Black Wave: Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Forty-Year Rivalry That Unraveled Culture, Religion, and Collective Memory in the Middle East
Rate it:
Open Preview
Kindle Notes & Highlights
2%
Flag icon
Trying to answer the question “What happened to us?” led me to the fateful year of 1979. Three major events took place in that same year, almost independent of one another: the Iranian Revolution; the siege of the Holy Mosque in Mecca by Saudi zealots; and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the first battleground for jihad in modern times, an effort supported by the United States.
3%
Flag icon
They were known hence as the partisans of Ali, shi’at Ali.
3%
Flag icon
The struggle opposed two visions for the succession: one religious, through a line of the prophet’s descendants known as imams (leaders of prayer); and the other, more earthly, centered on power, caliphs (literally, “successors”), chosen by consensus among wise men. The
3%
Flag icon
Shias had never had anyone speak up for them or lead their battles. Now they had Imam Sadr.
4%
Flag icon
Khomeini and other clerics denounced what they saw as the Westernization of Iran by a despotic ruler. They were particularly incensed about the greater rights granted to women, including the right to run for elected office and serve as judges.
4%
Flag icon
The shah crushed the protests, killing dozens. Opposition leaders who were not arrested went underground or scattered abroad.
4%
Flag icon
On November 29, 1947, the UN General Assembly approved the Partition Plan. On May 14, 1948, as the last British troops departed, Jewish leaders declared the creation of the State of Israel on the land apportioned to them by the UN plan.
4%
Flag icon
But Arab countries had rejected the Partition Plan, declaring they would continue to fight for an undivided Palestine.
4%
Flag icon
But in 1967, during six days of war, the Arabs lost more land: Gaza, the West Bank, East Jerusalem, including the walled old city that is home to Al-Aqsa mosque, as well as Egypt’s Sinai and Syria’s Golan Heights.
5%
Flag icon
The king of Jordan would have none of it—his army crushed the PLO ruthlessly in 1970. More Palestinian fighters, and more refugees, headed to Lebanon.
5%
Flag icon
The Shias felt they had no one: the shah of Iran was an ally of Israel and was mostly concerned with keeping tabs on the Iranian opposition in Lebanon.
5%
Flag icon
Traditionally in Shiism, the perfect Islamic state can come into existence only with the return of the Mahdi, or Hidden Imam, a messiah-like redeemer and the twelfth imam after Ali, who had gone into hiding, or occultation, in the ninth century. Until the return of this infallible man, governance would be in the hands of the secular state.
5%
Flag icon
Chamran, Ghotbzadeh, and Yazdi formed the backbone of the LMI, whose members were middle-class or wealthy Iranians who had lived a comfortable life.
5%
Flag icon
Most of his colleagues on the left found the writings so outlandish that they assumed it was a forgery by the Iranian regime seeking to discredit Khomeini as a religious fanatic.
5%
Flag icon
The fire was sparked in 1977. It began with the death in June of Ali Shariati, the dangerous visionary ideologue of the revolution.
5%
Flag icon
were mysterious and attributed his death to the shah’s secret service, the SAVAK.
6%
Flag icon
There had been years of unrest in Iran, but the moment when the dam truly broke was in November 1977, when the shah allowed Khomeini’s relatives in Iran to mark the fortieth day of mourning for Mostafa.
6%
Flag icon
How could Egypt break rank and betray the Arab and Palestinian cause? Peace talks would soon begin between Israel and Egypt—so who would wipe the shame from the forehead of Arab men now?
Julian
The same is happening today
6%
Flag icon
Husseini and Imam Sadr got to work. The politician would operate the recorder and the cleric would speak. They made tape after tape of revolutionary messages addressed to the Iranian people, encouraging them to rise up and demand change.
Julian
Why don’t we do this again?
6%
Flag icon
Saddam wanted the shah to agree first. After discussing the proposal with close aides, the shah decided against
6%
Flag icon
Iran as an authentic revolution against injustice that brought together students, workers, intellectuals, and men of religion—a revolution of ideas, not one of politics or violence.
6%
Flag icon
The turning point in the heat of a summer of unrest had been an arson attack on the Rex Cinema in the city of Abadan, killing 420 people on August 19.
6%
Flag icon
September 8, 1978, Black Friday, was another dramatic turning point. Thousands converged on Jaleh Square, chanting Marg bar shah, Death to the shah. The crowd of mostly men was a mix of Khomeini supporters, students, and leftists. Among them, behind the first lines of women and young people, there were guerrilla fighters, many trained in Lebanon by the Palestinians.
