|
| |
[ Home ] [ Up ] [ Early Life ] [ Peyman &Parcham ] [ On Religion, God, .. ] [ Azaadegaan Today ] [ Books & Works ] [ Biography in Farsi ] [ Pictures ]

The
Azaadegan Party Today:
There is no time to give a detailed analysis of what has happened to the Azadegan party
during the past three or four decades, or to try to explain why it has not made progress.
One major fact, however, can be mentioned: the tremendous and complex nature of their
task. The Azadegan were fighting all segments of the establishment political,
religious, literary-academic, educational, economic, in a highly traditional culture. No
other group has done that. There was no "interest group", or economic class, or
any other categrory of people, whose particular interest they were defending against
others and on whom they could therefore count. They were, in a sense, fighting the very
people or at least their most cherished traditions whose cause they were
advancing. To make things more difficult, when they started, in 1941, political
organizations were, for all practical purposes, something new in Iran, especially one
based on ideology, and there was no collective experience to draw on. Furthermore, unlike
most other parties, they neither had nor sought either financial backing or moral support
of the Iranian government or of rich Iranians, or of foreign powers. Had Kasravi lived a
few more years until the party was on a sounder organizational basis (and with a larger
membership), things would very likely have been different. As it was, removal of Kasravi
from the scene, occurring at a very sensitive juncture, at first made his fellow-party
members more determined, and resulted in a burst of energetic activity. Gradually,
however, things slowed down and, as far as structured activity is concerned, ultimately
came to a standstill.
However, there is a difference between movements such as that of the Azadegan in the
twentieth century and those of earlier eras that could save Kasravis ideology from
oblivion, and indeed perhaps cause it to ultimately gain the attention it deserves. At the
very least, the printed word will keep alive an accurate record of the ideology as
presented by its founder. That even in Iran the number of literate people continues to
increase will help. If proper conditions should prevail, at some point in the future,
other means of mass communication would also help.
Finally, developments within Iran itself might work in favor of the movement. The Islamic
religious establishment, always criticizing the secular government and directly or
indirectly seeking an "Islamic" government and a ShiI society as the ideal
solution for Irans problems, has had its chance to show what it was talking about.
Other groups, leftist and rightist, have also been tested.
There are, in fact, some signs of increased interest in Kasravis ideas. Some
visitors from Iran inform us that more people than before read Kasravis writings,
and find them more appealing than before. Outside of Iran, the same is true. His name
appears with some frequency in letters to the editors of emigre Iranian press, and in some
articles. Occasionally, an entire newspaper or journal article is devoted to him. Some
references to him indicate misunderstandings, some serious, or based on a speakers
or writers wishful thinking. But perhaps, on balance, his ideology will become
better known, and judgments of it, favorable or unfavorable, will be based on accurate
knowledge.
The
Book: Dar Piraamoon e Eslaam
I have spoken many times on Islam. I would like to speak once again on this subject,
and I hope that this will be the last time I do so. I am writing this in order to leave no
room for excuses for anyone. As for those who will not accept what I have to say, I have
nothing else to say. Let God be the judge.
Today, there remains no country called Islam for you to rule. Today, Moslems of every
ethnic group have separated, and each has created a country in the name of that ethnic
group. In Iran, people live as Iranians, not as Moslems. That is why they consider the
Iraqis, Egyptians, Jews, and Zoroastrians who live in Iran to be one of them. Besides, for
many years, Western laws have been practiced in Iran, and Islamic laws have been set
aside. Is this not proof that Islam has been eliminated?
What has forced us into such discussions is the facts that, as we said, the clerics have
made a claim to the government and they disrupt the life of the nation. And their pretext
is that Imam Ali ebn Abitaleb was chosen calif by God, and other such statements. In order
to show that their claim is without any foundation, we have been forced to engage in such
discussions.
Excerpts From: (On Islam And Shi'ism / Ahmad Kasravi; translated from the
Persian by M.R. Ghanoonparvar; with an introductory essay and bibliographical note by M.A.
Jazayery, pages 5,6,7,38,40,41,45,60,199&204, Copyright 1990 by Mazda Publishers).
Dr. William C. Staley Jr., Princeton University 1966

Copyright © 1998-2003 Aturpat Limited. All rights reserved.
|