Mehdi Bazargan Explained

Mehdi Bazargan
Order:41st
Office:Prime Minister of Iran
Term Start:4 February 1979[1]
Term End:6 November 1979
Appointer:Ruhollah Khomeini
Predecessor:Shapour Bakhtiar
Successor:Mohammad-Ali Rajai (1980)
Office2:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Acting
Primeminister2:Himself
Term Start2:1 April 1979
Term End2:12 April 1979
Predecessor2:Karim Sanjabi
Successor2:Ebrahim Yazdi
Office3:Member of the Parliament of Iran
Constituency3:Tehran, Rey and Shemiranat
Term Start3:28 May 1980
Term End3:28 May 1984
Majority3:1,447,316 (68%)
Birth Name:Mehdi Bazargan
Birth Date:1 September 1907
Birth Place:Tehran, Sublime State of Persia
Nationality:Iranian
Death Place:Zürich, Switzerland
Resting Place:Qom, Iran
Alma Mater:
Party:
Otherparty:
Spouse:Malak Tabatabai
Children:5, including Abdolali
Signature:Mehdi Bazargan signature.svg
Allegiance:Iran
Serviceyears:1935–1937
Native Name Lang:fa

Mehdi Bazargan (Persian: مهدی بازرگان; 1 September 1907 – 20 January 1995) was an Iranian scholar, academic, long-time pro-democracy activist and head of Iran's interim government.

One of the leading figures of Iranian Revolution of 1979, he was appointed prime minister in February 1979 by Ayatollah Khomeini, making him Iran's first prime minister after the revolution. He resigned his position in November of the same year, in protest at the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Iran and as an acknowledgement of his government's failure in preventing it.

He was the head of the first engineering department of University of Tehran.

Early life and education

Bazargan was born into an Azerbaijani family[5] in Tehran on 1 September 1907.[6] His father, Hajj Abbasqoli Tabrizi (died 1954) was a self-made merchant and a religious activist in bazaar guilds.

Bazargan went to France to receive university education through an Iranian government scholarship during the reign of Reza Shah.[7] He attended Lycée Georges Clemenceau in Nantes and was a classmate of Abdollah Riazi. Bazargan then studied thermodynamics and engineering at the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures (École Centrale Paris).[8] [9] [10]

Following his return to Iran, Bazargan was called up for conscription, and served from 1935 to 1937.[11] According to Houchang Chehabi, Bazargan was firstly tasked with shifting pebbles in a barracks but was then moved to translate technical articles from French.[12]

Career

After his graduation, Bazargan became the head of the first engineering department at Tehran University in the late 1940s. He was a deputy minister under Premier Mohammad Mosaddegh in the 1950s.[13] Bazargan served as the first Iranian head of the National Iranian Oil Company under the administration of Prime Minister Mosaddegh.[14]

Bazargan co-founded the Liberation Movement of Iran in 1961,[13] a party similar in its program to Mossadegh's National Front. Although he accepted the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, as the legitimate head of state, he was jailed several times on political grounds. A strong admirer of Mahatma Gandhi, he praised Mahatma Gandhi's ideas and the Indian independence movement in his writings in jail as an ideal example for Iranians.[15] [16]

Iranian Revolution

On 4 February 1979, Bazargan was appointed prime minister of Iran by Ayatollah Khomeini.[17] [18] He was seen as one of the democratic and liberal figureheads of the revolution who came into conflict with the more radical religious leaders – including Khomeini himself – as the revolution progressed. Although pious, Bazargan initially disputed the name Islamic Republic, wanting an Islamic Democratic Republic.[19] He had also been a supporter of the original (non-theocratic) revolutionary draft constitution, and opposed the Assembly of Experts for Constitution and the constitution they wrote that was eventually adopted as Iran's constitution. Seeing his government's lack of power, in March 1979, he submitted his resignation to Ayatollah Khomeini.[20] Khomeini did not accept his resignation,[20] and in April 1979, he and his cabinet members were reported to have escaped an assassination attempt.[21]

Bazargan resigned, along with his cabinet, on 4 November 1979, following the taking of hostages at the U.S. Embassy.[22] [23] His resignation was considered a protest against the hostage-taking and a recognition of his government's inability to free the hostages, but it was also clear that his hopes for liberal democracy and an accommodation with the West would not prevail.

