What is left of the Iranian dream of democracy?
Ramin Jahanbegloo 8 March 2011

Review on: People Reloaded by Nader Hashemi and Danny Postel

For the title of their new book, Danny Postel and Nader Hashemi borrow a concept developed by two Iranian intellectuals that exemplifies “the continuity of democratic struggle within Iran”. As such, readers will not find in the Postel-Hashemi book a new attempt to describe the contemporary history of Iran. It is also more than a simple compilation of essays written by different Iranian and non-Iranian scholars and activists inside and outside Iran.

Postel and Hashemi provide us in this book with the most comprehensive coverage of the Iranian Green Movement studied and analyzed in an exceptionally concise and critical manner. While they touch on different aspects of the Iranian democratic movement since June 2009, their main concern is to shift our attention from the main issues surrounding Iran’s nuclear program, which have dominated the analyses of Iranian politics for the past decade, to a discussion of Iranian civil society and its social, political and cultural potentialities. Aside from this important shift of attention, this book brings to light the principal positions which have emerged in the Iranian society since the death of Ayatollah Khomeini and more specifically after the landslide victory of Khatami’s election in 1997.

For the hard-line conservatives and those who control all the means of violence in Iranian society (the Revolutionary Guards, the security services, the Basij), the two concepts of civil society and democratization are antithetical to the basic values and ideals of Islam and Iranian Revolution. As for those who are in favor of a more tolerant, pluralistic and democratic order in Iran, the rise of civil society in Iran has been an explosion of democratic thought and action, which has created a “new unity of purpose” since the downfall of the Shah, among Iranians around the world. For Hamid Dabashi, a Professor of Iranian Studies and. Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York, “This movement is ahead of our inherited politics, floating ideologies or mismatched theories. We need to sit back and let this inspirational movement of a whole new generation of hope teach us courage and humility.”

The Green Movement remains the most promising indigenous democracy movement in the history of Iran. A new generation of Iranians has been taking to the streets of Tehran and other cities of Iran clamoring for change and making themselves heard. One should not forget that in today’s Iran, two out of three people are under 30 and they make up one-third of eligible voters in presidential elections. It is true, however, that these youngsters pose little immediate threat to the regime, which has vast paramilitary and police resources, as well as significant rural political base, at its disposal. But given this segment of the electorate and the demographic nature of the Iranian public space, any future decision that disregards the hopes and opinions of the young Iranians would risk severely the very foundation on which the Islamic regime stands.

It is true that the widespread protests of the year 2009 have faded because of the brutality and cruelty of the Iranian government, but there is no shadow of doubt that the Green Movement belongs to the future of Iran. In words of Nader Hashemi, the co-editor of this book and Professor of Islamic Politics at University of Denver, “The Green Movement’s nonviolent orientation can best be affirmed by continuing to articulate a new future for Iran, one that makes a clear historical break from the violent past and which is rooted in lessons from other political struggles that have universal appeal, such as the anti-colonial movement in India, the African-American struggle for civil rights and the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa.” In other words, as a democratic learning community. the Green Movement is still in its formative process and as such, it is under permanent development. It is a self-institution and a self-formation which learns from its own errors. The effectiveness of the Green Movement rests, therefore, on self-organizing the Iranian civil society which insists on living in truth against lies.

Recent protests in Iran proved that the Green Movement has not died, despite a crackdown since the disputed 2009 presidential election. It seems that the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt have reenergized Iranian civil society, helping it become firmer and more outspoken in its demand for democratization in Iran. After twenty months of imprisonments, torture, executions, and house arrests of the opposition’s key figures, the scale of the protests in Iranian cities contrasts profoundly with government affirmations that there is general popular support for the Islamic regime. Despite the incarceration of Mousavi and Karoubi, the voice of protest has not been silenced in Iran. Once again, pro-democracy demonstrations in Tehran and other Iranian cities have eroded the image of the regime as the vanguard of the resistance against oppressors in the Muslim world.

The recent revolts of the Arab streets against corrupt dictatorships in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Jordan, and Bahrain were more synchronized with the pace and rhythm of nonviolent demonstrations in Tehran than with the violent actions of truncheon-wielding Basiji thugs. The Iranian regime’s anti-democratic domestic policies are steadily sweeping away its legitimacy as “popular” and “Islamic.” According to Said Amir Arjomand, professor of sociology at Sony Brook University, “The ayatollah- dictator and the Revolutionary Guards have tried their best to discredit their opponents by concocting, through forced confessions at show trials, a conspiracy of regime change based on a “velvet revolution” produced by “Western social sciences”. Deep down they know there is no conspiracy. The fear is grounded in what they see in front of them: the forward march of history.”

What is certain is that the current power holders have lost moral credibility by virtue of their brutal crackdowns on Iranian civil society. Moreover, by asserting the republican principle of popular sovereignty, the Green Movement has posed a counter-claim of legitimacy against the Iranian theocracy. The ultimate question which remains is: if the Iranian political system cannot be reformed in a peaceful and nonviolent way and through the ballot box because of its failure to heed to popular demand for change, then what is left of the Iranian dream of democracy? Maybe the Iranians would have to wait another generation for this dream to become reality. Nader Hashemi and Danny Postel ‘s book certainly takes a comprehensive and consistent approach to this question.

SUPPORT OUR WORK

 

Please consider giving a tax-free donation to Reset this year

Any amount will help show your support for our activities

In Europe and elsewhere
(Reset DOC)


In the US
(Reset Dialogues)


x