Ahmad Azari Qomi

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Ahmad Azari-Qomi-Bigdeli
TitleGrand Ayatollah
Personal
Born1925
DiedJanuary 31, 1999(1999-01-31) (aged 73–74)
ReligionIslam
EraModern era
RegionIran
JurisprudenceShia Islam

Grand Ayatollah Ahmad Azari-Qomi-Bigdeli was an Iranian cleric. Born in 1925 in Qom, after the 1979 Iranian Revolution he served on the Special Clerical Court, and Assembly of Experts, founded the conservative Resalat Newspaper. He was arrested in November 1997 after an open letter by him was published in Britain criticizing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei for allowing torture and "moral corruption" among officials and clerics. Shortly after Khamenei denounced him in a televised speech for allegedly committing "treason against the people, the revolution and the country." His renewed candidacy for the Assembly of Experts was rejected by the Guardian Council the next year and he died in 1999.

Background and career

Azari was born to a family of

Sh'ia clerics in Qom in 1925.[1]

Azari started his studies at Qom in 1941 under Ayatollahs

Upon finishing his clerical studies, he emigrated to Tabriz in northwest Iran to work as a religious teacher in a boarding school.

Azari was a founding member of the

Khomeini’s successor. He also founded the Resalat Foundation, a religious organisation which owns the Resalat
newspaper. Azari-Qomi was originally a staunch conservative. Allegedly, in the midst of the struggle over the Land Reform which the leftist parliament envisioned in the early 1980s, Azari-Qomi asked for Khomeini's permission to found a conservative newspaper, but Khomeini declined. Azari-Qomi tried again a year later. This time, Khomeini did not react to the request, which Azari-Qomi interpreted as a permission. This was the birth of Resalat Newspaper, together with Keyhan one of the most conservative newspapers in Iran.

Conflict with Khamenei

Grand Ayatollah Ahmad Azari-Qomi was arrested in November 1997 after having published an open letter outside of Iran (inter alia in the London-based independent weekly newspaper Nimrooz) in which he criticized Supreme Leader

Khatami to abolish the Special Clerical Court which had arrested and tortured many followers of Grand Ayatollah Shirazi.[3]

In his letter Azari-Qomi proposed that the velayat-e faqih should be split into two different realms of theological authority and political authority. Ayatollah

Khamenei could exercise political authority.[citation needed
]

Finally, grand ayatollah Azari-Qomi reminded the new president

Supreme Leader
.

"With their vote in your favour, our brave people have brought the whole of the present leadership under question and I’m proud of it. But, dear Mr President, be careful of not becoming the last of the presidents of the Islamic Republic, for this is what may well be your fate if you do not act now to stop at once present injustices committed under the name of Islam".[4][5]

In response, on November 10, 1997, Azeri-Qomi was forcibly expelled from clerical institutes in Qom and his and Ayatollah Montazeri's offices were ransacked.

On November 26, 1997, the Supreme Leader of the

Khamenei, announced in a televised speech that Grand Ayatollahs Montazeri and Azari-Qomi had "committed treason against the people, the revolution and the country," and commanded the Judiciary Branch to ensure they were "punished according to the law."[6]

Iran News reported on February 5, 1998, that Jomhuri-ye Islami printed an article on a recent meeting in Mashhad between some members of the Assembly of Experts who asked for the expulsion of Azari-Qomi from the Assembly. Ultimately, Azari-Qomi was not expelled from the Assembly of Experts, but his renewed candidacy in 1998 was rejected by the Guardian Council.[3]

Azeri-Qomi spent 15 months under house arrest, during this time becoming "comatose twice", according to Mohsen Kadivar.[7] He was hospitalized on 1 February 1999[8] and died shortly thereafter at the age of 74.

Works

  • Sima-ye Zan dar Nezam-e Eslami (Woman's Image in Islamic Order)[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Islam and gender: the religious debate in contemporary Iran, Part 2 By Ziba Mir-Hosseini
  2. ^ Mohammadighalehtaki, Ariabarzan (2012). Organisational Change in Political Parties in Iran after the Islamic Revolution of 1979. With Special Reference to the Islamic Republic Party (IRP) and the Islamic Iran Participation Front Party (Mosharekat) (PhD thesis). Durham University. p. 176.
  3. ^
    doi:10.2139/ssrn.1505542. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help
    )
  4. ^ FDI Newswire Number 36 Feb. 18, 1997
  5. ^ BRIEF ON IRAN, No. 787, Thursday, November 20, 1997, Representative Office of The National Council of Resistance of Iran, Washington, DC, Montazeri: Khamenei Should Have A Supervisory Role, Reuter, November 19
  6. ^ "Action memorandum 037 – The Foundation for Democracy in Iran". December 4, 1997.
  7. ^ Kadivar, Mohsen (24 February 2014). "The Rise and Fall of Azari Qomi; The Evolution of Ayatollah Ahmad Azari Qomi's Thought". english.kadivar.com/. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  8. ^ Iran Report, 8 February 1999, Volume 2, Number 6, RISE AND FALL OF REGIME STALWART