of women without
such a device and only this device could keep women under such constraints.
The Islamic movement as a political device has found its usefulness.
It serves against the left, civilisation, free-thinking culture and
human happiness. It is completely and a hundred percent reactionary.
Its existence is exactly against freedom and socialism. I believe, therefore,
that we must deal with it as a reactionary ideology and political institution
of the 20th century. Like fascism, its role can be defined in society.
Question: In a worker's state, what
will happen to these Islamic groups such as Lebanon's Hezbollah or the
Islamic Fedayeen in Iran? Would their activity be prohibited and if
so, would this not be contrary to the essence of unconditional freedom
of political activity?
Mansoor Hekmat: I can tell you my personal
opinion. The political system that we propose is a council system in
which its laws and regulations are decided by the people's representatives
across the country. Based on their citizenship and residence, people
- irrespective of their national or ethnic background, would become
a member of their local council and in that way participate in the political
life of the country. Naturally, one must want the regulations governing
these things from the state and the very people who live there at the
time. I, however, as one of those people will give my view. In my opinion,
establishing the 'Islamic Fedayeen' is essentially not a crime. Demanding
an Islamic world is also essentially not a crime. We must first define
crime and then prohibit it. If someone advocates an Islamic society
in which people are miserable and women are in chains and tells these
to people and they hear him, then no crime has been committed until
this moment. But if that someone begins to kill, intimidate, confine,
and frighten someone, or deny a child her or his rights or encroach
on someone's life or freedom, then based on these crimes that someone
must be sought out. Consequently, in my opinion, having Islamic parties
even in our system will not be a crime. Establishing a group that essentially
advocates for the entire world becoming Islamic is not a crime since
the expression of the most insane and dim-witted beliefs are people's
right. They can air their views. By establishing a society in which
no-one can hide their political ambitions behind such things, a society
in which people can see the activities and books of all groups, we aim
to arrest their development. In a free society where everyone is entitled
to express their views, write plays and poems, shout out in the streets,
criticise what s/he is being taught in schools or use the radio and
TV, which is equally shared between everyone, then if one in every ten
thousand utters fascist, racist or Islamic views, it will be a tolerable
phenomenon for that society, and will even be ridiculed and not taken
seriously. But if you go and organise an Islamic Fedayeen group, acquire
bombs, store arms, illegally create a list with people's names and addresses
and then assassinate them, or want to plant bombs in another country,
then the specific state will arrest this group, not for being Islamic
but for the deeds I mentioned. The state will tell them that they don't
have a right to endanger anyone's life, intimidate a minority, threaten
anyone to death or make someone's life insecure for them. Therefore,
in my opinion, they would have their right to freedom of expression.
Unfortunately, a number will still hold these views, but under these
circumstances, I believe, their numbers will continue to diminish. In
my opinion, freedom is the best medicine for ignorance and idiocy. If
society is free, and everyone can speak their mind, over time views
will become more serious, deeper and human. It is precisely dictatorship
that produces such garbage. I think that if a society is confidant of
itself and particularly has distributed political power between the
people to such an extent that no-one can take away political power and
influence the political process by conspiracy, coup d'état, bombings,
terrorism and violence, then expression of views by such people will
do nothing but raise the consciousness of society since it will be possible
to show school children that in opposition to rational thought, there
are some people who think this way. I think that these groups will be
isolated and subject to ridicule. Even now, they are isolated as an
idea and belief. They have kept themselves in power by money on the
one hand and by threats, terrorism and massacres on the other. Moreover,
real channels for expression are closed to many people in the Middle
East. If you had access to Marxist and socialist parties, trade unions
and women's organisation in Iran, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria and Iraq,
no one would become a member of an Islamic group to express their disenchantment
with the dictatorial regime of the day. People would become members
of organisations that elevate their dignity. I think freedom is the
answer. I am against suppression, but I am all for the arrest and legal
prosecution of anyone who threatens people's peace, security and physical
and emotional well-being; of course, Islamists are experts at this.