Bazargan continued in Iranian politics as a member of the first Parliament (Majles) of the newly formed Islamic Republic. He openly opposed Iran's cultural revolution and continued to advocate civil rule and democracy. In November 1982, he expressed his frustration with the direction the Islamic Revolution had taken in an open letter to the then speaker of parliament Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

The government has created an atmosphere of terror, fear, revenge and national disintegration. ... What has the ruling elite done in nearly four years, besides bringing death and destruction, packing the prisons and the cemeteries in every city, creating long queues, shortages, high prices, unemployment, poverty, homeless people, repetitious slogans and a dark future?[24]

His term as a member of parliament lasted until 1984. During his term, he served as a lawmaker of the Iran Freedom Movement, which he had founded in 1961, and which was abolished in 1990. In 1985, the Council of Guardians denied Bazargan's petition to run for president.

Views

Bazargan is a respected figure within the ranks of modern Muslim thinkers, known as a representative of liberal-democratic Islamic thought[25] and a thinker who emphasized the necessity of constitutional and democratic policies.[26] In the immediate aftermath of the revolution Bazargan led a faction that opposed the Revolutionary Council dominated by the Islamic Republican Party and personalities such as Ayatollah Mohammad Hossein Beheshti.[27] He opposed the continuation of the Iran–Iraq War and the involvement of Islamists in all aspects of politics, economy and society. Consequently, he faced harassment from militants and young revolutionaries within Iran.[28]

Attacks

During the Pahlavi era, Bazargan's house in Tehran was bombed on 8 April 1978.[29] The underground committee for revenge, a reputed state-financed organization, proclaimed the responsibility of the bombing.[29]

Laws of social evolution

Bazargan is known for some of the earliest work in human thermodynamics, as found in his 1946 chapter "A Physiological Analysis of Human Thermodynamics" and his 1956 book Love and Worship: Human Thermodynamics, the latter of which being written while in prison, in which he attempted to show that religion and worship are a byproduct of evolution, as explained in English naturalist Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species (1859), and that the true laws of society are based on the laws of thermodynamics.

Death

Bazargan died of a heart attack on 20 January 1995 in Switzerland.[30] He died at a hospital in Zürich after collapsing at the airport.[30] He was travelling to the United States for heart surgery.[30]

Personal life

Bazargan married Malak Tabatabai in 1939.[31] They had five children, two sons and three daughters.[31]

