Internet Mahdism in the (re)Shaping of Shi‘i Iran
With the rise of digital technology Islamic communities have incorporated new communication technologies for various experiential and institutional activities. While changes in such technologies have involved complex social consequences in the broad socio-structural context, religious subjectivities and communities continue to shape and be shaped by new technological practices. This study examines the phenomenon of Internet communication in the reconfiguration of key Shi‘i Twelver practices in post-revolutionary Iran. It focuses on variations of online Shi‘i Iranian millenarian discourses and practices and argues that Internet is impacting such beliefs in terms of authority, authenticity, community and public ritual practices. These transformations are not about technology changing Shi‘i Iran, the paper argues, but rather how agency engages with technology in reproducing new conceptions of millenarianism in the context of Iranian public life. The paper offers an analytical-theoretical discussion of what it calls “Internet Mahdism” by focusing on various textual, visual and audio productions made possible on digital space, wherein new conceptions of space, time, self and politics are negotiated and contested. In particular, it examines these transformations through social media production of apocalyptic themes, public rituals such as nimeh shaban, and pilgrimage rites associated with visitation sites such as Jamkaran. Finally, the paper offers an interpretation on the complex relationship between technology and religion in the context of Shi‘i Iranian life, which continues to undergo changes in terms of popular and official religious cultures.
Dr. Mina Yazdani
On 15 September 1944, Muhammad Parvin Gunabadi (d. 1979), a member of Iran’s parliament, wrote a letter to the Prime Minister, Muhammad Sa’id (d. 1973), expressing his concern about disturbing news coming in from different parts of the country where a “coordinated plan” had been executed and commotion now seized the populace. He went on to inform the Prime Minister that some five hundred religious groups in Khurasan had formed and were preparing a “major uproar.” Parvin Gunabadi’s letter was a rare attempt by a member of the parliament to prevent anti-Baha’i attacks that had exacerbated since Reza Shah’s abdication. During the 1940s, the Baha’i population of Iran faced mob attacks, raids, arsons, looting, and even sporadic murders. Murderers, often acting collectively, were never punished. In rare instances where the government arrested the culprits, the joint action by a number of clerics exerted pressure on the government to release them. A salient example was the murder, in 1949, of a Baha’i physician in Kashan. Eight individuals connected with the Fada’iyan-i Islam, a radical organization devoted to militant propagation of Islamic ideals together stabbed Dr. Soleyman Birjis to death. Collectively, they went to the police headquarter and confessed to his murder, and were put under arrest. However, the joint, immediate and organized actions of Ayatollahs Burujirdi, Kashani, Bihbahani and a number of other clerics prevented the judicial system from any further actions. The killers were all exonerated, and immediately released. This was despite the known conflicts, if not blatant animosities between Ayatollah Burujerdi, the sole marj‘-i taqlid of the Shi‘ia at the time and the highly influential and politically active Ayatollah Kashani. Exploring the newspapers of the time, pertinent governmental documents and memoirs of the individuals involved, this paper suggests that the government’s inability or unwillingness to challenge fiery clerics and radical Muslims in their attacks against Baha’is, practically, empowered and emboldened these individuals and groups preparing them, over time, for the fervent opposition against the government itself. Furthermore, the joint action of the otherwise rival clerics to protect the murderers of Baha’is provided the clerics with experience that they later used, against the government, first in 1964, and in 1979, during the Islamic Revolution.