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How sectarian strife penetrated Islam's holiest rite. |
Khomeini’s Messengers in Mecca
Arab Awakening and Islamic Revival
According to the tradition of Islam,
Mecca during the annual Muslim pilgrimage is a city open to all Muslims, in
which all forms of strife and bloodshed are forbidden. The peace of Mecca is a
concept so rooted in Arabia that it even predates Islam, and was observed by
sojourners in Mecca before the Arabian shrine became the center of Muslim
faith.
But in 1987, Mecca became a site of unprecedented
carnage when demonstrating Iranian pilgrims clashed with Saudi security forces
in a bloody confrontation that claimed over four hundred lives. The Saudis and
their supporters called the event a premeditated riot: violent Iranian
demonstrators crushed themselves to death in a stampede of their own making.
The Iranians and their sympathizers called it a premeditated massacre: the
Saudis conspired to provoke and shoot Iranian pilgrims. The pilgrimage to
Mecca, far from providing a respite from the conflicts that beset Islam, had
itself become a point of confrontation between rival visions of Islam. The
pilgrimage peace had been shattered by the brickbats and bullets of Muslims.
The disruption of the pilgrimage peace admitted multiple interpretations. It
occurred at a moment of escalating tensions in the last phase of the Iranian-Iraqi
war, following the American reflagging of Kuwaiti tankers and the introduction
of foreign escorts in the Gulf. This foreign intervention, favored by Saudi
Arabia and opposed by Iran, created an atmosphere of crisis between the two
states. Yet the deterioration of the pilgrimage peace also reflected tensions
dating back to Iran’s revolution, an event which kindled a broader rivalry
between Saudi Arabia and Iran over primacy in the Gulf and in Islam. That
conflict had its remote origins in the great historical animosity of Wahhabism,
the fount of Saudi Islam, to Shi‘ism itself. Nor can the most recent pilgrimage
strife be divorced from the history of mistrust between Shi‘ite pilgrims and
their Sunni hosts, a history that stretches back as far as the sixteenth
century. At a still deeper level, the event echoed Sunni-Shi‘ite animosities
that had their origins in the seventh century, at the very dawn of Islam.
Even if it is allowed that the Gulf crisis triggered the violence of 1987, it was
understood by Muslims in a larger historical context. Much of that
understanding is implicit and unspoken, because it is essentially sectarian.
Sectarian bigotry dare not speak its name openly. Like racial and ethnic
prejudice in other societies, sectarian prejudice is not professed openly in
the Muslim world. “They are now propagan
dizing and claiming that this incident
was a war between Shi‘ites and Sunnis,” charged Ali Khamene’i, then the
president of Iran, after the 1987 violence. “This is a lie! Of course there is a
war; but a war between the American perception of Islam and true revolutionary
Islam.” 1
The pilgrimage controversy
is not only one between Shi‘ites and Sunnis, but neither is it one between
Khomeini’s truth and America’s falsehood. It is a conflict that is
simultaneously political and sectarian, that combines a present-day clash of
interests with the historic clash of sects in Islam. Some of these sectarian
differences touch upon the Muslim pilgrimage itself, and involve conflicting
notions of sanctity and asylum. The aim of this essay is to explain the
interaction of contemporary politics with the enduring prejudices that Saudis
and Iranians still bring to Mecca.2
From Ottomans to Saudis
The pilgrimage ritual itself is not
an issue about which Sunnis and Shi‘ites have conducted an elaborate polemic.
The bedrock of sectarian conflict has always been the matter of the Imamate--the
question of legitimate authority in Islam--which is a matter of theological
controversy outside the ritual sphere. Yet over time, theological differences
were transformed into political, social, and cultural differences, and these
infected both sects with bigoted lore about Shi‘ite pilgrims and Sunni hosts.
This was particularly evident after Sunni-Shi‘ite differences took the form of
Ottoman-Safavid armed conflict, beginning in the sixteenth century. That was
perhaps the most divided century in Islamic history, marked by great wars of
religion between Sunnis and Shi‘ites. When the holy cities were under Sunni
Ottoman rule, there were years in which the Ottomans denied entry to Shi‘ites
coming from Safavid domains. The Safavids reacted by trying to discourage the
pilgrimage to Mecca and emphasizing the importance of Shi‘ite shrines in their
own domains.3
The Sunni corpus of libel is perhaps more readily documented, if only because it
sometimes led to violent acts against Shi‘ite pilgrims. At the root of the
Sunni lore is the belief that Shi‘ites feel themselves compelled to pollute the
holy premises. Much evidence for Sunni belief in this libel exists both in
Islamic textual sources and in European travel literature. This pollution was
said to take a particularly repelling form: Burckhardt and Burton, the great
nineteenth-century explorers of Arabia, both heard about attacks on Shi‘ite
pilgrims, prompted by the suspicion that they had polluted the Great Mosque in
Mecca with excrement. According to Burton, “their ill-fame has spread far; at
Alexandria they were described to me as a people who defile the Ka‘bah.”
4
The Shi‘ite libel was just as farfetched. It held that Sunnis did not respect Mecca as a
sanctuary,
and that the lives of Shi‘ite pilgrims were forfeit even in these sacred
precincts, where the shedding of blood is forbidden. Shi‘ite pilgrims were
indeed liable to humiliation at any time; as Burton wrote of Shi‘ites on
pilgrimage, “that man is happy who gets over it without a beating, [for] in no
part of Al-Hijaz are they for a moment safe from abuse and blows.”5 Yet it would seem that, for the most
part, Shi‘ite pilgrims were as secure as other pilgrims, provided they
exercised the discretion (taqiyya) permitted them by Shi‘ite doctrine
and conformed with the customs of their Sunni hosts. During the Ottoman period,
the Iranian pilgrims’ caravan also bought its security through a special
tribute, paid both to desert tribes en route and to the guardians of the
sanctuaries.6
Since toleration could be had at a price which Shi‘ite pilgrims were prepared to pay,
their lives were rarely as threatened as their dignity. The open manner in
which Shi‘ites observed Muharram in Jidda epitomized the tolerance of the late
Ottoman years. When the Dutch Orientalist Hurgronje witnessed these ceremonies
in 1884, he found the Ottoman governor in attendance. Hurgronje reported that
the governor “not only drank sherbet but also wept piously.”
7
Writing of his pilgrimage in 1885, an
Iranian Shi‘ite described the tolerance shown to Shi‘ites generally:
Previously, in Mecca the populace
greatly persecuted the Iranian pilgrims who were Shi‘ites, so they had to
practice complete dissimulation. These days, because of the weakness of the
Ottoman government and the European style civil law which is practiced there,
and the strength of the Iranian government, this practice is completely
abandoned. There is no harm done to the Iranians. No one would molest them,
even if they did not practice dissimulation.8
But sectarian
antagonisms were exacerbated following the advent of Saudi rule over Mecca in
1924. The doctrinal divide which separated Ottoman Sunnism from Shi‘ism seemed
narrow in comparison to the chasm which separated Saudi Wahhabism and Shi‘ism.
Wahhabi doctrine regarded Shi‘ite veneration of the Imams and their tombs as
blasphemous idolatry. The Wahhabi iconoclasts had earned lasting notoriety in
Shi‘ite eyes when they emerged from the Arabian desert in 1802 and sacked
Karbala, the Shi‘ite shrine city in Iraq. They slew several thousand Shi‘ites
on that occasion and desecrated the revered tomb of the Imam Husayn, whose
martyrdom in the seventh century is the pivotal event in Shi‘ite religious
history. Those Shi‘ites who perished became martyrs in the eyes of their
coreligionists, sacrificed on the very site of Husayn’s martyrdom.
When a revived Wahhabi movement swept through Arabia during the first quarter of
this century, it appeared as hostile as ever to Shi‘ism’s most fundamental
assumptions. The leader of the movement, Abd al-Aziz Ibn Sa‘ud, when asked in
1918 about the Shi‘ite shrines in Iraq, could still declare that “I would raise
no objection if you demolished the whole lot of them, and I would demolish them
myself if I had the chance.”
9 He
never had that chance, but he did besiege and occupy Medina, and his
bombardment of the city produced a general strike in Iran and an uproar
throughout the Shi‘ite world. For while the pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca
holds the same significance for Sunnis and Shi‘ites, the visitation (ziyara)
to nearby Medina is of special significance for Shi‘ites. The cemetery of
al-Baqi‘, near the city, is the reputed resting place of the Prophet Muhammad’s
daughter Fatima and four of the Twelve Imams. It was the Shi‘ite practice at
this cemetery to pray for their intercession with God.
