Sheikh Fazlollah Noori
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Sheikh Fazlollah Noori (Persian: شیخ فضلالله نوری, d. July 31, 1909, Tehran) was a prominent Shiite Muslim cleric in Iran during the late 19th and early 20th century who fought against the Iranian Constitutional Revolution and was executed for treason as a result. Today he is considered a martyr (shahid) in the fight against democracy by Islamic conservatives in Iran.
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[edit] Background
Noori was one of, if not the most vigorous opponents of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution, a movement to remove foreign influence from Iran, limit the power of the Shah and to establish a national consultative assembly that would give the people a voice in the affairs of state. The movement was led principally by merchants, intellectuals and some clerics. Noori initially gave restrained support to the uprising, but he soon became an extreme critic and enemy of the constitutionalists. He authored pamphlets and encited mobs against Constitutionalism and constitutionalists preaching that they would bring vice to Iran. He issued fatwa declaring all members of the new parliament and government "apostates", "atheists," "secret Babis," and koffar al-harbi (warlike pagans) whose blood ought to be shed by the faithful.[1] [2]
Noori allied himself with the new Shah, Mohammad Ali Shah who with the assistance of Russian troops staged a coup against the Majlis (parliament) in 1907. In 1909, however, constitutionalists marched onto Tehran (the capital of Iran). Noori was arrested, tried and found guilty of `sowing corruption and sedition on earth,`[3] and in July 1909, Noori was hanged as a traitor.
Since then, and especially after the Islamic Revolution of 1979, Noori has been honored by the most conservative sections of the Shiite Muslim clergy in Iran, including Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (the spiritual and political leader of the revolution) and the current leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Today he is honored in Iran's capital, Tehran, by billboards graced with his image and the Sheikh Fazlollah Nouri Highway.[4]
Nouri is said to be the only ayatollah executed in the modern history of Iran. [5]
Nouri also had an influence on cinema in Iran. When motion pictures first arrived in Iran, Sheikh Fazlollah Nouri issued a fatwa declaring the watching of films an unpardonable sin. Very few pious Iranians dared go to the movies thereafter.[6]
Nouri is celebrated in the Islamic Republic of Iran as `the rose of Iran's clergy` "martyred for his defense of Islam against democracy and representative government," with Sheikh Fazlollah Noori highway in Tehran named after him and his image adorning a large billboard above the highway.[7]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Taheri, Amir, The Spirit of Allah by Amir Adler and Adler (1985), p.45-6
- ^ Abrahamian, Ervand, Tortured Confessions by Ervand Abrahamian, University of California Press, 1999 p.24
- ^ Abrahamian, Ervand, Tortured Confessions by Ervand Abrahamian, University of California Press, 1999 p.24
- ^ Molavi, Afshin, The Soul of Iran, Norton, 2005, p.193.
- ^ Project Muse. Access Restricted
- ^ THE HISTORY OF IRANIAN CINEMA
- ^ Persian Pilgrimages: Journeys Across Iran By Afshin Molavi p.193
[edit] Further reading
- Ahmad Kasravi, Tārikh-e Mashruteh-ye Iran (تاریخ مشروطهٔ ایران) (History of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution), in Persian, 951 p. (Negāh Publications, Tehran, 2003), ISBN 9643511383. Note: This book is also available in two volumes, published by Amir Kabir Publications in 1984. Amir Kabir's 1961 edition is in one volume, 934 pages.
- Ahmad Kasravi, History of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution: Tārikh-e Mashrute-ye Iran, Volume I, translated into English by Evan Siegel, 347 p. (Mazda Publications, Costa Mesa, California, 2006). ISBN 1568591977