{"id":17883,"date":"2020-04-20T14:49:08","date_gmt":"2020-04-20T19:49:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/english.kadivar.com\/?p=17883"},"modified":"2020-04-21T12:33:24","modified_gmt":"2020-04-21T17:33:24","slug":"ayatollah-khomeinis-political-theory-public-interest-url","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/english.kadivar.com\/2020\/04\/20\/ayatollah-khomeinis-political-theory-public-interest-url\/","title":{"rendered":"Ayatollah Khomeini\u2019s Political Theory & Public Interest"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Ayatollah Khomeini\u2019s Political Theory & Public Interest<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n\n
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Ayatollah Khomeini (1902-89) was one of the most influential Muslim leaders in the 20th<\/sup> century and one of the most significant Shi\u2019ite figures in history. Although he was a mystic, philosopher, jurist, theologian, and poet, his major contributions were mainly in two other areas. First, he was a successful politician who led the Iranian revolution of 1979 – one of the most popular revolutions of the 20th<\/sup> century, and ruled his country for a decade. He bolstered the self-confidence of Muslims, reconstructed a dynamic Islamic identity, and enforced cultural and socio-political independence in a postcolonial age. Second, he developed a new idea regarding the role of public interest in political Islam, by which I mean an Islamic state. Hence, in addition to be an important politician and religious ruler, he was an important political theoretician in Shi\u2019ite Islam as well. In this paper I focus on the theoretical contributions of Ayatollah Khomeini, but I will not discuss his practical affairs in contemporary politics.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Although Khomeini\u2019s theory of al-wilayat al-mutlaqah lil-faqih<\/em> (the absolute guardianship of the jurist) was well known, he had experimented with three theories before crafting his ideal political theory. This process is called \u201cthe evolution of his political theory\u201d. These four theories could be attributed to the cities in which he elaborated them: Qom, Najaf, Paris, and Tehran.[1]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The Qom Theory<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

In Kashf al-Asrar <\/em>(Uncovering of the Secrets<\/em>), a book published in 1942 in Qom, the young Khomeini advocated the viewpoints of Shi\u2019ite authorities of Najaf in the time of the Constitutional Movement, such as Mohammad Hosein Gharavi Na\u2019ini (d. 1936). In the Tanbih al-Umah wa Tanzih al-Mellat, <\/em>a seminal book published in 1908, Na\u2019ini argued for the legitimacy of a democratically elected government and parliament with the permission and under the legal supervision of Faqihs<\/em>. The young Khomeini clearly elaborated on issues such as governance, wilayat-i faqih<\/em>, the role of clergies in politics, the expectations of the believers from the governments, the understandings of jurists from the monarchy, constitutional state and so on. Here is the outline of the major points of this book:    <\/p>\n\n\n\n