See also

Notes and References

  1. The office was disputed between him and Shapour Bakhtiar from 4 to 11 February 1979.
  2. Book: Abrahamian, Ervand. 1982. Iran Between Two Revolutions. 0-691-10134-5. Princeton University Press. 190–191. registration.
  3. Book: Bahman Bakhtiari. Parliamentary Politics in Revolutionary Iran: The Institutionalization of Factional Politics. University Press of Florida. 69. 1996. 0813014611.
  4. Book: Houchang. Chehabi. Between States: Interim Governments in Democratic Transitions. A Knife Without a Blade. 1995. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-48498-5. 132.
  5. The Rising Tide of Cultural Pluralism: The Nation-State at Bay?, Crawford Young, p. 127, 1993
  6. http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/01/090130_ir_bazargan.shtml Biography: Mehdi Bazargan
  7. Vakili Zad. Cyrus. Organization, Leadership and Revolution: Religiously-Oriented Opposition in the Iranian Revolution of 1978–1979. Conflict Quarterly. Spring 1990. 5–25. 13 February 2013.
  8. News: If I Confess.... Sahimi. Muhammad. 6 August 2009. Tehran Bureau via PBS. 18 October 2012.
  9. Book: Boroujerdi, Mehrzad. Iranian Intellectuals and the West: The Tormented Triumph of Nativism. Syracuse University Press. 1996. 190. 9780815604334. 18 October 2012.
  10. Encyclopedia: Mehdi Bazargan. Encyclopædia Britannica. 18 October 2012.
  11. Book: Dabashi, Hamid. Theology of Discontent: The Ideological Foundation of the Islamic Revolution in Iran. Transaction Publishers. 2006. 1-4128-0516-3. 327.
  12. PhD Dissertation. Chehabi. Houchang Esfandiar. 1986. Modernist Shi'ism and Politics: The Liberation Movement of Iran. Yale University. I/II. B0007CAVDC. 204.
  13. Web site: Iran's Political Elite. United States Institute of Peace. 11 October 2010 . 28 July 2013.
  14. Book: Kinzer. Stephen. All the Shah's men: an American coup and the roots of Middle East terror. 2003. John Wiley & Sons. Hoboken, N.J.. 0471265179. 93–94. registration.
  15. Book: Reframing the Implications of Knowledge of History, Philosophy and Socio-political Science in the Prospect of Democratisation in Iran. 222. Griffith University.
  16. Book: Dabashi, H. . Shi'ism: A Religion of Protest . Harvard University Press . 2012 . 978-0-674-05875-0 . 272.
  17. Book: Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World. Richard C.. Martin. Macmillan Reference USA. 2003. 1. 106. 9780028656045.
  18. Web site: Nikou. Semira N.. Timeline of Iran's Political Events. United States Institute of Peace. 27 July 2013.
  19. Book: Abrahamian, Ervand. History of Modern Iran . Cambridge University Press. 2008. 9780521821391.
  20. News: Bazargan talked out of resigning. 9 November 2012. The Palm Beach Post. 10 March 1979. Tehran.
  21. News: Reports of Attack on Prime Minister Set Tehran on Edge. Branigin. William. 25 April 1979. The Washington Post. 2 November 2019.
  22. News: Godsel. Geoffrey. Bazargan resignation increases Iran risks to American hostages. 9 November 2012. The Deseret News. 9 November 1979.
  23. Book: Rakel, Eva Patricia. The Iranian Political elite, state and society relations, and foreign relations since the Islamic revolution. 2008. University of Amsterdam.
  24. News: Khomenin's grip appears at its tightest. The New York Times. 21 November 1982.
  25. Islamic Forces of the Iranian Revolution: A Critique of Cultural Essentialism. Mojtaba. Mahdavi. Iran Analysis Quarterly. 2. 2. 2004. 22 July 2007. 14 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210914113149/http://web.mit.edu/ISG/iaqfall04mahdavi.htm. dead.
  26. 195568. Constitutionalism and Democracy in the Religious Ideology of Mehdi Bazargan. Saeed. Barzin. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 21. 1. 1994. 85–101. 10.1080/13530199408705593.
  27. Behrooz. Maziar. Factionalism in Iran under Khomeini. Middle Eastern Studies. October 1994. 27. 4. 597–614. 4283464. 10.1080/00263209108700879.
  28. Web site: Mass trial of opposition group in Iran. Justus. Leicht. World Socialist Website. 20 November 2001.
  29. Nikazmerad. Nicholas M.. A Chronological Survey of the Iranian Revolution. Iranian Studies. 1980. 13. 1/4. 327–368. 4310346. 10.1080/00210868008701575.
  30. News: Mehdi Bazargan, Former Iran Premier, Dies. 9 November 2012. The New York Times. 21 January 1995.
  31. News: Barzin. Saeed. Mehdi Bazargan. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220512/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituaries-mehdi-bazargan-1568973.html . 12 May 2022 . subscription . live. 22 August 2013. The Guardian. 21 January 1995.