The Cinema Rex Fire

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Cinema Rex after the fire
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Cinema Rex after the fire

On August 20, 1978, Cinema Rex in Abadan, Iran, was set ablaze by Islamist militants killing approximately 430 individuals. The shah and the country’s intelligence service, SAVAK, were initially accused of planning the fire but after testimony by the lone surviving arsonist, it was proven that Khomeinist devotees were behind the incident.[citation needed]

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[edit] Death toll

There is speculation over the actual number of casualties incurred during the fire. Various sources draw their own conclusions concerning the death toll. Some of the numbers considered include: 377,[1] 400,[2] 410,[3] 430,[4] (almost) 600,[5] and (over) 800.[6] The National Fire Protection Association, a reputable source on fire-related issues lists the number of dead at 422.[7]. A 1980 Amnesty International report states that there were 438 victims, including individuals who were tried and wrongfully executed after the fire itself.[8]

[edit] Motives behind the fire

There are a few reasons why Islamist militants may have planned and executed the Cinema Rex fire: To mobilize the masses in support of the revolution by claiming the arson was a "Reichstag fire" set by SAVAK in order to blame and discredit radical Islamist revolutionaries who had attacked and burned cinemas in earlier protests. Up until the fire, the revolutionary movement involved more politically active citizens but according to Roy Mottahedeh, author of The Mantle of the Prophet, “thousands of Iranians who had felt neutral and had until now thought that the struggle was only between the shah and supporters of religiously conservative mullahs felt that the government might put their own lives on the block to save itself. Suddenly, for hundreds of thousands, the movement was their own business.”[9]

Finally, Islamists opposed cinema for ideological or doctrinal reasons. While Shia Muslims (unlike some strict Sunni Musilms) do not forbid pictures, many strict Shia believe any motion pictures "with music, dance or any other un-Islamic portrayal is haram to view."[1] Ever since motion pictures were first introduced into Iran at the turn of the 20th century, the clerical establishment saw the medium as not only a threat to moral righteousness, but also a direct attack on their position as authority figures. The depiction of women without proper religious attire and other blasphemous content furthered anti-Western sentiment, solidifying an ‘Us vs. Them’ mentality that in part continues to maintain clerical dominance over Iranian society. [2] Today, the fire is seen by Islamists as an event where Islam triumphed over Western corruption. [5]

[edit] Rumours of SAVAK and monarchial involvement

As the event took place during the revolutionary period, it was quite difficult to make out who the perpetrator(s) was, making ill-conceived accusations rather prevalent. Many elements of the revolutionary bloc laid blame on Mohammad Reza Shah, the now deposed authoritarian monarch of Iran, and SAVAK (Sazeman-e Ettelaat va Amniyat-e Keshvar), the country’s domestic security and intelligence service. Although sufficient evidence was never brought forth to facilitate such claims, the labeling would have far-reaching implications on the subsequent direction of the revolutionary movement. The circumstances in which the fire was set did not aid in the shah’s pleas of innocence either. The timing and the location of the incident (an impoverished district of Abadan) did not coincide with preceding patterns of protestation, which raised the level of suspicion. It was also believed that the shah specifically targeted Cinema Rex for the sole purpose of killing political dissidents who had gathered to watch a controversial anti-government film called Gavaznha (The Deer) starring well-known actor Behrouz Vossoughi.[10][11][4]

Another rumour suggested that the shah intentionally blamed the incident on Islamist militants in an attempt to discredit and potentially dislodge them from their growing influence within the undefined hierarchy of the revolutionary forces.[8]

As a whole, the ruling government's conduct after the fire did not parallel that of a perceived non-implicit party. The shah assumed a highly reactionary guise by placing General Gholam Ali Oveissi in charge of a capital that was already under a state of martial law,[3] and Jamshid Amouzegar, Prime Minister of Iran at the time, was replaced by Jafar Sharif-Emami,[12] in a sense symbolizing the deteriorating state of the Pahlavi regime. Although such tactics were meant to restore order in the midst of growing civil unrest, it was seen as representing an unorganized regime in crisis control.

Another theory as to why many believed there was explicit royal involvement revolved around the central government’s inflexible posturing when it came to the production of feature films. Because the film industry in Iran was for the most part subsidized by the state, films were meant to be molded to project the Pahlavi regime in a positive light. Dissent and anti-governmental activism through such mediums were strictly prohibited. In order to escape censorship, political messages would be presented through more abstract means.[10] Elements of the state apparatus were fully aware of such internal transformations and the fire at Cinema Rex was seen by some as being punishment for defying the state’s strict production parameters.

