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Authors: Michael Axworthy

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Fig. 11. Naser od-Din Shah was an intelligent, cultured man but failed to support reforming ministers who might have upheld Persian interests against the growing interference of Britain and Russia.

Jamal al-Din al-Afghani

By the latter part of the nineteenth century some thinkers in Iran and in the Middle East more generally had gone from an initial response to the West of bafflement, reactionary resentment or uncritical admiration to more sophisticated attitudes of adaptation, resistance or reform. Notable among these was Jamal al-Din al-Afghani, who despite his name was probably born in Iran and brought up as a Shi‘a in the 1830s and 40s. Later he travelled widely, including in India, Afghanistan, Europe and Egypt, and lived in Egypt for some years in the 1870s. It is thought that he adopted the name al-Afghani in order to be accepted more easily in a Sunni milieu. In all these places he attracted a following and strongly advocated resistance to European influences. He was energetic and charismatic, with a talent for getting access to powerful people in a variety of countries; but tended to be bumptious and seems to have disliked women.

More specifically, al-Afghani opposed British influence, whether in Afghanistan, Egypt, Sudan or Iran; he was more ambivalent about the Russians, for example. He wanted to see a revival in the Islamic world, and believed that the message of Islam had to be revised in the light of reason, to adapt to different conditions in different times. He asserted that there was nothing inconsistent between Islam and reform, or Islam and science. The scientific and technological achievements of the West could
be equalled or surpassed by a science based on Islam. But al-Afghani’s attitude even to Islam was ambivalent, and his message was different for different audiences at different times. There are undercurrents of Shaykhism and mysticism in his thinking that probably reflect his traditional education, but he was a politician and a pragmatist rather than an ascetic, or religious dogmatist, and did not have a reputation for personal holiness. He had flirtations with various contemporary governments in Islamic countries, which usually ended badly, but was a major influence on later thinkers of Islamism, especially in Egypt and in Iran (though his ideas were too boldly innovatory to be accepted by the classically-trained ulema, whether Shi‘a or Sunni
15
).

Afghani returned to Iran in the 1880s at the invitation of the Shah, but when they met there was no meeting of minds; his ideas being too strongly anti-British for the Shah, at least at that stage. He left and returned again, but was forced-marched out of the country to Iraq in 1891 after pamphlets appeared, apparently under his influence, attacking concessions to foreigners.

From Iraq al-Afghani was an influence in the campaign against the tobacco concession, corresponding in particular with Hajji Mirza Hasan Shirazi before he ordered the tobacco boycott; and was active thereafter with the two main Persian newspapers printed overseas,
Qanun
and
Akhtar
, printed in London and Istanbul respectively. While he was in Istanbul in 1895, he was visited by an ex-prisoner called Mirza Reza Kermani and they discussed future plans. Kermani returned to Iran, and on 1 May 1896 he shot and killed Naser od-Din Shah, having approached him with the appearance of wanting to present a petition while the Shah was visiting the shrine at Shah Abd ol-Azim. Naser od-Din was buried there shortly afterwards. Kermani was executed by public hanging the following August, and Al-Afghani died of cancer in 1897.

One aspect of the assassination illustrates the complexity of attitudes towards Jews in Iran. Apparently in his interrogation Kermani said that he had had an earlier opportunity to kill the Shah, while he was walking in a park, and had not done so, despite the fact that he could easily have escaped, because he knew that a number of Jews had been in the park
that day, and that they would be blamed for the killing. Kermani did not want the assassination to be blamed on the Jews, and did not want to be responsible for the riots and attacks on Jews that might follow.
16
For every anti-Semitic preacher or rabble-rouser there were many educated, humane Iranians, clerics and others, for whom it was a matter of conscience to do what they could to help the Jews and other minorities (irrespective of the radicalism or otherwise of their other beliefs).

The sudden death of the Shah could have brought disorder and confusion, but for a time courtiers were able to conceal what had happened, and the Cossack brigade kept order in Tehran until Naser od-Din’s appointed successor, Mozaffar od-Din, could arrive from Tabriz and assume the throne.

The Slide to Revolution

Mozaffar od-Din was sick when he became Shah and was surrounded by a gaggle of greedy courtiers and hangers-on. They had waited a long time with him in Tabriz for their chance to take over in Tehran, and the Shah did not have the energy or force of personality to keep them in check. Initially he had a reforming prime minister, Amin od-Dowleh, who was especially active for improving education, encouraging the opening of many new schools, including schools for girls. Censorship was lifted, and the Shah permitted the formation of cultural and educational associations. Most of this new activity was independent of the state and had little financial cost to the government, but the Shah had to pay more for the court than his father had, and in addition for frequent and expensive trips to Europe for medical treatment. With the exception of the debt incurred after the cancellation of the tobacco concession, his father had succeeded in keeping the state finances in order, but despite Amin od-Dowleh’s efforts to restrain spending, state debt accumulated under Mozaffar od-Din Shah, necessitating new loans from the Russians and the granting of new monopolistic concessions. One of Amin od-Dowleh’s money-raising innovations was the introduction of Belgian customs administrators, but in 1898 the Shah dismissed him after he failed to secure a British loan. A new prime minister, Amin ol-Sultan, took his place and set up Joseph
Naus, a Belgian, as customs minister. As time went on Naus effectively became finance minister.
17

The new customs arrangements were unpopular with many bazaar merchants, who seemed to be paying more than before and more than foreign traders; and were paying the money to foreigners. The Russian loans were unpopular; the ulema disliked the new schools, which weakened their traditional grip on education, and also the Shah’s trips to Europe. The lifting of censorship and the freedom to form associations made criticism of the government easier and more public, and gratified the inclinations of a new intelligentsia, with a diversity of liberal, nationalist, socialist and Islamic reformist elements, all of whom tended to be hostile to the monarchy, for different or overlapping reasons. It was a time of change and ferment, but also of resentment and unease.

