Most Westerners know very little about the psyche of the Iranian
population. Those who think they do are usually nothing more than
elitist leftists who are projecting what they want to believe about
Iranians unto the Iranians.
I’ve gotten into many debates with leftist elitists who insist
that the Iranian population is Muslim. I was on the phone with a
man (who sympathizes largely with communist theory), and I brought
up Iran. The first thing he said to me was, “They are Muslim.”
Although he asserted that they are Muslim, he in fact revealed the
opposite. The fact that as I brought up the Iranian people, he immediately
defended the notion that they are Muslim proves that the issue is
debatable.
Those insisting the Iranians are Muslim are leftists who fundamentally
need to believe that the entire rest of the world is Muslim. They
are of the naïve belief that people everywhere would just like
a kinder, gentler version of Islam. They are wrong. Many people
around the world, especially in Iran, are not Muslim and in fact
hate it.
It’s time to shed light on the secular psyche of the Iranians.
Ever since my work on Shirin Ebadi, I’ve been in contact with
several Iranians from around the world – including phone contact
with an Iranian living in Tehran. Let me tell you what they have
told me.
I’ll tell you about my first phone conversation with my friend
in Tehran. I said to him at the end of the conversation, “I
hope and pray that Iran is free someday so I can safely visit you.”
He said to me, “Don’t pray. Praying gets us nowhere
and got us into this mess.”
Just today (Thursday Dec 4, 2003), four popular fast food restaurants
were shut down in Tehran, Iran because the Iranian youth at the
restaurants were behaving in ways that were “un-Islamic.”
“Young women, in particular, have incurred the wrath of hardline
authorities by wearing make-up, short coats and colorful scarves
pushed back to expose as much hair as possible instead of the head-to-toe
black chadors deemed necessary by the country's ruling clerics to
protect a woman's modesty.”
The Iranian youth purposely violate Islamic law in favor of going
to fast food places to mingle with the opposite sex and let their
hair down. Do they sound Muslim to you?
Most are shocked to learn that Iran, which is a theocracy, is made
up of a population that is not Muslim. Surely a government that
is the most vigorous theocracy in the Middle East would be filled
with Muslims. But it is the exact opposite. The more un-Islamic
the people are, the more insistent those who want to create an all
Islamic society are in forcing Islam upon them.
It was the Iranians, not any other country in the Middle East,
who did not only cheer on 9-11, but in fact have come to support
the Americans. The Iranians favor the West and Western ideals in
more ways than one.
For centuries, there has been a battle between reactionary mullahs
and ancient Persian heritage. The mullahs have been doing every
thing they can to force their culture down upon the Iranians. As
an example, the mullahs have banned parents from naming their children
ancient Iranians names and instead force Arabic names on the children.
It is difficult to tell how many Iranians actually support Islam
because leaving Islam is punishable by death inside the Islamic
Republic. But every indication tells us that a large portion of
Iran's youth does not identify itself as Muslim. If the emails pouring
into me are any indication, they tell me the Iranian people see
Islam and its laws as a source of oppression and sexual apartheid.
And even though an Iranian may consider themselves Muslim, they
still consider themselves Iranian first and Muslim second.
If you want to see the secular psyche of Iranians, you really have
to do little research on the internet to find it. You will find
many Iranians who are downright hostile to Islam itself, with its
advocacy of decapitations and floggings; Iranians who openly say
they see no compatibility between Islam and human rights; or even
Muslim Iranians, like Ebadi, who call for an ending of such Shariah-based
laws like public stonings. Among the Iranian people, you would be
hard pressed to find someone who wants to keep the government as
it exists. They do not want a milder version of what exists (everyone
except Ebadi that is). They want a fundamental regime change. And,
I’d like to add – they would like a government minus
religion.
The Iranian government poses the biggest threat to the United States
and the Iranian people hold the biggest potential for setting up
a stable democracy in the Middle East. It is where we should turn
our attention to next. We should be focused on empowering the Iranian
people. They need our support in every possible – including
moral and military support.
The Iranian population is incredibly young. This means they are
willing to fight but lack leadership. The West needs to provide
it. The thugs working for the mullahs would turn their back on the
government and support the people if only the people showed clearly
that they will support them 100%. However, many Iranians are still
waiting for a Messiah. This should stop. They need to know fundamental
regime change is, ultimately, in their hands and their hands alone.
The Iranian people need a whirlwind of support – a gusto –
a fire under their wings to once and for all topple the Ayatollah.
It should be quick, devastating, and therefore – relatively
painless.
They are in dire need of our support. If most Western people understood
the situation in Iran, there is little doubt in my mind that Westerners
would support the Iranian people – which means, toppling the
Iranian government.
The reason why America as a whole is hesitant to support others
around the world is largely due to our corrupt intellectual leadership.
Our universities, media, etc. is filled with anti-capitalist, anti-American
dirtbags. I was in fact told by one leftist that we should be “cautious”
about endorsing a free, capitalist society in the Middle East. He
said, "I think it would be fine if civil society controlled
the middle east, but I'm afraid it would turn into another stifling
petite bourgeoisie modeled after the West."
I would like to take his concern to the Iranian people. Let them
choose: a theocracy which stones its women for committing adultery
or – oh the horror – a system with a middle class.
Leftists are reprehensible. They are Khatami apologists, insisting
Iranians would like to just work with the system. A large part of
the reason they won’t support Iranians is because it makes
their complaints look petty. Western intellectuals complain the
capitalist system victimizes people – Americans simply can’t
turn down Big Macs at McDonald’s or Hershey bars at the supermarket.
Meanwhile, in Iran, virginal women are raped before they are executed
so they don’t die virgins – because some Shiite clergy
a few centuries back decided that executing a virgin was unlawful.
Regardless what political-economic system is ultimately set up in
Iran or elsewhere, one thing is for sure: it will be far better
than what exists now.
I am addressing this to you – a Western person, especially
those on college campuses. Tell everyone you know about the Iranian
peoples’ situation. Write letters. Send this article to your
friends. Get the word out. I believe it is in the heart of every
American to see people around the world enjoy the freedoms we do.
Amber Pawlik