By Rostam Pourzal
It is said that when a British reporter asked what he thought of
Western
Civilization, anti-colonial campaigner Mahatma Gandhi dismissively
replied, "It
would be a good idea!" Decades later, Iran's enlightened class turned
this
insult around in an attempt to explain its defeat in 1979. While it
blamed
foreign intervention for our nation's ills before the Revolution, the
superficially modernist crowd targeted the "intolerant" oriental
culture of
common people afterwards as the sole cause of Iran's lagging
development. In
the Eurocentric worldview of the native intelligentsia, pious Iranians
who
claimed to have discerned Ayatollah Khomeini's likeness on the moon
epitomized
superstition and opposition to progress on a national scale.
But the dissidents did not have the same reaction last week when the
media
reported similar illusions expressed by some of the Western pilgrims at
the
Pope's funeral. Nor have I heard many of them publicly condemn the
evangelical
circus preceding Terry Schiavo's death in Florida late last month.
While
fanatic "born again" Christians are inching towards imposing their
regressive
Texas Republican Party platform on America, college students in Iran
are taught
that Europe's second birth, the Renaissance, defines life and politics
in
America.
They rarely read about the fanatic "pro-life" millions who in 1996
brought us
Timothy McVeigh and the mass murder of civilians at the Oklahoma City
federal
building. Nor would they believe that the Congressional leaders who
push the
hardest for regime change in Iran - including Congresswoman Ileana
Ross-Lehtinen and Senators Sam Brownback and Rick Santorum - are
fighting tooth
and nail to fuse religion and government in the United Sates.
The late Pope promoted the most backward elements in the Catholic
church
worldwide for over two decades, but the multitudes who adore him are
not
classified as culturally retarded. The televised archaic clothing and
chanting
of the Vatican's cardinals -- not to mention the Church's secretive and
hierarchical decision making, sexual child abuse, and patriarchal
obsession
with chastity, contraception, and "family" - are met with silent
"tolerance" in
Iranian intellectual circles.
A similar nostalgia about everything Western ruled in the Soviet Union.
Wrote
Columbia University historian Eric Foner, who taught in Moscow as the
communist
bloc unraveled in 1990, "But the [utopian] view of the United States is
as one
dimensional as the [negative] one it is supplanting ... I delivered a
talk at the
Institute of World History on blacks and the American Constitution. I
discussed
how the founding fathers had written protections for slavery, such as
the
obligation to return fugitives, into the document; how even free blacks
had
enjoyed few legal rights before the Civil War...Nothing I said would have
seemed
controversial to American historians. But my talk was not, shall we
say,
greeted with enthusiasm... [In Tbilisi, Georgia] a scholar of American
history
chided me for leaving out the 'fact' that much of our racial problem is
caused
by black women who 'have six or seven children and expect white
taxpayers to
support them." When Foner returned four years later, "Russia had been
subjected
to [US-sponsored economic] 'shock therapy,' and among the casualties
were the
utopian dreams I had encountered in 1990"
While I applaud the spirit of critical inquiry that initially gripped
frustrated Westernized Iranians after the Revolution, I find the
ideological
echo chamber that characterizes them today quite narrow and
self-serving. I
yearn for a day when "dissident" will describe Iranians who not only
resist
Iran's rulers, but also dare to re-examine elitist definitions of
"civilization" and other received wisdom.
The irony of it all is that the most enlightened sector in the West,
well aware
of the corruption and brutality of capitalism, has long rejected
simplistic
explanations of "underdevelopment." It is the William Bennetts and Paul
Weyriches of America that blame poverty and crime on character
deficiency and
cultural relativism. This clique's well-financed Reaganite moralizing
against
common folks promotes the war on working class Americans that has more
than
doubled the prison population in the United States since 1980.
The pseudo-scholarship that blames the cultures of entire socioeconomic
classes
and nations for their problems has ancient roots. US strategists
revived it
during the Second World War as studies of the enemy "national
character". It
was put to use again later as former colonies gained independence in
rapid
order and a number of them rejected "free market" economics in favor of
state-directed development. The forerunners of today's neoconservative
network
- intellectuals like Daniel Bell and William F. Buckley and their
social
science counterparts like William Kornhauser and Seymour Martin Lipset
impressed upon the electorate that the popular will was a threat to
democracy.
This was the lesson to learn from the early postwar popularity of
communism
across Europe, they successfully argued with a nod from the US agencies
that
funded their institutes. Philosopher Walter Lippman spoke for the bunch
when he
wrote, "The public must be put in its place... Responsible men [must]
live free
of the trampling and the roar of a bewildered herd."
Conservative think tanks nurtured by corporate interests have used
similar
arguments since the 1960s to condemn the "lifestyles" of African
Americans as
the cause of their "underachievement" as a community. The latest
version of
this mystification, promoted by Francis Fukuyama, attempts to explain
varying
degrees of national development by reference to "social capital"
(formerly
called "political culture"). What all such non-material theories have
in common
is that they conveniently discount inequality and exploitation in
domestic and
international spheres.
You may have noticed that the best publicized reports of human rights
violations in Iran largely highlight the suffering of lawyers,
journalists,
professors and similar middle class professionals. I have read too many
analyses claiming that the struggle for democracy in Iran and
everywhere
depends on such visionaries, who have greater passion for freedom and
endure
worse abuses than the rest. I rarely hear that Iranian peasants and
workers who
confiscated the assets of the old privileged class during the
Revolution did so
because they had experienced much unnecessary deprivation and indignity
before.
Nor are they hailed as progressive dissidents for refusing to let
private
interest trump common good.
All of this makes me skeptical about the agendas of the opposition
against the
current government in Tehran, which is not to say that I favor the
existing
order. It is rather transparent that most Iranians are described as
backward
because they are reluctant to unite with the professional class against
the
current government again as they did against the monarchy in 1978-79. I
note
that few opposition activists acknowledge that the Revolution was
genuine and
progressive before it stalled, and this worries me. When I read any of
the
dozens of books or hundreds of essays in Farsi that define the
traditional
classes as the obstacle to progress, I fear that the opposition's goal
is to
reverse the Revolution rather than to reclaim and complete it.
We are rightly saddened when a women's testimony in an Iranian court of
law
carries less weight than that of a man. But if we similarly consider
our common
fellow countrymen incompetent, what confidence can we have that their
testimony
in court, and their views on public policy, will not be dismissed in
the future
that the sophisticated opposition is promising us? Is it my imagination
or does
the opposition in fact strive to replace the hereditary aristocracy
under the
Shah with a professional gentry?
About the author:
Rostam Pourzal writes regularly about the politics of human rights in Farsi
journals in exile.
... Payvand News - 4/18/05 ... --