10 The Wah
habis, for whom prayer through these intercessors
represented a form of idolatry, had leveled much of this cemetery in 1806,
during an earlier occupation of Medina, but its domed tombs had been rebuilt by
the end of the century. Now the Saudis, in their purifying zeal, again
demolished the domes of al-Baqi‘, a move regarded by Shi‘ites as desecration of
their hallowed shrines.
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The demolition created so profound a
sentiment in Iran, especially in religious circles, that the Iranian government
refused to recognize Ibn Sa‘ud’s rule. Instead, Iran demanded that a general
assembly of Muslims be created to regulate the holy cities, while a Shi‘ite
conference convened in Lucknow, India, called upon all Muslims to use every
possible means to expel Ibn Sa‘ud from the Hijaz.
11
Denial of recognition was combined, in 1927, with a decision
by Iran to forbid the pilgrimage to its nationals, as an act of protest against
the alleged intolerance of the Wahhabis and their destruction of tombs.
12
Still, the ban failed to discourage the most determined pilgrims from Iran, who continued to
arrive via Iraq and Syria. And in a pragmatic step, Ibn Sa‘ud moved to defuse
the extensive Shi‘ite agitation against him by a show of tolerance designed to
win official Iranian recognition. Shi‘ite pilgrims from Arab lands met with
exemplary treatment during the year in which Iran imposed the ban, and Iran’s ulama
soon were demanding the restored right to perform the pilgrimage. In 1928, Iran
lifted the pilgrimage ban, and in 1929 Iran and Ibn Sa‘ud’s kingdom concluded a
treaty of friendship. Article 3 of
the treaty guaranteed that Iran’s pilgrims would enjoy treatment identical to
that of pilgrims from other countries, and that they would not be prevented
from observing their own religious rites.13
Iran’s pilgrims came to enjoy a measure of toleration which
reflected the pragmatism of Ibn Sa‘ud on Shi‘ite matters, an approach which
also guided his policy toward his own Shi‘ite minority in the east of his
kingdom.
14
Ibn Sa‘ud, in both hosting
and ruling over Shi‘ites, now asked only that they avoid public enactment of
distinctly Shi‘ite rituals. A pattern of tolerance thus seemed to have been
established. It was not much tested during the 1930s, when Iran’s own government
imposed a virtual ban on the pilgrimage to Mecca, in order to conserve foreign
exchange.
15
But other Shi‘ites,
especially from India, fulfilled the obligation with no difficulty, although
they often expressed frustration at their inability to pray at graves and sites
which had once been the focus of the Shi‘ite pilgrimage.
16
All the more striking, then, was a serious
recurrence of the Sunni libel of Shi‘ite defilement. In 1943, a Saudi religious
judge ordered an Iranian pilgrim beheaded for allegedly defiling the Great
Mosque with excrement supposedly carried into the mosque in his pilgrim’s
garment. Ibn Sa‘ud remarked to some Americans that “this was the kind of
offense which might be expected of Iranian.” The verdict in local coffee houses
held that “the Iranians always act that way.”
17
The incident, which infuriated religious opinion in Iran, culminated in an
official Iranian protest and a demand for payment of an indemnity. The Iranian
press indulged in a campaign of anti-Wahhabi polemic shriller than anything
published since Ibn Sa‘ud’s conquest of the Mecca. Once again, tales of Wahhabi
barbarism were retold, and the story of the sacking of Karbala was recounted
with anguish and embellishment. The government of Iran imposed another
pilgrimage ban, which it only lifted in 1948, after the dust of controversy had
settled.
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The pilgrimage controversy became dormant again
following the political rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran during the
1960s, which was the outcome of shared apprehension over Egyptian-sponsored
subversion. Theologians on both sides of the divide continued to publish
intolerant polemical attacks and legal opinions directed against the rival
reading of Islam. Yet the doctrinal disagreement was accompanied by a steady
increase in the number of Iranian pilgrims, thanks to the introduction of a
direct air service for pilgrims. The number of Iranian pilgrims rose steadily,
from 12,000 in 1961 to 57,000 in 1972.
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Revolution and Pilgrimage
This influx coincided with the
appearance of an introspective and overtly political genre of Iranian writing
on the pilgrimage. The radical Iranian publicist Ali Shariati, in his book
entitled Hajj, sought deeper meaning in the Meccan pilgrimage in his
quest for a solution to contemporary Islam’s broader philosophical and
political dilemmas. Shariati urged the pilgrims “to study the dangers and
consequences of the superpowers and their agents who have infiltrated Muslim
nations. They should resolve to fight against brainwashing, propaganda,
disunity, heresy, and false religions.”18
In 1971, several Iranians were arrested in Mecca for distributing a message to
Muslim pilgrims from one Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in Najaf, the Shi‘ite
shrine city in Iraq: “At this sacred pilgrimage gathering, the Muslims must
exchange their views concerning the basic problems of Islam and the special
problems of each Muslim country. The people of each country should, in effect,
present a report concerning their own state to the Muslims of the world, and
thus all will come to know what their Muslim brothers are suffering at the
hands of imperialism and its agents.” Khomeini then presented his own scathing
“report” on Iran, describing it as “a military base for Israel, which means, by
extension, for America.”19
After 1971, hardly a year passed during which some Iranians did not distribute
a similar message from Khomeini to Muslim pilgrims. The effort usually met with
Saudi apathy, for the Saudis did not regard this preaching as directed against
themselves. Khomeini worded his annual pilgrimage message in such a way as to
appeal to Iranian pilgrims, and to alert other pilgrims to the “shameful, bloody,
so-called White Revolution” of the Shah. Such propaganda was liable to
complicate Saudi relations with the Shah’s Iran, so Saudi authorities took
measures against the more brazen distributors of Khomeini’s messages. But the
Saudis did not regard these few troublesome Iranians as a serious threat to
their own standing as rulers of Islam’s holiest sanctuaries. Khomeini himself
performed the pilgrimage in 1973, without incident.
The truly radical feature of Shi‘ite doctrine as expounded both by Khomeini and
Shariati was their abrogation of the Shi‘ite principle of discretion (taqiyya)
during the pilgrimage, a discretion which had generally been reciprocated by
Saudi tolerance. Khomeini now argued that a crucial obligation of the Muslim
pilgrim was to “disavow the polytheists,” in an essentially political rite
focused on denunciations of America, Israel, and corrupt Muslim governments. By
urging his
followers to view the pilgrimage as a political rite, he set
Shi‘ites apart from other pilgrims, with serious consequences for the fragile
tolerance which the Saudis had shown toward Shi‘ite pilgrims. The new preaching
upset the delicate balance that preserved the pilgrimage peace, by urging a
line of action that implicitly underlined differences between Shi‘ite pilgrims
and Sunni hosts.
Following the Iranian revolution, Iran
sought to act on the principles elaborated by Khomeini, by appealing directly
to the Muslim pilgrims of other lands through political activity during the
pilgrimage.
20
The process of politicization
was gradual. In 1979, Iran’s pilgrims engaged in only light propagandizing, and
in 1980 Iran organized a much reduced pilgrimage, due to the outbreak of war
with Iraq. But large demonstrations, resulting in violent clashes with Saudi
police, first took place in 1981, when Iranian pilgrims began to chant
political slogans in the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina and the Great Mosque in
Mecca. Saudi security forces acted against the Iranians in both mosques, and a
subsequent clash in the Prophet’s Mosque resulted in the death of an Iranian
pilgrim. In 1982, the Iranian pilgrimage took an even more radical turn, when
Khomeini appointed Hojjatolislam Musavi-Khoiniha as his pilgrimage
representative. Khoiniha was the mentor of the students who had seized the
United States Embassy in Tehran. Saudi police clashed with demonstrators whom
he addressed in both Medina and Mecca. In Mecca he was arrested, and a speech
delivered in Medina after the pilgrimage earned him expulsion as an
“instigator.”
This renewed conflict on the ground intensified the polemical debate over the
pilgrimage. The debate was not a simple repetition of the old libels, if only
because the intellectual climate of contemporary Islam is inhospitable to overt
sectarian polemics. For most Muslims, it is no longer considered politic to
dwell openly on the differences between Sunni and Shi‘ite Islam. Indeed, merely
to cite these differences is regarded by many as part of an imperialist plot to
foment division in Islam. The new sectarianism takes a subtler form: Shi‘ites
profess their unity of purpose with Sunnis, but then declare that a major
expression of Sunnism (in this case, Saudi Wahhabism) is a deviation from
ecumenical Islam. Sunnis declare their acceptance of Shi‘ites as Muslims, but
then declare that a major expression of Shi‘ism (in this case, Iran’s
revolutionary activism) constitutes a deviation from ecumenical Islam.