Nothing solidified the shah’s perceived guilt more so than that of Captain Monir Taheri’s trial.

Captain Monir Taheri after his execution.
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Captain Monir Taheri after his execution.

[edit] Captain Monir Taheri’s trial and execution

After the usurpation of power by revolutionary forces, Islamic tribunals were established as part of the Islamization of society. Members of the shah's regime who were unable or chose not to leave the country were often subject to the judgment of the newly instated judicial process. In the midst of revolutionary terror and general uncertainty, many were tried and convicted for crimes they had little or nothing to do with. This was for the purpose of quelling the population’s thirst for revolutionary justice. The Cinema Rex fire was an event that continued to loom over the minds of many Iranians, and closure, no matter how vulgar the result, was vital not only for legitimizing the newborn government’s capacity to fulfill public demands, but also to crush any form of royal revivalism.

Captain Monir Taheri, member of Iran’s pre-revolutionary armed forces, was arrested in the town of Mianeh two days before his trial and execution on February 21, 1979; a few months after the fire at Cinema Rex. The conviction of an army officer was significant because the blame was placed squarely on the shah who had always had a close relationship with the armed forces.

“Based on the available information from the press, the defendant had been accused of ‘martyring 3 people in Rudsar’, ‘receiving guerilla training in the United States’, ‘involvement in the Abadan's Rex Cinema fire’, ‘receiving a Medal of Honor [for his participation in the fire]’, and ‘involvement in the torture of political prisoners in Mashhad and Shiraz.’”

According to published sources, there was no evidence to suggest that the Captain had any involvement in the fire. Additionally, no mention of Taheri was made by either defense or prosecution staff during the public trial of 1980. Like many other defendants who were brought before an Islamic tribunal at this time, Taheri was not given sufficient time to organize any form of defense.

Before his execution by firing squad on February 23, 1979, the court fulfilled four of Taheri’s requests, including: not to be blindfolded, to avoid being photographed during the execution, to personally give the firing squad the order to fire, and to return his body to his family.[8]

Days later, Taheri’s family rebuked with counter claims suggesting that many of the charges the Captain faced were utterly fallacious in nature. This not only mobilized a popular campaign headed by the discontented families of Cinema Rex victims, but also brought into question the legitimacy of the very institution that tried Captain Taheri – the Islamic tribunals.

Family members of a Cinema Rex victim overlook a cemetery dotted with unmarked graves. Many of the dead were simply unidentifiable due to the extent of their burns.
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Family members of a Cinema Rex victim overlook a cemetery dotted with unmarked graves. Many of the dead were simply unidentifiable due to the extent of their burns.

[edit] Public Trial

After Captain Taheri’s family protested the charges that eventually led to the officer’s execution, the public had quickly become restless over the secretive posture assumed by Abadan authorities. After an effective public campaign headed by the disillusioned families of Cinema Rex victims that included a four-and-a-half month sit-in at a government office, a representative of Ayatollah Khomeini, Ayatollah Zia Rohani, presided over a public trial that would reopen the Cinema Rex case for the final time.

Lasting from August 25 to September 4, 1980, the Revolutionary Tribunal would oversee seventeen court sessions that involved the trial of twenty six individuals, including the only survivor of the four-man arson team. After much deliberation, Hossein Takializadeh, the lone surviving arsonist, and five others were put to death in public.

“In his defense statement, the principal defendant admitted to having started the fire along with three other religious activists and denied having had connections with the former regime’s security apparatus.”[8]

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ A Black Day in Iranian History. FaithFreedom.org. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  2. ^ a b After the revolution: the cinema will carry us - cinema flourishes in Iran. Find Articles. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  3. ^ a b The Iranian Revolution: King Pahlavi (the Shah) against Dissent. MacroHistory: The Prehistory to the 21st Century. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  4. ^ a b Abadan. Answers.com. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  5. ^ a b One Man's Terrorist is Every Man's Terrorist. Benador Associates. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  6. ^ The Real Iranian Hostage Story. Venus Project. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  7. ^ Important dates in fire history. National Fire Protection Association. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  8. ^ a b c d One person's story: Mr. Monir Taheri. Boroumand Foundation. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  9. ^ Mottahedeh, Roy (2004). The Mantle of the Prophet: Religion and Politics in Iran, page 375.
  10. ^ a b The unvanquished. Behrouz Vossoughi.com. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  11. ^ The hero and the heroin. Payvand. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
  12. ^ Iran: The Coming Revolution. Country Data. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Mottahedeh, Roy P., 1940- The mantle of the prophet : religion and politics in Iran, Oxford : Oneworld, 2000.