Is Sistani Iraq’s Khomeini?

My Monday column calls the election “Sistani’s Triumph,” and suggests that the government that comes out of Sunday’s poll will be closer to the Iranian model than the American system. Here’s the conservative columnist Terry Jeffries, in a column published in May of last year that is of interest given the probable outcome of the Iraqi election:

“As we struggle to transform this conflict from an international military confrontation into a peaceful Iraqi political contest, we need to be as realistic in assessing the political obstacles confronting our efforts to leave Iraq with a benign regime as we are in assessing the military obstacles.

“One of those political obstacles is the Grand Ayatollah Ali al Sistani, Iraq’s leading Shiite cleric.

“Policymakers ought to carefully examine the similarities and differences between Sistani and Ayatollah Khomeini, the late Shiite cleric who sparked the Islamic revolution in Iran.

“One difference between Khomeini and Sistani is that Khomeini would actually meet with Westerners, including female Western reporters. Sistani won’t even meet with Ambassador Paul Bremer, head of the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority.

“This may be explained by an entry on Sistani’s English language Web site. Discussing things that are ‘najis,’ which he defines in a glossary as ‘impure,’ and things that are ‘pak,’ which he defines as ‘clean,’ Sistani says: ‘As regards people of the Book (i.e. the Jews and the Christians) . . . they are commonly considered najis, but it is not improbable that they are Pak. However it is better to avoid them.’

“Another difference between Khomeini and Sistani is that when Khomeini communicated with the West in the days before the Iranian revolution, he made soothing noises about free elections, political pluralism and women’s rights. When Sistani communicates with the West today, he speaks about free elections (which would empower his own Iraqi Shiite base, which makes up 65 percent of Iraq’s population), but he doesn’t tout pluralism or women’s rights. Indeed, Sistani won’t endorse Iraq’s draft constitution because it gives Iraqi Kurds a chance to veto Shiite political domination and because it doesn’t guarantee that Islamic law will be the basis of Iraqi government.

“Last November, Sistani ally Abdul Aziz al Hakim explained the ayatollah’s objection to a U.S. plan to hold caucuses to pick an interim government. ‘There should have been a stipulation which prevents legislating anything that contradicts Islam in the new Iraq,’ he said.

“In April, the New York Times reported: ‘Ayatollah Sistani’s supporters want Islam to govern such matters as family law, divorce and women’s rights.’

“Where does Sistani stand on these issues? Postings on his Web site include prescriptions for temporary marriage (‘In a fixed time marriage, the period of matrimony is fixed, for example, matrimonial relation is contracted with a woman for an hour, or a day, or a month, or a year, or more.’); keeping wives indoors (‘It is forbidden for the wife of a permanent marriage to go out without her husband’s permission.’); and multiple marriages and divorces (‘A man is not permitted to marry more than four women by way of permanent marriage. He also has the right to divorce his wives.’)

“Khomeini may have shared Sistani’s values here, but his pre-revolutionary propaganda was better packaged for the West.

“In November 1978, for example, Dorothy Gilliam of the Washington Post ‘Style’ section interviewed Khomeini, who was then living in exile in France. While noting that Khomeini’s aides ‘order Western women journalists to cover their heads and shoulders’ before meeting him, she dutifully recorded that the ayatollah himself said, ‘In Islamic society women will be free to choose their own destiny and activity. God created us equally.’

“That same month, Washington Post correspondent Ronald Koven also interviewed Khomeini and some of Khomeini’s aides. ‘The aides say he rejects the authoritarian models of Islamic republicanism in much of the Arab world. Iran is not an Arab country,’ wrote Koven. ‘The aide quoted Khomeini as saying, ‘In the history of Islam, those who denied God were free to express themselves.’ This, said the aide, is Khomeini’s way of saying all political parties would be legal in his vision of an Islamic republic to be established in a national referendum.’

“Why did the man who installed a theocracy in Iran in 1979 say these things in France in 1978? Perhaps he was practicing ‘taqiyya,’ the Shiite doctrine that Grand Ayatollah Sistani blandly defines on his Web site as: ‘Dissimulation about one’s beliefs in order to protect oneself, family, or property from harm.’ Sistani has written an unpublished treatise on this doctrine. Is it wise to assume he is not practicing it today in his dealings with a U.S. occupational force?”[/i]

Here’s more analysis of the “Sistani isn’t Khomeini” meme from the Christian Science Monitor:

“While Sistani’s involvement so far has been a moderating voice, stressing the need for free elections and the protection of Sunni and other minority rights in any Iraqi government, he is not a believer in a strict separation of church and state.

“He’s long rejected the thought of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who lived in exile in Najaf before leading Iran’s Islamic revolution and called for wilayat al-faqih, or the guardianship of the jurisprudent, that directed clerical rule. But Sistani has also written about the need for clerical influence in political life.

“”Sistani in his fatwas does talk about … the guardianship of the jurisprudent in social issues,” says Mr. Cole, the history professor. Sistani’s preference is ‘that clerics mostly leave running the state to lay persons. But the implication is that Shiite lay persons will be influenced by Sistani’s fatwas on legislative issues.'”

One thought on “Is Sistani Iraq’s Khomeini?”

  1. In this way the student never able to learn his education properly and can’t able to live his life with confident. It is very important for the students that their parents must give them confidence and support them.

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