In this manner, sectarian prejudice is insinuated, even as the unity of Islam is
openly professed. This is precisely how the lines of argument in the new
pilgrimage polemic insinuated the libels of yesteryear--most perfectly in the
brief correspondence between the Saudi King Khalid and Imam Khomeini in October
1981, at a time of violent clashes in Mecca and Medina between Iranian pilgrims
and Saudi police.
21
Khalid compiled a
revealing letter of protest to Khomeini, asking that Khomeini urge his
followers to show restraint but strongly hinting that the Great Mosque had been
defiled by blasphemous Iranian pilgrims. According to Khalid, Iranian pilgrims
in the Great Mosque had performed their ritual circumambulations while chanting
“God is great, Khomeini is great,” and “God is one, Khomeini is one.” There was
no need for Khalid to elaborate on this charge. It was obvious that the
Iranians’ slogans constituted an excessive veneration of their Imam, a form of
blasphemous polytheism. All this had aroused the “dissatisfaction and disgust”
of other pilgrims, wrote Khalid to Khomeini.
In fact, Khalid’s letter distorted well-known Iranian revolutionary slogans. Iranian
pilgrims had actually chanted “God is great, Khomeini is leader.” The Saudis
had confused the Persian word for “leader” (rahbar) with the rhyming
Arabic for “great” (akbar). The pilgrims’ Arabic chant declared that
“God is one, Khomeini is leader.” Here, the Saudis had confused the Arabic for
“one” (wahid) with the rhyming Arabic for “leader” (qa’id). There
was a vast difference between the slogans as actually chanted by the Iranians,
and the inadvertent or deliberate misrepresentations of Khalid. In the actual
slogans, Khomeini is cast as a leader unrivaled in the world, but subordinate
to an almighty God. In the slogans as reported by the Saudis, Khomeini is
placed on one plane with God, a verbal pollution of Islam’s holiest sanctuary.
It was this familiar but disguised charge of Shi‘ite defilement which the
Saudis sought to level at Iran’s pilgrims. The accusation gained credibility
from the formerly widespread Sunni conviction that the Shi‘ites are bound to
pollute the Great Mosque.
In his reply to Khalid, Khomeini
evoked the old Shi‘ite libel, charging the Saudis with failing to respect the
refuge provided by the Great Mosque. “How is it that the Saudi police attack
Muslims with jackboots and weapons, beat them, arrest them, and send them to
prisons from inside the holy mosque, a place which according to the teaching of
God and the text of the Qur’an, is refuge for all, even deviants?” This was a
decidedly Shi‘ite reading of the meaning of the Great Mosque’s sanctity, which
owed a great deal to the concept of refuge (bast) which traditionally
applied to Shi‘ite shrines in Iran. Such shrines were indeed absolutely
inviolable places of refuge, where any kind of malefactor could find asylum.22
Nothing could have
been further from the Wahhabi-Saudi concept of the sanctity of the holy places.
These were and are regarded as sites so sacred that no deviation at all may be
allowed in their precincts. Only from a Shi‘ite perspective did this Saudi concern
for preserving the purity of the Great Mosque appear as blind disrespect. In
1979, when an extreme group of Sunni zealots took over the Great Mosque, the
Saudis acted in good conscience to clear it of “deviants,” relying upon a fatwa
issued by over thirty men of religion who argued that it was permissible to
dislodge the defilers even by force of arms. This decision enjoyed wide Muslim
support beyond Saudi Arabia, and Khomeini’s presentation of the Great Mosque as
a place in which even “deviants” enjoyed absolute immunity could only be
regarded as peculiarly Shi‘ite, for it relied upon a Shi‘ite concept of
inviolable refuge which knows no parallel in Sunni Islam.
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Differing
concepts of sanctity also affected that part of the pilgrimage controversy
played out in Medina. In 1982, Khomeini’s representative to the pilgrimage
chose the cemetery of al-Baqi‘ in Medina as the site for a series of
demonstrations combined with visitation prayers. After the Saudi demolition of
the shrines in the cemetery in 1926, al-Baqi‘ ceased to serve as a place of
organized Shi‘ite visitation. But after Iran’s Islamic revolution, Iranian
pilgrims began to recite prayers outside the high wall which the Saudis had
built to seal off the cemetery. In 1986, in a concession to Iran’s pilgrims,
Saudi authorities allowed them access to the cemetery itself, and Khomeini’s
representative to the pilgrimage formally thanked Saudi King Fahd for
permitting the return of Shi‘ite pilgrims to the venerated site. This obsessive
interest in al-Baqi‘ and other tombs, and the resort to the cemetery as a
rallying point for pilgrims in Medina, reflected an especially Shi‘ite notion
of Medina’s sanctity, and served to evoke past resentment against the Saudis
for having defaced the memory of the Imams.
This heightened
Shi‘ite interest in Medina also owed a great deal to changes in the spiritual
geography of Shi‘ite Isla
m. After the outbreak of the war between Iran and
Iraq, it was no longer possible for Iranians to visit the Shi‘ite shrine cities
in Iraq and the tombs of the Imams in their sacred precincts. For the great
mass of Shi‘ites, the pilgrimage to these sites in Iraq had taken precedence
over the pilgrimage to Mecca and the visitation to Medina. Their
inaccessibility greatly enhanced the significance for Iranian Shi‘ism of the
holy cities of Arabia. By 1988, over one million Iranians had made application
to Iranian authorities to embark on the pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina.
23 As a result, al-Baqi‘ emerged again as a
major Shi‘ite center of pilgrimage, and mass prayer services were conducted
there after Iran’s revolution, not by the Saudi men of religion who manage the
mosques in Mecca and Medina, but by visiting Shi‘ite clerics.
The Pilgrimage Understanding
Such identifiably Shi‘ite themes and
methods of protest might have blinded other pilgrims to the political message
of liberation which Iran wished to convey during the pilgrimage. The fear that
Iran’s message might be dismissed by other Muslims as Shi‘ite dissent was
responsible for some of the ecumenical intonations of Khomeini’s pilgrimage
representatives and other Shi‘ite clerics. Most notably, Khomeini’s
representatives instructed Iran’s pilgrims to pray with all other pilgrims
behind the Sunni prayer leaders in the Great Mosque and the Prophet’s Mosque,
lest they stand out for their Shi‘ism rather than their political activism.
This restraint, matched by a parallel Saudi restraint in dealing with Iran’s
pilgrims, left the impression that the pilgrimage controversy had been defused.
The climate of confrontation dissipated in 1983; although tensions remained
high, only minor incidents marred the pilgrimage peace over the next few years.
By 1986, it seemed that Iran and Saudi Arabia had reached a
compromise permitting Iran to conduct a limited measure of political propaganda
during the pilgrimage. By the informal terms of the pilgrimage understanding,
Khomeini’s pilgrimage representative was permitted to organize two pilgrims’
rallies, the first in Medina and the second in Mecca, in areas removed from the
holy mosques in each city. A number of understandings restricted the form and
content of these demonstrations. Iran’s pilgrims were not to import or display
printed matter and posters of a political nature, and their slogans were to be
directed only against the U.S., the Soviet Union, and Israel. Other Muslim
governments and the host government were not to be criticized. This
understanding allowed Iran’s pilgrims to express their views, but enabled Saudi
authorities to confine all demonstrating to two fixed events.
Yet not all of Iran’s zealots accepted these limitations. In 1986, a group of
Iranian pilgrims who opposed the strategy of moderation in dealing with Saudi
Arabia arrived in the country with a large quantity of high explosives in their
suitcases. Their apparent aim was to destroy the pilgrimage understanding
reached between Iran and Saudi Arabia. The plot failed: Saudi airport
authorities discovered the explosives and arrested over one hundred pilgrims
upon their arrival. The episode embarrassed those Iranian leaders who had
assured Saudi Arabia that the pilgrimage peace would be preserved, and they
dissociated themselves from the plot by their silence while the Saudis detained
the pilgrims for weeks. But the plotters did enjoy the support of one of the
major factions in Iran, which opposed the pursuit of the any opening toward the
Saudis and favored the aggressive export of the revolution. In the pilgrimage
plot of 1986, it became clear that the pilgrimage peace was an unstable one,
affected by the changing balance in Iran’s internal power struggle.