Among other concessions granted around this time, for fisheries and other rights, was one in 1901 to another British entrepreneur, William Knox D’Arcy. This concession was to prove much more important than was apparent initially: he was allowed to explore the southern part of the country for oil.

The British, feeling their loss of the latest round in the Great Game, decided in 1902/1903 to liaise with some members of the ulema (notably Ayatollah Abdollah Behbehani) to encourage their opposition to the customs arrangements, the Belgians and the Russian loans. Money changed hands. There was agitation by the ulema in several cities, but it turned against foreigners and non-Muslims in general. There were riots in Isfahan and Yazd in the summer of 1903 that led to the killing of several Baha’is, and there were attacks on Jews and Christian minorities too.

The following year the harvest was bad, and the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese war, followed by the 1905 revolution in Russia, interrupted imports from the north and made them more expensive. The significance of the outcome of the war, in which the Japanese inflicted a humiliating defeat on the Russians (albeit with the help of British-built battleships), was eagerly taken in by Iranian intellectuals, for whom it demonstrated that the dominance of the imperialist Europeans was not unshakeable. Meanwhile the disruption of commerce meant that wheat prices went
up by 90 per cent and sugar prices by 33 per cent in northern cities like Tabriz and Tehran in the early months of 1905. The government was hit because its customs revenues went down. The Shah tried for another Russian loan and was offered £350,000; but the condition was that he should accept Russian commanders to lead all his military units. The Shah rejected these terms, and instead raised internal tariffs and postponed payments to local creditors, increasing yet further the pressure on the bazaar merchants.
18
The government’s financial problems also meant that the salaries of some ulema went unpaid.

In Tehran in June 1905 there was a demonstration in the mourning month of Moharram that fused economic and religious elements in a way that was to become typical. Two hundred shopkeepers and moneylenders closed their businesses and walked to the shrine of Shah Abd ol-Azim, protesting against the latest damaging government measures and demanding the removal of M. Naus, the Belgian customs chief. The demonstrators passed around offensive pictures of Naus dressed as a mullah at a fancy-dress party. The Shah, still sick and suffering, talked to the protestors, and promised to satisfy their demands when he came back from his imminent trip to Europe. But this did not happen, and a more serious protest broke out in December 1905 after two sugar merchants from the Tehran bazaar were given beatings on the feet (the bastinado or
falake
) at the orders of the governor of Tehran for charging too much for sugar. One of them was a revered elder of the bazaar who had paid to repair the bazaar itself and three mosques. His protests that he was not profiteering and that the prices were high because of the situation in Russia availed him nothing.

Again the bazaar closed, and this time 2000 or more merchants, religious students, ulema and others met in the central mosque, and again went from there to the shrine of Shah Abd ol-Azim, led by the mojtaheds Behbehani and Seyyed Mohammad Tabataba’i, and took sanctuary (
bast
) there. From the shrine they demanded the removal of the governor who had ordered the beatings, enforcement of sharia law, dismissal of Naus and the establishment of an
adalatkhaneh
(House of Justice—a representative assembly). Initially the government was defiant but the bazaar stayed
closed and after a month the Shah dismissed the governor and accepted the protestors’ demands.

Figs 12 & 13. Ayatollahs Behbehani (left) and Tabataba’i (right) supported the Constitutional revolution, believing that the ideas of constitutional government and democratic representation, despite their western origin, were nonetheless compatible with Islam.

But there was no attempt to convene the House of Justice in the following months and in the summer of 1906 there were further street protests by theological students when the government tried to take action against some radical preachers; and one of them, a
seyyed
(someone believed to be descended from the Prophet Mohammad) was shot dead by the police. This killing created a huge uproar. Behbehani, Tabataba’i, two thousand ulema and their students left Tehran for Qom (then as now the main centre for theological study in the country) and a larger group of merchants, mullahs and others took sanctuary in the grounds of the summer residence of the British legation at Golhak, then north of Tehran (having established that the British chargé d’affaires would respect the tradition of bast). Their number there eventually reached 14,000, and their accommodation and other needs were organised by the bazaar merchants’ guilds. This meant that both the ulema and the bazaar were on strike, which effectively brought the capital to a standstill; and the Golhak compound became a hotbed of political discussion and speculation, with liberal and
nationalist intellectuals joining in and addressing the assembled crowds. Many of these began to speak of the need to limit the powers of the Shah by establishing a constitution (
mashruteh
), and the demand for a House of Justice became more specific, shifting to call for a properly representative national assembly (
Majles
). Coordinated by the ulema, similar groups sent many telegrams in support to the Shah from the provinces.

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