On February 18, 1979, six days after the victory of the
Islamic Revolution, Yasser Arafat, Chairman, Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) arrived in Tehran on a sudden and unannounced visit. He was the first
foreign guest who visited Iran to meet Imam Khomeini in Tehran. He congratulated
him and the Iranian nation over the victory of the Islamic Revolution.
Arafat was detested by the King Mohammad Reza Shah, a close
ally of the Zionist occupying Israeli regime. Upon arrival from Damascus at
Mehrabad Airport in Tehran, he told reporters, “Iran and Imam Khomeini showed
that our Umma (Muslims) will never give up. The Iranians broke the chains tied
around the Palestinians. This great revolution of yours is the guarantee of our
victory.”
"Your revolution was like an earthquake that sent
shockwaves across the globe and trembled Israel and imperialism,” the PLO
chairman also said in his interview at Mehrabad Airport.
According to media reports, when Arafat was asked whether
the Palestinian movement felt “stronger” since the Iranian uprising, he replied,
“Definitely, it has changed completely the whole strategy and policy in this
area. It has been turned upside down.”
The oppressed Palestinian nation was just one of the many
Muslim and non-Muslim nations that were inspired by the Islamic Revolution in
Iran. The victory of the Islamic Revolution was a very important, decisive, and
promising factor for the future of the Palestinians' struggle.
The victory of the Islamic Revolution brought lots of joy
among Muslim Palestinians, especially in the occupied territories and among the
people of Lebanon.
Palestinian fighters took to the streets of occupied cities
and refugee camps across the occupied lands and fired salvos of celebratory
gunfire into the sky to express their joy over the Islamic Revolution's
victory.
The
visit was a striking sign of the turn in Iran's foreign policy towards the
Palestinian issue, the New York Times reported about the visit at the time. The
Shah had maintained relations with the usurping Israeli regime and furnished
the regime with about 60 percent of its oil needs, the Times report added.
The Pahlavi regime initially refused to recognize Israel but
after the Shah tightened his grip on power, his regime established overt and
covert ties with the occupying regime. An unofficial Israeli embassy was
operating in Tehran for years to advance the interests of the Zionists in Iran.
Simultaneously with the visit of the Palestinian delegation
in Tehran, a sign that read "Palestine Embassy" was installed at the
top of the front door of that unofficially declared embassy building in
downtown the capital in the presence of Arafat.
The
embassy used to be like an espionage center. Israeli security experts helped in
building the notorious Pahlavi regime’s secret police known as SAVAK. They
contributed much to SAVAK's personnel training. Israeli intelligence
services and SAVAK were in close contact, oppressing the freedom-seeking
movement in Iran before the revolution.
Israeli regime’s high-ranking officials repeatedly visited
Iran to hold meetings with the Shah regime’s authorities, despite sparking
anger among Muslim nations.
Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution led by Imam Khomeini
reversed course in line with Muslim people’s demands and the country severed
all diplomatic and trade ties with the usurping Israeli regime. Even before the
revolution, many Iranians were in Lebanon to help the oppressed of the Shia
community and the Palestinian refugees there who were under aggression by the
Zionist regime in the south of the country.
In the meeting, Imam Khomeini stressed to Arafat that
leftist Arab nationalism and reliance on foreign powers would not direct the
Palestinian struggle toward victory. Instead, the Imam told Palestinians that
only trusting in God Almighty and relying on the holy Quran and Islamic
teachings would show the way forward to achieve the goal of liberation of the
occupied Palestinian lands.
“The Shah too pinned hope on the support from America, the
United Kingdom, China, Israel, etc. But their support was not too strong. Only
support the God bestows is reliable,” Imam Khomeini further stressed.
Imam Khomeini further stressed that the Palestinian issue
was an issue of the entire Islamic world, emphasizing the need for supporting
Palestinians uprising as a religious duty that has to be shouldered by all
Muslim nations, not only in their political struggle but also on the
battlefield and armed struggle with the usurpers of holy Quds and their
backers.
Nearly
a decade after meeting with Imam Khomeini in 1988 amid indifference to the
Palestinians suffering on the part of Arab rulers, Arafat, charmed by the
infeasible two-state solution bid, gave in to pressures and began to negotiate
with the Israeli regime, followed by signing the Oslo Accord in which the PLO
acknowledged the State of Israel and pledged to reject armed struggle. But all
this had a devastating impact on the struggle of Palestinians.
In the years following the Islamic Revolution, the Islamic
Republic of Iran helped different Muslim nations in the region to forge a
powerful alliance of Resistance forces against the occupying regime.
Tehran
also helped in globalizing the Palestinian nation. It was Imam Khomeini who
named the last Friday of the holy month of Ramadan the International Quds Day
during which Muslims across the globe show their solidarity with the
Palestinians.
Unlike Arab nationalism, which suffered humiliating defeats
against the Israeli regime in both the 1967 and the 1973 wars, the Resistance came
out victorious on many battlefields against the usurping regime and its Western
backers.
The Resistance inspired by the Iranian revolution has now
become a global movement and has found supporters among freedom seekers all
around the globe, even among people in Western countries.
Today, Iran is proud of its assisting role in creating a
powerful Resistance movement that has waged a successful battle against the
most barbaric regime in history.
Courtesy: Tehran Times