The heightened political tensions of 1987 surrounding the introduction of U.S.
naval forces into the Gulf also threatened the pilgrimage understanding. Saudi
authorities were alarmed by a speech made at the beginning of July by Khoiniha,
Khomeini’s former pilgrimage representative. Khoiniha had presided over the
most turbulent pilgrimage seasons. His replacement as pilgrimage supervisor and
his appointment as prosecutor general in 1985 was probably intended to reduce the
chances of confrontation in Mecca. But he remained a powerful figure in Iran
and a champion of extremists who opposed all limitations on Iran’s pilgrims.
His speech was plainly provocative. This year, he declared, “a mere march or
demonstration will not suffice.” Iran should not simply “gather a certain
number of people who might support the views of the Islamic republic.” Khoiniha
demanded that Saudi Arabia allow Khomeini’s pilgrimage representative to enter
the Great Mosque in Mecca for one night, and there conduct a referendum among
the throngs of pilgrims over the decision of the emir of Kuwait to invite
foreign escorts for Kuwaiti tankers. At the same time, Khomeini’s
representative would explain Iran’s case in the Gulf war. “All we ask is that
the Saudi government not oppose this, nor send its guards to the Great Mosque.
Let us see what happens. We will try it for one year.”24
Saudi authorities now had grounds to
suspect that some of Iran’s pilgrims might attempt a takeover of the Great
Mosque, as a political maneuver to embarrass Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the U.S.
Khoiniha’s statement touched a raw nerve, and immediately elicited a warning
from an unnamed official source in Saudi Arabia. The source noted that Saudi
Arabia supported numerous other occasions for the expression of Muslim opinion
on various matters, even during the pilgrimage. But such consultations in the
Great Mosque would constitute an innovation in Islam, and “anyone who attempts
to innovate in Islam will go to hell.” Saudi Arabia would shoulder its
responsibility for safeguarding the Islamic shrines in Mecca and Medina.25
Khoiniha’s statement
put the Saudi security apparatus on a high state of alert, and lent more
credence to inevitable rumors that the Iranians planned a violent
confrontation. But Khoiniha’s demand did not figure in the negotiations between
the Saudi ministry of pilgrimage affairs and Khomeini’s official pilgrimage
representative, Mehdi Karrubi. As Khomeini’s spokesman, Karrubi asked only that
Iran be allowed to conduct its demonstration in Mecca as in past years. An
Iranian official even covered the route of the planned demonstration with a
Saudi official, and it clearly ended a mile short of the Great Mosque.
But despite this understanding, the Saudi authorities remained deeply suspicious.
On the eve of the Mecca demonstration, they pressured Karrubi to cancel the
march, lest violence break out. Karrubi refused, and declared that “in the
event of disorder and disruption, the responsibility for this will be fully with
the Saudi government.”
26 Two days
before the planned demonstration, the Iranian media published Khomeini’s annual
message to the pilgrims. While longer and more high-strung than the messages of
recent year
s, it did not constitute a major departure from the understanding
regarding the pilgrimage itself. Khomeini included the customary plea to
pilgrims that they “avoid clashes, insults, and disputes,” and warned against
those intent on disruption “who might embark on spontaneous moves.”27
The Understanding Destroyed
The atmosphere in Mecca was charged
with tension on 31 July, the day of the planned demonstration. Many units of
Saudi security forces were in evidence throughout the city and at the Great
Mosque, where the usual Saudi “morality” police were replaced by armed
soldiers. For the first time, guards at the gate subjected entering pilgrims to
full body searches and forbade pilgrims from carrying anything into the Great
Mosque, including sun umbrellas and canteens.
28
These measures apparently reflected a Saudi intelligence estimate that an
attempted Iranian takeover of the Great Mosque constituted a real possibility.
In the afternoon, the Iranian demonstration began in the usual fashion, with
slogans and speeches. The march commenced upon the conclusion of the speeches;
as in the past, it was led by chador-clad women and war invalids. At or
near the end of the planned route, the march came upon a cordon of Saudi riot
police and National Guardsmen who refused to allow the procession to go any
further.
This dangerous situation became explosive in the
wake of two developments. Apparently, some within the crowd of Iranian pilgrims
chose this moment to echo Khoiniha’s provocative demand, and called upon the
marchers to continue to the Great Mosque. At the same time (or perhaps even
earlier), unidentified persons in an adjacent parking garage began to pelt the
Iranian demonstrators with bricks, pieces of concrete, and iron bars. This
exacerbated the situation on the confrontation line between the pilgrims and the
police, and both sides began to exchange blows, the police using truncheons and
electric prods, the demonstrators using sticks, knives, and rocks.
Because Karrubi and the other Iranian officials had not positioned themselves at the
head of the march, they had no control over the conduct of Iran’s pilgrims at
the crucial point of contact with Saudi police. During the ensuing
confrontation, the Saudis backed down temporarily and the crowd surged forward.
According to American intelligence sources, the tide was finally turned by
reinforcements from the National Guard, who fired tear gas shells into the
crowd and then opened fire with pistols and automatic weapons.
29 The Saudis later denied firing on the
demonstrators or even using tear gas. They claimed that the dispersed
demonstrators surged in retreat, trampling one another to death. According to
official Saudi figures, 402 people died in the clash, including 275 Iranian
pilgrims, 85 Saudi police, and 42 pilgrims from other countries. Iran claimed
that 400 Iranian pilgrims died, and that several thousand were injured.
This reconstruction rests upon a selective reading of the contradictory accounts
provided by Iranian and Saudi sources.
30
As no independent investigation will ever be conducted, important details will
remain in doubt. But no evidence has been produced by Saudi Arabia or Iran to
establish that the other side acted deliberately or with premeditation in order
to provoke violence. The available evidence indicates that a group of
undisciplined Iranian pilgrims, acting under the influence of at least one
provocative statement by a leading Iranian official, wished to enter the Great
Mosque as demonstrators. Saudi security authorities, who had been alerted to
this possibility but lacked self-confidence in the face of provocation,
employed deadly force to thwart the Iranian crowd.
While the actual events in Mecca remained shrouded by irreconcilable claims, there could
be no doubt about the immediate effect of the deaths at Mecca in revalidating
hoary prejudices. The accusations which flew in both directions after the
incident had few parallels in their intensity. Saudi Arabia’s interior
minister, Prince Nayif bin Abd al-Aziz, relied upon Sunni prejudice when he
charged that the real objective of the Iranian pilgrims was “to spoil the
pilgrimage, because, as is known, the pilgrimage is done only if the Great
Mosque is entered.” Iranian “sedition” inside the Great Mosque would have made
it impossible for other pilgrims to have carried out the required circumambulations
in the Great Mosque. “The pilgrimage would have been spoilt.”
31 There is no evidence that the Iranian
demonstrators, even those who wished to carry their protest into the Great
Mosque, intended to ruin the rite for other pilgrims. But by his charge Nayif
sought to associate the Iranian demonstrators with the legendary Shi‘ite
“defilers” of the Great Mosque.
Iranian statements pandered
to the belief still held by Shi‘ites that the fanatic Saudis were driven by
their own misguided beliefs to kill innocent Shi‘ite pilgrims. Khomeini
declared that the Saudi rulers, “these vile and ungodly Wahhabis, are like
daggers which have always pierced the heart of the Muslims from the back,” and
announced that Mecca was in the hands of “a band of heretics.”
32 Once more, the Saudis were transformed
into what the speaker of the parliament, Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, called
“Wahhabi hooligans.” Rafsanjani recalled the nineteenth-century Wahhabi
massacres (of Shi‘ites) in Najaf and Karbala, the Wahhabi destruction of
Islamic monuments in Medina (venerated by Shi‘ites), and the Wahhabi burning of
libraries (containing Shi‘ite works). The Wahhabis “will commit any kind of
crime. I ask you to pay more attention to the history of that evil clique so
that you can see what kind of creatures they have been in the course of their
history.”
33 This represented a
deliberate attempt to fuel a present crisis with the memory of past sectarian
hatreds.