7%
Flag icon
three thousand had died,
7%
Flag icon
which (as in Iran) was eating away at their privileges and giving rights to women.
7%
Flag icon
In Neauphle-le-Château, over the course of a four-month stay, he would give 132 interviews and become the face of the revolution, recognized throughout the world. The seventy-six-year-old cleric was invigorated.
7%
Flag icon
wilayat al-faqih in public.
7%
Flag icon
As early as 1964, Banisadr had enlisted Sartre to preside on a committee to raise awareness about Iranians in the shah’s jails. Sartre had once declared: “I have no religion, but if I had to pick one it would be Shariati.”
7%
Flag icon
Saudi Arabia and Iran were allies and twin pillars in the US policy to counter the spread of communism and Soviet influence in the region. Iran was more powerful, and the shah had a formidable army and naval force, posing as the regional policeman.
9%
Flag icon
Khomeini wanted to land at the peak of the fervor, so that the people’s relief at being saved would pour in his direction only.
9%
Flag icon
Khomeini’s devotion was to the past, to re-creating an Islamic society fashioned after the one in the days of the prophet.
9%
Flag icon
Not everyone noticed Khomeini’s reference to the wilayat.
9%
Flag icon
It would take years for some of the early revolutionaries to accept the truth: they had delivered their nation to a theocrat, an irredeemable monster.
Julian
Who thinks this though?
10%
Flag icon
Socialist leftists, pro-Syrian and Palestinian leaders, all said the same: this was a triumph for their cause and for Arab unity over Israel and the United States. THE SHAH IS GONE. TOMORROW SADAT, read one banner.
10%
Flag icon
And Arafat, just as cunning and unscrupulous as the ayatollah, didn’t want to be owned; he wanted to lead. He would never adopt the name of Islamic resistance.
12%
Flag icon
98 percent picked green, even though there was no definition of what an Islamic republic entailed.
12%
Flag icon
He pointedly avoided addressing Taleghani as Ayatollah, instead calling him Mr. Taleghani.
12%
Flag icon
It had its own thugs: Hezbollah, or the Party of God, and attacked demonstrators who opposed Khomeini, terrorized students on university campuses, shut down critical newspapers, and rode in the streets in convoys of motorbikes, waving black flags and banners.
19%
Flag icon
the shah, but the ideologies then came in all colors and every possible combination: secular leftists, modernist Islamists, nationalists, leftist Islamists. Now there was only one stance, one narrative allowed. Seven hundred qualified scholars lost their jobs, while the country cut off
21%
Flag icon
He had no use for pro-American leaders like Sadat, but Assad was already in his camp. Together they would form what would be known as the axis of resistance for decades ahead.
21%
Flag icon
He knew the ayatollah and the pull this man could have on Iraq’s Shia community. He forced his cousin,
Julian
Now we’re getting into game theory
22%
Flag icon
Jordan sent volunteers to fight with Saddam. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia continued to give him billions. The ranks of Iraq’s army were filled with Shias who fought for their country—this was a war between nations. Syria sided with Iran.
22%
Flag icon
The mighty Persian Sassanid Empire had succumbed to Arab conquest in 636 during the Battle of al-Qadisiyya. Now, over a millennium later, Khomeini and Saddam wanted a redo. Or revenge.
22%
Flag icon
His admission to the United States for medical care had triggered the hostage crisis in Tehran.
Julian
And the establishment of the counter terrorism task force
35%
Flag icon
In the summer of 1987, Pakistani Sunnis went into a village on the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan and killed Shias, fellow countrymen. Then Shias killed Sunnis.
35%
Flag icon
The two men met only once, but the parallel tracks of their lives tell the tale of the proxy war that the House of Saud and Khomeini began to fight in Pakistan in the 1980s.
36%
Flag icon
Lines were being drawn within Pakistani society, between those who paid zakat and those who didn’t, between the Sunnis and the Shias—the “other” Muslims.
36%
Flag icon
the real representative of the Hidden Imam on earth, and the only man who could break the dominance of the great powers—both the US and the USSR—on other countries, including Pakistan.
36%
Flag icon
Conservative but inclusive, this was a city and a region of famed Pashtun warriors who could recite the verses of two books by heart: the holy Quran and the poetry of their very own Peshawari Sufi saint Rahman Baba.
37%
Flag icon
They were establishing a small Arabistan in the middle of Pakistan (just as Iranians were setting up a Little Tehran in Baalbek).
« Prev 1 3 4