Posted on 10/26/2001 11:10:20 PM PDT by kattracks
Tens of thousands of young people have taken to the streets of Iran in the past week, causing some of the worst violence in the history of the 22-year-old Islamic revolution.
The youths both boys and girls used two World Cup football qualifying fixtures as an excuse to reclaim the streets and assert their hunger for Western culture and freedoms.
In Tehran, the young people braved tear gas and blows from the security forces to cavort to the sound of the Western pop star Sonique, blaring from radios. Girls blew hooters at Islamic vigilantes armed with staves while their boyfriends fought riot police with stones and homemade explosives.
Shock at a 3-1 loss against Bahrain on Sunday sparked two nights of nationwide protests and the crowds returned to the streets on Wednesday following a 1-0 victory against the Emirates.
"What we're witnessing are the sort of demonstrations which preceded the last months of the Shah,'' said a senior Iranian analyst who wanted his name withheld.
Dozens of banks have been burned and cars overturned as the authorities set up special courts to try more than a thousand detainees officially denounced as football hooligans.
But the chanting of the crowds has been overtly political. Youths taunted groups of brutal Islamic vigilantes known as Bassiji, Persian for holy warriors, and chanted zindibad azadi [long live freedom].
The 11 September attacks have boosted pro-Western voices. Iran has emerged as one of the few Muslim states where people have taken to the streets in sympathy with the US.
Conservatives remain suspicious that expressions of sympathy hide a broader agenda of counter-revolution. Earlier this month in Mohseni Square a part of Tehran so Westernised that Iranians call it the 51st state of America police used clubs to disperse a crowd of mourners, including elderly women, holding a vigil for the New York attacks.
Hard-liners say that the war in Afghanistan marks the final stage in the military encirclement of Iran. In addition to the US arsenal in the Persian Gulf, Washington now has thousands of troops close to Iran's eastern border with Pakistan and to the north in Tajikistan.
Western efforts to bring back the exiled shah of Afghanistan are arousing fears of a similar plot to restore a shah to Iran. In silent protests on Sunday, demonstrators in Mohseni Square claimed Reza Pahlavi, the son of the ousted late shah, as their spiritual leader.
Opposition satellite TV channels beamed from Los Angeles have stoked a growing nostalgia for the monarchy. In a belated effort to muzzle the royalists, the Islamic vigilantes have swooped on the rooftops of northern Tehran confiscating hundreds of satellite dishes.
But popular pressure has already extracted concessions from the ayatollahs. While women are still barred from attending football games, they now occupy the front desks in Iranian hotels and strut the streets holding hands with their boyfriends.
Opposition to the great Satan of the US has given way to tacit support for the attack on the Taliban and an official policy of "active neutrality'' in the American bombing. Iran has also undertaken to rescue any US airmen downed in Afghanistan.
Newspaper editorials have openly appealed to the clerics not to waste the opportunity to mend relations with the US and have called on President Khatami to join the alliance.
Years ago, I had a camera store in a small midwestern college town, and for some odd reason I seemed to attract most of the middle eastern trade, of which there was a fairly large amount thanks to the college being some kind of magnet for it. I never figured out why the college attracted so many folks from that part of the world, but I more or less concluded that my store's "hole in the wall" ambience made it the closest thing in town to a stall in the bazaar. (seriously)
I do know (because they told me) that a lot of the used equipment I sold ended up being re-sold "back home" because it would bring a premium in that part of the world.
Anyway, some of my customers were Iranian, and when the revolution/hostage situation happened, they all got called back (and I think the US ), and they were not happy about it. One guy came in to buy a tripod to take back, and broke down crying when he found out, and told me that the revolutionaries had killed his brother because they were Kurds, and not "religious". He was a complete wreck, and I ended up giving him the tripod and a bunch of other stuff he could sell on the black market when he got home to maybe help his family survive a bit longer. I have no idea if he or any of the others survived.
Anyway, you can add "Kurds" to your list of non-moslem parts of Iranian society.
Add Canada, England, Australia, and Russia to the first list.
China will try to hang onto the nailbiters "middle" position for as long as possible.
I'm glad you found the movie. I hope you like it......
Say it, virgil! Get it out of your system, sing praises to Islamic revolution!
Good Grief!! He was a scumbag!! Yeah, he was our scumbag, but wow....
Because the US media doesn't want you to know that some people in the Muslim world aren't anti-American.
Doesn't fit their storyline, y'know...
the young shah is a pretty charismatic guy, by the way.
The readers of Pravda, however, were a bit less gullible than your average Freeper...
Ha.
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