Following the Mecca tragedy, both Saudi Arabia and
Iran conducted large-scale campaigns to influence Muslim opinion abroad. The
Saudi government ordered its principal missionary organization, the Muslim
World League, to convene an Islamic conference in Mecca in October 1987. More
than six hundred supporters and clients of Saudi Arabia from 134 countries
attended the conference, which was opened by Saudi King Fahd. As expected, the
conference condemned Iran alone for the Mecca violence: Iran’s government--a
government “accustomed to terrorism and a thirst for Muslim blood”--“solely
bears the responsibility for the outrage in God’s holy mosque.” The conference
endorsed the measures taken by the Saudi authorities “to quell the sedition and
to contain the fires of wickedness.”
34
Iran immediately attacked the conference in Mecca as one more attempt by the
Saudis to “buy the religion of Muslims.”
35
Saudi Shi‘ite opposition sources charged that the Saudis had spent $470 million
on the conference, and that total expenses were liable to reach $700 million.
The conference, far from being Islamic, had a narrowly Sunni, Wahhabi, and
Saudi orientation, said its Iranian crit
ics; it was a conference of men of
religion who served the rulers, not the religion.
36
The following month, Iran convened an
“International Congress on Safeguarding the Sanctity and Security of the Great
Mosque,” under the auspices of the ministry of Islamic guidance and the foreign
ministry. Rafsanjani, in addressing the three hundred participants from 36
countries, called for the “liberation” of Mecca and the establishment of an
“Islamic International” which would govern Mecca as a free city.
37 Ayatollah Husayn Ali Montazeri, at the
time Khomeini’s successor-designate, met with the foreign guests and denounced
the Saudis as “a bunch of English agents from Najd who have no respect either
for the House of God or for the pilgrims who are the guests of God.” Just as
Jerusalem would be liberated from the “claws of usurping Israel,” Mecca and
Medina would be liberated from the “claws of Al Sa‘ud.”
38 A Sunni cleric at the conference apparently took
the analogy
still further, denouncing the Saudis as Jews. An Iranian conferee clarified the
point: Iran did not label the Saudis Jews, but “even if we do not agree that
you are Jews, your deeds are worse than those of the Jews. What you did to
Muslims in the House of God has never been done to Muslims by the Jews.”
39
The insinuation that the Saudis were
Jews--the worst possible libel--echoed an old piece of Shi‘ite bigotry that
attributed Jewish origins to the Saudi ruling family.40 The Tehran resolutions were repeated by Iranian-inspired
seminars on the pilgrimage that subsequently met in Beirut and Lahore. The
Saudis also convened supporting conferences elsewhere, most notably in London,
where Saudi clients declared support for the use of force in quelling Iranian
“sedition.”41
The Three-Year Boycott
After the initial round of
conferences, attention shifted to the next pilgrimage. The Saudis were
reluctant to impose an outright ban on Iran’s pilgrims, lest they open Saudi
Arabia to the charge of denying Muslims the opportunity to fulfill a
fundamental obligation of Islam. But the Saudis clearly sought to translate the
tragedy into a far-reaching revision of the informal understanding that had
come apart in 1987, and that had become a thorn in the side of Saudi security.
First, Saudi officials, citing wider Muslim support for their version of the 1987
tragedy, made it clear that no marches would be allowed again. The
demonstrations which Khomeini had attempted to introduce as part of the
pilgrimage ritual--and which the Saudis had tolerated--would no longer be
allowed.
Second, the Saudis then moved to cut the number of
Iran’s pilgrims. Numbering 150,000 per year, they had come to constitute the
largest national group. This move won full endorsement from the foreign
ministers’ conference of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, meeting in
Amman in March 1988. That gathering placed the blame for the tragedy in Mecca
squarely on the shoulders of Iran’s pilgrims, and voiced support for Saudi
measures to prevent a repetition of the violence. But most important, the
conference supported a Saudi proposal to limit the number of pilgrims by
establishing national quotas for pilgrims, based upon each country’s
population. The ostensible aim was to give Saudi Arabia a three-year interlude
to expand and improve facilities in Mecca. But while these facilities did need
modernization, the most important effect of the planned quota of one thousand
pilgrims per million population would be a drastic cut the number of Iran’s pilgrims,
from 150,000 to 45,000. The Saudis, of course, were fully aware of Khomeini’s
stand that any reduction in the number of Iran’s pilgrims would result in an
Iranian boycott of the pilgrimage.
Finally, to assure such
a boycott, Saudi Arabia chose this moment to sever relations with Iran. Saudi
Arabia had maintained relations with Iran through the confrontation of October
1987, despite the storming of the Saudi legation by a Tehran crowd and the
resulting death of a Saudi diplomat. But in April 1988, Saudi Arabia severed
relations, with the clear purpose of making it impossible for Iranian pilgrims
to secure pilgrims’ visas.
|
As expected, the Iranian
government, with the sanction of a ruling by Khomeini, responded to the Saudi
measures by boycotting the 1988 pilgrimage altogether. As expected, Iran
accused the Saudis of preventing Muslims from fulfilling the fundamental obligation
of pilgrimage. Any Muslim with the means to perform the pilgrimage was entitled
to do so, claimed the Iranians; the Saudi implementation of a quota system
demonstrated their incompetence.
42 In
Khomeini’s message on the first anniversary of the “massacre,” he accused the
“centers of Wahhabism” of “sedition and espionage.” At Mecca in 1987, he said,
“the sword of blasphemy and division, which had been hidden in the hypocritical
cloak of Yazid’s followers and descendants of the Umayyad dynasty, God’s curse
be upon them, had to come out again from the same cloak of Abu Sufyan’s heirs
to destroy and kill.”
43 Whatever his
intention, Khomeini’s resort to this historical analogy constituted a sectarian
allusion--despite his claim, in the very same message, that it was the U.S. and
the Saudis who tried to portray the Mecca events as a sectarian clash. It would
be his last word on the pilgrimage: Khomeini died less than a year later.
The boycott continued in 1989, but even in the absence of Iran, Sunni-Shi‘ite
tensions ran high. During July, two explosions in Mecca killed one pilgrim and
wounded sixteen more. Saudi police speedily arrested over thirty Kuwaiti
Shi‘ites, and in September a Saudi executioner beheaded sixteen of them by
sword in a public square in Mecca. The leader of the plot claimed to have acted
on behalf of Iranians who presented themselves as officials of the Iranian embassy
in Kuwait. The Saudis apparently were not persuaded that these Shi‘ites had
operated on highest Iranian authority, and did not accuse Tehran of involvement
in the blasts. But the broadcasted confessions of the plotters seemed
accusation enough.
44
In April 1990, one hundred and forty deputies of the Iranian parliament issued an
open letter, setting terms for the return of Iran’s pilgrims. The
parliamentarians demanded that the Saudis “apologize for their treachery to the
meek Iranian pilgrims”; that Saudi Arabia pay blood money to the families of
the Iranian pilgrims killed “unlawfully” by Saudi security security forces in
1987; that Saudi Arabia compensate Iranian pilgrims for “assets” seized from
their caravans in the aftermath of that tragedy; that Saudi Arabia accept
150,000 Iranian pilgrims; and that these pilgrims be allowed to “disavow the
polytheists”--that is, hold demonstrations.
45
Saudi Arabia rejected all these demands as so much cheek, and the boycott
continued for a third year. During the pilgrimage itself, A
yatollah Ali Khamene’i, who had succeeded Khomeini as Iran’s “leader” the previous summer,
issued a message to the world’s Muslims condemning the “despotic and traitorous
rulers of the Hijaz” who had closed the door of the House of God on Muslim
believers. “God’s shrine is safe for U.S. advisors and oil company owners, but
unsafe for selfless Muslims,” Khamene’i lamented.
46
An Understanding Renewed?
Contacts toward resolving the
pilgrimage controversy nevertheless continued between Iran and Saudi Arabia as
1990 ended. In September, Saudi foreign minister Sa‘ud al-Faysal met Iranian
foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati in New York to discuss the 1991 pilgrimage.
Publicly, Sa‘ud al-Faysal announced that “we are very eager to see the Muslim
people of Iran travel to Saudi Arabia this year to perform their pilgrimage
rituals.”
47 Velayati expressed
optimism that “our pilgrims will be able to perform the important
religious-political hajj rituals this year.”
48 Privately, Sa‘ud al-Faysal reportedly offered to
accept a
larger number of Iranian pilgrims in 1991. The Saudi minister also proposed
that the Iranians hold their rally but in a “fixed” place, without marching
through the streets of Mecca. At that fixed point, Khamene’i’s annual message
could be read to the pilgrims, just as Khomeini’s message had been read in the
past. The Saudis repeated the offer during the GCC meeting in Qatar in
December, which Iran attended as an observer. There Saudi Arabia reportedly
proposed the figure of 90,000 Iranian pilgrims.