It is unlikely that they will organise an Islamic group, which will
not immediately busy itself with threatening children. There must be
institutions, which will defend the rights of citizens against these
groups and prevent them from committing illegal acts. If they want to
express their views within the legal framework of the country, in my
opinion, they must be free to do so. Even with all the crimes committed
by their predecessors, they must be free to say what they want. This
is their birthright. Anyone who has been born has the right to air their
views. In my opinion, no state can take this right away.
Question: Iran is a polarised society
as far as Islam is concerned, that is both the Islamists and anti- Islamists
are active. How do you view the confrontation between these two camps?
Do you think there is a renaissance in progress in Iran?
Mansoor Hekmat: I think what is happening
in Iran is a massive social hatred of Islam which has accumulated in
the vast majority of the population; its pressure is increasing day
by day and this will very soon break the dams. It will tear the chains
and turn Iran, which has been the seat of reactionary Islamic rule for
over twenty years, into one of the centres of struggle against the reactionary
Islamic movement in the region. I am sure of this. I think that the
intellectual, philosophical and ideological struggle which has not occurred
in Iran historically, will perhaps this time take place because of the
political situation through people's political action. That is, an anti-Islamic
offensive by people who have experienced 20 years of reactionary Islamic
rule in this country and all the crimes committed for Islam and in the
name of Islam. The hatred against Islam is historically unprecedented.
As one of your listeners said, mullahs would at one time come and get
paid to read religious sermons and go. They had a role in society. But
when they come to the fore, organise society based on their views, turn
their internal moralities into external laws for all to observe and
we see all of their filth everywhere, then it's not possible just to
permit them to go back into their previous hole. When the wave sets
off and people's anti-Islamic offensive begins, then Islam cannot retreat
to its position and stance of two decades ago. It is highly probable
that people will take all of these away from them. Could this be called
a renaissance? I believe that one aspect and problem on this question
is whether this political and emotional hatred of Islam is accompanied
with a deep intellectual fight which will dissect the foundations of
this religion and religious thought in general and expose and criticise
it in all of its aspects including Orientals, patriarchy, rightlessness
of children, etc. This critique must be advanced by the social ideologues
in each era. We don't see this. Consequently, the movement against Islam
in the first instance will be a mass popular movement against the political-social
expression of Islam, but to what extent this will be accompanied by
a deep ideological critique which next generations can capitalise on
to move beyond the religious-superstitious era, we will have to wait
and see what happens in practice. It is clear that the rise of the anti-Islamic
wave will certainly have with it its own ideologues but we are not currently
witnessing such a phenomenon. What we are witnessing, apart from the
Worker-communist Party of Iran (WPI) and some well thinking individuals,
is that a majority of those who want to get rid of the Islamic Republic
and think that they are 'being clever', which is in fact a kind of 'provincial
cleverness' is that if we encourage a 'good mullah' in opposition to
a 'bad mullah', this is considered progress. Then we set another mullah
against Khatami and then another one until eventually one day we tell
the last one that you don't have to be a mullah. This is a kind of so-called
politicking and deceiving history, which has never been successful in
history. It is sad to see intellectuals, poets, writers and politicians
who are party to this political farce; I believe they are an obstacle
to the transparency of the future struggle. I think all of them will
be isolated. Anyone who compromises with any aspect of Islam or the
Islamic Republic will be asked to respond to the people tomorrow. I
think that in Iran those who are rear guards in society are called intellectuals.
The bright and freethinkers must be sought among the generation who
is involved in a life struggle and goes and sets up a satellite dish
on the roof and risks arrest in order to know what the world is saying.
S/he is the real intellectual of that country. The 'intellectuals' are
the rear-guards who have set up intellectual shops for themselves; it
is really sad. Today, we are missing someone who will challenge the
roots of Islam and criticise Islam in the same manner as Sadegh Hedayat
and Ali Dashty. Whoever does this at this juncture will become a historical
personality more than anyone else in the intellectual history of this
country and will become the banner of intellectual and moral struggle
of the people of Iran against Islam and Islamism for hundreds of years.
This seat is vacant. Consequently, today this is purely a political
conflict. How far this political wave can stabilise people's anti-Islamic
advance is debatable. I would not call it a renaissance but I think
that Islam will suffer a major defeat in this country.
The above is a summary of an interview
in Persian with Radio Hambastegi on 13 June 1999. The English version
is a reprint from WPI Briefing.