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Iran After Khomeini


Article # : 15256 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 8 / 1989  1,840 Words
Author : Daniel Pipes
Daniel Pipes is director of the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia and editor of Orbis, its quarterly journal. His most recent book, The Long Shadow: Culture and Politics in the Middle East, has just been published by Transaction Books.

       The death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Musavi Khomeini on June 4 was mourned by millions of his followers with an extravagance that surprised even the Iranian authorities. Time and again, funeral plans were disrupted by gigantic mobs unwilling to give way either to schedules or politicians. The scene in Tehran was one of unrelieved chaos. In the traditional Shiite manner, men pounded their chests and flagellated themselves with chains. Some sacrificed sheep, and some shouted, "We wish we were dead, so not to see our beloved imam dead." Others ran 25 miles to the cemetery. The grave dug for Khomeini's body was occupied by mourners who refused to leave. The authorities appealed to citizens to stay away from Khomeini's house and the cemetery, but to no avail.
       
        Fire trucks sprayed water on mourners in an effort to keep them from fainting in the intensity of the June heat and the press of humanity. According to official sources, some 10,879 people were injured and received on-the-spot medical attention, 438 were taken to hospitals, and 8 died in the crush to view Khomeini's body. In the cemetery, mourners climbed on buses, to catch a better glimpse of the body, and in one case the roof of a bus collapsed, injuring those sitting inside. Ali Khamenei, the president of the republic, could not even reach the special stand set up for dignitaries. Indeed, the stand for state officials and foreign dignitaries almost collapsed under the weight of the crowd.
       
        The height of frenzy occurred at the gravesite itself. Bringing the body by land vehicle was out of the question, so it arrived by helicopter. The first time the helicopter landed, the crowd swarmed in and grabbed pieces of the shroud, causing the corpse actually to fall to the ground. ... (2000 of 10723 Characters)
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