From the autumn of 1990, direct Saudi-Iranian talks took place on the highest diplomatic
level, involving five meetings between Sa‘ud al-Faysal and Velayati. Omani
mediation helped to produce a written agreement, signed by the two foreign
ministers in Muscat in March 1991. The agreement resolved the two outstanding
issues that had divided Saudi Arabia and Iran. First, it set the number of
Iranian pilgrims at 110,000, a figure later raised to 115,000. This was more
than the annual quota of 45,000 which Saudi Arabia had set over a three-year
period after 1987, a measure that produced a total Iranian boycott. Yet it was
also less than the 150,000 Iranian pilgrims who had arrived annually through
1987. Second, Iran would be permitted to conduct one rally in a fixed place in
Mecca, where a message from Khamene’i could be read to assembled pilgrims, as
Khomeini’s message had been read in the past. It was also understood that the
rallied pilgrims would not criticize Muslim governments, although it was understood
that they might chant the usual “Death to America” and “Death to Israel.” The
new agreement included an Iranian commitment to prevent any flow of
demonstrating pilgrims from the rallying point. On this basis, the two
countries renewed diplomatic relations, and the stage was set for the return of
Iran’s pilgrims to Mecca in 1991. Preparations for the pilgrimage went
smoothly, orchestrated this time by a new pilgrimage representative, Muhammad
Muhammadi-Reyshahri, one of Rafsanjani’s own troubleshooters.
|
There was a complication, which emerged after the pilgrimage of 1991 was underway,
involving the choice of a site for Iran’s rally. The Saudis proposed a number
of sites, all of them remote from the heart of Mecca and difficult of access.
The Saudis clearly wished to place as much distance as possible between the
rallied pilgrims and the center of the city. Iran rejected these sites, arguing
that their location made it impossible for the rally to draw pilgrims from
other countries. At the last minute, Saudi authorities relented and allowed the
rally to gather in a square near the headquarters of Iran’s pilgrimage
representative, a site already at a good distance from the Great Mosque.
On the eve of the pilgrimage, Rafsanjani and Reyshahri made several statements
that set a conciliatory tone for the pilgrimage. And at the last minute,
Velayati himself arrived as a pilgrim. During his stay, he had two audiences
with King Fahd, and three meetings with his Saudi counterpart, Sa‘ud al-Faysal.
“Saudi Arabia’s conduct has been proper,” he announced, “and we hope that in
view of good understanding between Iran and Saudi Arabia we will see the
pilgrimage rituals performed more splendidly than ever before in coming years.”
49
After the pilgrimage, the two countries
raised their diplomatic ties to the ambassadorial level. In addition, Saudi
Arabia agreed to receive some three thousand Iranians a week over the next
seven months, to perform the minor (out-of-season) pilgrimage (umra).
There were 300,000 Iranians on the waiting list for this pilgrimage.
In 1992, the pilgrimage also passed uneventfully. Iran’s leadership set the low
key of the pilgrimage: Rafsanjani announced that the political aspect of the
pilgrimage could not be allowed to have a negative effect on “other dimensions
of the pilgrimage,” which were presumably spiritual. In 1991, there had been
“no problem,” and Rafsanjani expressed hope that “excesses and extremes” would
be avoided this year as well.
50 Ahmad
Khomeini, son of the late leader of Iran’s revolution, told departing pilgrims
in a speech at his father’s mausoleum that “disavowing the polytheists is not
tantamount to opposition to the Saudi and similar governments.”
51 Once again Rafsanjani’s stalwart,
Reyshahri, served as Iran’s pilgrimage supervisor, and he closely followed the
conciliatory lead of Iran’s leaders, especially during the annual demonstration
in Mecca. Some 3,500 Iranian pilgrims, with yellow ribbons on their arms,
guided pilgrims to the demonstration site in front of the Iranian pilgrimage
headquarters. Iranian sources put the crowd at 150,000 pilgrims. As agreed, the
pilgrims confined their banners and chants to the familiar “Death to America”
and “Death to Israel,” making no criticism of the Saudis themselves. The Saudi
police and security forces kept a distance of several miles from the
demonstration.
52 There were no
incidents, and Rafsanjani expressed his satisfaction: “Of course, I did not
think that it was ideal, but it was a relatively good pilgrimage.”
53
An End to Demonstrations?
It seemed that Iran and Saudi Arabia
had reached a final understanding on the extent of Iran’s own use of the Meccan
platform. The number of Iranian pilgrims, long a bone of contention, remained
steady at 115,000, by mutual agreement. Reyshahri, who headed Iran’s pilgrims,
once again set a conciliatory tone as the 1993 season approached, reminding
Iranians that “it would be the greatest sin if the dignity of Iranian pilgrims
were to be cast in disrepute.” He therefore called on Iran’s pilgrims to pray
with Sunni brothers in congregational prayer.
54
And Saudi-Iranian political relations were generally on the upswing. Velayati
visited Saudi Arabia as the pilgrimage got underway, and there was even talk of
a visit by King Fahd to Iran and a summit with Rafsanjani. There was no reason
to expect any change in Meccan status quo, which provided for one Iranian rally
in Mecca.55
On 27 May, the Iranians were to have held their annual rally for the “disavowal of
the polytheists.” This was the occasion for the usual chants and banners of
“Death to America” and “Death to Israel,” and the delivery of a message to the
pilgrims from Iran’s leader, Khamene’i. But much to the consternation of the
Iranians, Saudi police threw up roadblocks around the rally site opposite the
headquarters of the Iranian pilgrims, and they turned away pilgrims who arrived
for the rally. Reyshahri protested that this violated the understanding between
the two governments. “It was only due to my recommendation to have
revolutionary patience, and also due to the obedience of the pilgrims, that we
were able to control their feelings, so as to make sure that no incident
occurred.”
56
But the Saudis justified
their action. They had always opposed such “unruly processions interspersed
with cheers and shouting of sensational slogans,” and had warned Reyshahri they
would not be tolerated.
57 Saudi
Arabia reiterated its “categorical rejection of the staging of marches,
gatherings, and demonstrations in general.”
58
Shaykh Abd al-Aziz bin Baz, grey eminence of the Saudi religious establishment,
made a statement against Iran’s “disavowal of polytheists” march in particular,
calling the practice a “groundless heresy” that could have “evil consequences.”59
In a quick shift,
Reyshahri rallied Iran’s pilgrims five days later at their caravan camp in Mina
to hear Khamene’i’s message, which he also had broadcast in Arabic over
loudspeakers.
60 According to the
Iranians, the Saudis quickly dispatched security forces to the site, but they
were caught by surprise and could only encircle the rally. The Saudis claimed
they did not notice any such gathering in the Iranian camp. But back in Mecca,
the Saudis put up a tight security cordon around the Iranian pilgrimage
headquarters once again, preventing pilgrims from entering or leaving.
Reyshahri left Saudi Arabia early, to protest the Saudi action.
61
The Saudis did not
seek a political confrontation with Iran, and immediately after the pilgrimage
resumed their conciliatory tone. But they also made it clear that the Iranian
demonstration in Mecca, even in an attenuated form, violated their monopoly on
the politics of the pilgrimage. Furthermore, Saudi Arabia had moved still
closer to the U.S., and also extended support to the American effort to resolve
the Arab-Israeli conflict. The kingdom’s rulers saw even less reason to
tolerate demonstrations which featured chants of “Death to America!” and “Death
to Israel!” In short, Saudi Arabia sought the first opportunity to restore the
pre-Khomeini status quo ante, and finally acted when it was reasonably
certain that Iran would not launch a counter-campaign of Islamic vilification.
They were right: despite its protest, Iran backed down from confrontation. Even
Ali Akbar Nateq-Nuri, the speaker of Iran’s parliament and a vocal critic of
the Saudi management of Mecca, chose to play down the incident: “We believe
[the Saudi decision] was due to pressure by others from outside, compelling
Saudi Arabia to prevent the rally. But this will not give way to a severance in
our relations. We should daily improve our ties with regional and neighboring
countries, and we should mutually resolve bilateral issues.”
62
In 1994, the Saudis
took still another step back from the prior understanding, by reducing the
numbers of Iran’s pilgrims by half. The Saudis read the situation accurately:
Iran, groaning under a mountain of debt and short of foreign exchange, accepted
the cut with muted protest. In Mecca itself, the Saudis repeated the maneuver
of the previous year. On the eve of the planned Iranian demonstration, battalions
of Saudi police surrounded the headquarters of the Iranian pilgrimage mission.
Water cannons and armored personnel carriers were deployed around the mission;
helicopters flew overhead. Reyshahri again cancelled the rally, opting instead
for “ceremonies” at the Iranian pilgrims’ camp in Mina.
The “disavowal of the polytheists” ceremony in Mecca, having been reduced from a
march to a rally, existed no longer. Yet Iranian political figures responded
with restraint. Both Khamene’i and Rafsanjani criticized Saudi policy but they
employed restrained language. Rafsanjani in particular called for renewed
efforts to reach an understanding. “A hajj that means hajj to a
Shi‘ite can take place,” said Rafsanjani. There was a need to find a formula
“in which both our views and the views of the Saudis are catered for, and
through which the Saudis’ concerns will be alleviated.”
63 As usual, the Iranian press took a harsher tone,
but this did
not resonate in public. The Saudi legation in Tehran requested and received
police protection at the height of the Saudi “siege” of Iran’s headquarters in
Mecca, but at no point did any of Iran’s leaders summon demonstrators into the
streets of Tehran.
Iran clearly had lowered its profile over
the pilgrimage. Saudi Arabia had acted to reduce the impact of Iran’s
pilgrimage, quantitatively and qualitatively; even as Iran protested these
measures, it accepted them. In part, this reflected an Iranian desire to
normalize relations with Saudi Arabia. But Iran’s retreat from sectarian
confrontation may have had an even more profound motive. As the 1990s unfolded,
Iran’s regime had become inwardly preoccupied with its own stability and
survival. One threat to that stability, formerly dormant, was posed by Iran’s
own Sunni minority, who number somewhere between 12 and 18 percent of Iran’s
population. In 1994, the Sunni question suddenly burst upon Tehran in a
dramatic way.
In January, authorities in the Shi‘ite shrine
city of Mashhad demolished a Sunni mosque, ostensibly as part of an urban
renewal project. On 1 February, the populace of Zahedan, capital of the
predominantly Sunni province of Baluchistan, reacted violently in
anti-government riots which left several dead and dozens dead. On 20 June, a
ferocious bomb went off inside the packed prayer hall in the mausoleum of Imam
Reza in Mashhad during Shi‘ite Ashura observances, killing twenty-six
worshippers. Iran accused the Mojahedin-e Khalq, an opposition group, but
widespread speculation attributed the bombing to Sunni militants. The sudden
appearance of violent Sunni protest within Iran suggested that the sectarian
sword cut both ways and that Iran also had sacred shrines of pilgrimage which
could become Sunni-Shi‘ite battlegrounds. The most important such shrine, in
Mashhad, drew at least eight million pilgrims a year--the so-called “pilgrimage
of the poor,” an emotiona
l substitute for the pilgrimage to Mecca.
64 Perhaps this realization contributed to
Iran’s accommodating posture in Mecca: after the domestic violence of 1994,
Iran’s interest lay not in fanning sectarian flames but in quenching them.
65
But as the fifteen
years since Iran’s revolution have demonstrated, the revival of Islam has been
more than a reassertion of Islam against the West. It has incited rival
understandings of Islam against one another. The social and political
earthquake of Islamism has not only opened the ancient fault line between
believers and unbelievers. It has opened the fault line, just as ancient,
between the two oldest traditions of Islam. Their holy places now echo with
bombs and bullets. Indeed, more Muslim blood has been shed during the past
decade in Mecca, Mashhad and Najaf, than in Jerusalem and Hebron. It is the
revival of this clash of Islamic civilizations which may prove to be Islamism’s
most enduring legacy.
Table
Number of Iranian Pilgrims, 1979-1994
(to the nearest 5,000)
___________________________________
1979: 75,000
1980: 10,000
1981: 75,000
1982: 85,000
1983: 100,000
1984: 150,000
1985: 150,000
1986: 150,000
1987: 160,000
1988: 0
1989: 0
1990: 0
1991: 115,000
1992: 120,000
1993: 115,000
1994: 60,000
___________________________________
Notes
1
Khamene’i sermon, Radio Tehran, 6 August 1987, quoted in BBC Summary of World
Broadcasts: The Middle East and Africa (hereafter cited as BBC Summary),
7 August 1987.
2
This study draws on the detailed narrative
of international Islamic politics I have written for the annual Middle East
Contemporary Survey (hereafter cited as MECS). For my
accounts of the pilgrimage, see MECS
6 (1981-82): 284-88, 301-3; 7 (1982-83): 238, 249-51; 8 (1983-84): 175-77; 9
(1984-85): 161-64; 10 (1986): 149-51; 11 (1987): 172-76; 12 (1988): 177-85; 13
(1989): 182-84; 14 (1990): 189-91 (by Reinhard Schulze); 15 (1991): 191-93; 16
(1992):
3
On the doctrinal shift from pilgrimage to
visitation, see Said Amir Arjomand, The Shadow of God and the Hidden Imam
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), pp. 168-170. On Iranian pilgrims
in Mecca, see Suraiya Faroqhi, Pilgrims and Sultans: The Hajj under the
Ottomans, 1517-1683 (London: Tauris, 1994), 134-39.
4
Richard F. Burton, Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to al-Madinah &
Meccah (1893; reprint, New York: Dover, 1964), 2: 168, n. 1; John Lewis
Burckhardt, Travels in Arabia (1829; reprint, London: Frank Cass, 1968),
168, 251-252.
5
Burton, ibid.
6
On these taxes, see H. Kazem Zadeh,
“Relation d’un pèlerinage à la Mecque,” Revue du monde musulman, no. 19
(1912): 159-60. Discriminatory levies continued to be collected from Shi‘ites
until the late 1930s.
7
C. Snouck Hurgronje, Mekka in
the Latter Part of the 19th Century (Leiden: Brill, 1931), 141.
8
Mirzâ Mohammad
Hoseyn Farâhâni, A Shi‘ite Pilgrimage to Mecca, 1885-1886, eds. and
trans. Hafez Farmayan and Elton L. Daniel (Austin: University of Texas Press,
1990), 228-29.
9
Quoted by H. St. J. B. Philby, Arabia
of the Wahhabis (London: Constable, 1928), 67.
10
On the special place of Medina in Shi‘ite Islam, see Dwight M. Donaldson, The
Shi‘ite Religion (London: Luzac, 1933), 142-51. On the cemetery’s history,
see Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2d ed., s.v. “Baki‘ al-Gharkad” (A.J.
Wensinck-[A.S. Bazmee Ansari]). On Shi‘ite worship there in Ottoman times, see
Farâhâni, A Shi‘ite Pilgrimage, 267-69.
11
Oriente
Moderno 6 (1926): 310, 513-14, 610.
12
Oriente
Moderno 7 (1927): 91, 111-12.
13
Text of treaty, Oriente
Moderno 10 (1930): 105-6.
14
The evolution of this
policy is detailed by Jacob Goldberg, “The Shi‘i Minority in Saudi Arabia,” in Shi‘ism
and Social Protest, eds. Juan R.I. Cole and Nikki R. Keddie (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1986), 230-46.
15
The author of the
British pilgrimage report of 1937 wrote of “the well-known reluctance of the
Iranian Government to see good Iranian money spent outside Iran.” A. C. Trott,
“Report on the Pilgrimage of 1937,” PRO, FO371/20840, reproduced in Records
of the Hajj: A Documentary History of the Pilgrimage to Mecca, vol. 7, The
Saudi Period (1935-1951) ([Slough]: Archive Editions, 1993), 194.
16
For examples of such complaints, see the documents reproduced in Records of
the Hajj, vol. 6, The Saudi Period (1926-1935), 415-32.
17
As reported by James S. Moose (Jidda), dispatch of 24 February 1944, National
Archives, Washington, D.C., RG59, 890f. 404/55. For reproductions of the the
British reports, see Records of the Hajj, 7:529-59.
18
Ali Shariati, Hajj (2d ed.; Bedford, Ohio: Free Islamic Literatures,
1978), 109. For more on the book, see Steven R. Benson, “Islam and Social
Change in the Writings of ‘Ali Shari‘ati: His Hajj as a Mystical
Handbook for Revolutionaries,” Muslim World 81 (1991): 9-26.
19
Khomeini’s message, 6 February 1971, in Islam and Revolution: Writings and
Declarations of Imam Khomeini, trans. Hamid Algar (Berkeley: Mizan Press,
1981), 195-99.
20
For a general discussion of this
development, see R. K. Ramazani, Revolutionary Iran: Challenge and Response
in the Middle East (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986),
91-100, 111-12.
21
Khalid-Khomeini correspondence, Al-Nashra al-arabiyya lil-hizb al-jumhuri
al-islami (Tehran), 19 October 1981; and in Sawt al-umma (Tehran),
31 October 1981.
22
Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2d ed.,
s.v. “Bast” (R.M. Savory).
23
Figure given by Mehdi
Karrubi, Tehran Television, 16 June 1988, quoted in Foreign Broadcast
Information Service Daily Report: The Middle East and South Asia (hereafter
cited as FBIS), 21 June 1988. The same need explains Iranian Shi‘ism’s
rediscovery of the mausoleum of Sayyida Zaynab, the Imam Husayn’s sister, near
Damascus. A minor site of Shi‘ite visitation in the past, it has been
transformed into a major shrine, visited by thousands of Shi‘ites from Iran and
Iranian-backed Shi‘ites from the Lebanese Hizbullah. Iran also has invested
large resources in restoration of the still lesser shrine of Sayyida Raqiya,
Husayn’s daughter, near the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. On these sites, see
Biancamaria Scarcia Amoretti, “A proposito della communità imamita
contemporanea di Siria,” Oriente Moderno, n.s., 3 (1984): 193-201.
24
Khoiniha’s speech, Radio Tehran, 2 July 1987, quoted in BBC Summary, 4
July 1987.
25
Saudi Press Agency (hereafter cited as SPA),
3 July 1987, quoted in BBC Summary, 6 July 1987.
26
Radio Tehran, 30 July 1987, quoted in BBC Summary, 1 August 1987.
27
Text of speech, Radio Tehran, 29, 30, 31 July 1987, quoted in BBC Summary,
31 July, 1, 3 August 1987. For a close content analysis of the message, see
Michael Glünz, “Das Manifest der islamischen Revolution: Ayatollah Homeinis
Botschaft an die Mekkapilger des Jahres 1407/1987,” Welt des Islams,
n.s., 33 (1993): 235-55.
28
Fahd al-Qahtani, Majzarat
Makka: Qissat al-madhbaha al-su‘udiyya li'l-hujjaj (London: Al-Safa
lil-nashr wal-tawzi‘, 1988), 27-28.
29
Report on the
assessment of American intelligence sources, New York Times, 6 September
1987.
30
The most detailed eyewitness accounts from a
pro-Iranian perspective include that of the Pakistani Shi‘ite journalist
Mushahid Hussain, which appeared in the Washington Post, 20 August 1
987,
and the several reports collected by Qahtani, Majzarat Makka, 77-107.
Qahtani’s book is an extensive survey of the event and the worldwide reaction
to it. The Saudi director-general of public security, Gen. Abdallah bin Abd
al-Rahman Al Shaykh, provided the most comprehensive Saudi account in a
statement which prefaced a special Saudi documentary film on the incident,
aired on Saudi Television on 20 August 1987.
31
Nayif’s press conference, SPA, 25 August 1987, quoted in BBC Summary, 27 August
1987.
32
Khomeini’s message to Karrubi, Radio Tehran, 3
August 1987, quoted in BBC Summary, 5 August 1987.
33
Rafsanjani’s speech, Radio Tehran, 2 August 1987, quoted in BBC Summary,
4 August 1987.
34
Conference communiqué, SPA, 15 October
1987, quoted in FBIS, 16 October 1987.
35
Al-Ahd (Beirut), 23 October 1987.
36
Al-Thawra al-islamiyya
(London), October 1987.
37
Rafsanjani’s speech, Radio
Tehran, 26 November 1987, quoted in FBIS, 28 November 1987.
38
Montazeri’s speech, Radio Tehran, 27 November 1987, quoted in FBIS, 29
November 1987.
39
Emami-Jamarani’s speech, 29 April 1988,
quoted in FBIS, 2 May 1988.
40
For a Shi‘ite
collection of alleged proofs of the Jewish origins of the Saudis, see Nasir
al-Sa‘id, Tarikh Al Sa‘ud, vol. 1 ([Beirut]: Ittihad sha‘b al-jazira
al-arabiyya, n.d.): 392-403. I am indebted to Prof. Werner Ende for this
reference.
41
Report of conference, Al-Sharq al-awsat
(London), 4 July 1988.
42
Mehdi Karrubi, Tehran Television,
16 June 1988, quoted in FBIS, 21 June 1988.
43
Khomeini’s message, Radio Tehran, 20 July 1988, quoted in FBIS, 21 July
1988. Abu Sufyan was a member of the Prophet Muhammad’s tribe who had
originally opposed Muhammad. His son, Yazid, was responsible for the killing of
the Imam Husayn. Another son, Mu’awiya, founded the Umayyad dynasty.
The family and the dynasty are deemed
usurpers in the Shi‘ite reading of early Islamic history.
44
On the bombing incident, see Reinhard Schulze, “The Forgotten Honor of Islam,” MECS
13 (1989): 182-84.
45
Text of letter, Keyhan
(Tehran), 11 April 1990, quoted in FBIS, 24 April 1990.
46
Khamene’i’s message, Radio Tehran, 28 June 1990, quoted in FBIS, 2 July
1990.
47
Sa‘ud al-Faysal quoted by Radio Tehran, 30
September 1990, quoted by FBIS, 1 October 1990.
48
Velayati quoted by IRNA, 4 October 1990, quoted by FBIS, 4 October 1990.
49
Islamic Republic News Agency (hereafter cited as IRNA), 29 June 1991, quoted in
FBIS, 1 July 1991.
50
Al-Alam (London), 16
May 1992.
51
Khomeini’s speech, Resalat, 6 May 1992,
quoted in FBIS, 1 June 1992.
52
IRNA, 7 June 1992,
quoted in FBIS, 10 June 1992.
53
Rafsanjani’s
speech, Radio Tehran, 12 June 1992, quoted in FBIS, 15 June 1992.
54
Radio Tehran, 10 May 1993, quoted in FBIS, 11 May 1993.
55
Al-Alam, 12 June 1993.
56
Radio Tehran, 27 May 1993,
quoted in FBIS, 28 May 1993.
57
Statement by
“reponsible source,” SPA, 2 June 1993, quoted in FBIS, 3 June 1993.
58
SPA, 29 May 1993, quoted in FBIS, 1 June 1993.
59
SPA, 2 June 1993, quoted in FBIS, 3 June 1993.
60
Khamene’i’s message, Iranian Television, 27 May 1993, quoted in FBIS, 28
May 1993.
61
IRNA, 5 June 1993, quoted in FBIS, 7
June 1993.
62
Nateq-Nuri’s interview, Middle East
Insight, July-August 1993.
63
Rafsanjani’s sermon, Radio
Tehran, 20 May 1994, quoted in FBIS, 23 May 1994.
64
See Nasrine Hakami, Pèlerinage de l’Emâm Rezâ: Étude socio-économiques,
Studia Culturae Islamicae 38 (Tokyo: Institute for the Study of Languages and
Cultures of Asia and Africa, 1989).
65
For the
Sunni-Shi‘ite strife of 1994, see “Sunnite ‘reprisal’ against Shiite sanctuary
in Iran?” Mideast Mirror, 20 June 1994; and “The Coming Sectarian
Conflict in Iran,” Mideast Mirror, 9 September 1994.
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Martin Kramer, "Khomeini's Messengers in Mecca," in his Arab Awakening and Islamic Revival (New Brunswick: Transaction, 1996), pp. 161-87.
This is the last and most detailed version of a series of studies devoted to the subject of Iranian-Saudi and Shiite-Wahhabi conflict in Mecca. Earlier versions: "The Ancient Sunni-Shiite Feud," The New York Times, August 5, 1987; "Behind the Riot in Mecca," Policy Focus, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, no. 5, August 1987; "Tragedy in Mecca," Orbis (Philadelphia), vol. 31, no. 1 (Spring 1988), pp. 231-47; "La Mecque: la controverse du pèlerinage," Maghreb-Machrek (Paris), no. 122 (Oct.-Nov.-Dec. 1988), pp. 38-52; and "Khomeini's Messengers: The Disputed Pilgrimage of Islam," in Religious Radicalism and Politics in the Middle East, eds. E. Sivan and M. Friedman (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1990), pp. 174-97.
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