Far from being a mere regime change, the Islamic Revolution
represented, for many of its supporters, a profound rupture with the dominant
modern political paradigm. At the heart of this movement was a key idea: Islam
should not be reduced to a purely spiritual or ritual practice but could offer
an alternative model of political, cultural, and social organization,
articulated from its own tradition.
Islamism, understood as the political formulation developed
by Ayatollah Khomeini, according to which Islam must occupy a central place in
the public sphere and in the configuration of power, displays several defining
traits. Among them is the conviction that the West has lost its normative
hegemony; the overcoming of the nation-state as the sole legitimate political
framework; and the need for an Islamic power capable of representing and
defending the umma—the global community of believers—on the international
stage.
In this context, the Islamic Republic of Iran presents
itself as a political actor with autonomous representational capacity,
independent from the dictates of Western powers and articulated through its own
political grammar.
Imam Khomeini understood that the orientalist gaze remained
the dominant prism through which Muslim societies outside the Eurocentric
narrative were interpreted. This outlook assumes that Western ideology—with its
categories, methods, and values—is universal, valid for analyzing and
explaining any reality, even those foreign to its historical and cultural
origins.
Islamism, however, challenges this premise. From this
perspective, the West is not defined as a concrete geographic space but as an
ideology: a thought system that presents itself as neutral while actually
imposing its own epistemic limits when interpreting the non-Western. The
Islamist critique is therefore not only political but also epistemological: it
questions the legitimacy of the conceptual framework used to understand the
Islamic world.
According to Islamists, the Western normative view starts
from the assumption that Islam cannot serve as a valid political tool. From
this standpoint, presenting Islam as a political identity alternative to the
Pahlavi regime would be dismissed as a distraction from the real, deeper causes
of the revolution. Islam, in this narrative, is reduced to a mere
epiphenomenon—a smokescreen without power to transform the political order.
Imam Khomeini’s thought emerged in opposition to
Eurocentrism. The revolution was not only the overthrow of the Pahlavi dynasty
(1925–1979) but also a break with the orientalist framework that portrayed
Muslims as lacking political agency. This opposition manifested in a cultural
transformation aimed at the “de-Westernization” of Iranian society.
The 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran has been subject to many
interpretations, ranging from sociological and theological to geopolitical and
cultural analyses. However, it has rarely been approached as an epistemic event
in the fullest sense, not merely as a regime change or a historical anomaly,
but as a rupture that destabilizes the very frameworks through which politics
has been conceived in modernity.
From this theoretical vantage point, the Islamic Revolution
is neither a theocratic regression nor an exception within the secularization
process but an epistemic break: a radical questioning of the modern political
order founded on theological-Christian sovereignty. What is at stake is not
only the ideological content of a new state but the very configuration of the
political field as constituted by Western thought. In this sense, the
revolution can be interpreted as an attempt to reconfigure the political from a
different place, outside the Western paradigm that reduced the Islamic to the
premodern or irrational.
Islamist historiography views this revolution as the first that
did not follow Western political grammar, making it unpredictable for scholars
and experts. A recurring example is the book Iran: Dictatorship and
Development, written by Fred Halliday just months before the 1979 revolution.
In this work, Halliday attempts to foresee possible scenarios after the fall of
the Pahlavi dynasty, which was already evident. However, among his many
predictions, he never considered the possibility of an Islamic revolution,
instead proposing options such as a nationalist government, socialism, or even
a new monarchy.
The absence of the Islamic revolution from such predictions
allowed Islamists to criticize Western political perspectives, which, they
argue, were incapable of conceiving Islam as a political tool. In other words,
the possibility of using Islamic language to achieve political emancipation
was, and remains, unimaginable within the Western narrative.
Imam Khomeini constructed an autonomous identity with Islam
as its nodal point. According to this interpretation, the founder denied the
universality of Western epistemology while simultaneously challenging the
historical sequence known as “from Plato to NATO.”
The revolution materialized as an Islamic identity embedded
in an alternative genealogy of anti-colonial resistance, with its own grammar
that cannot be expressed in the Western language of national liberation or
Marxism.
Thus, Imam Khomeini, through his political thought, answered
one of the most pressing questions for Islamism: how can Muslims live
politically, as Muslims, in the contemporary world?
Imam Khomeini’s importance lies in his political project,
which aimed—and succeeded, in displacing the West as the normative discourse.
This process was carried out using exclusively the language of the Islamic
tradition, without any reference to political doctrines considered Western,
unlike other Islamic reformists.
Imam Khomeini wrote as if Western grammar did not exist. For
his followers, this irrelevance was fundamental, as it meant the
materialization of an autonomous Muslim political identity. That Imam Khomeini
wrote as if the West did not exist also implies that Islam cannot be reduced to
the category of “religion.”
From this perspective, the idea of “religion” is a product
of the European Enlightenment, a model that has been globally exported.
Accepting the universalization of the category “religion” ignores that it is a
project attempting to present European local history as a universal narrative.
Islamism denounces this imposition of Western epistemic norms over Islamic
traditions.
Religion as a colonial category
The idea that there exists something universal under the
name of “religion” assumes a transhistorical essence that overlooks the
differences among the various projects invoking the figure of God. From the perspective
of the Islamic Republic, speaking of “religion” implies accepting its character
as a private belief, separate from politics, as understood in the West. For
this reason, discourse on religion can only be fully understood in relation to
the narrative of secularism.
Secularism should not be understood simply as the absence or
exclusion of religion from the public sphere, but as a normative project that
establishes its own boundaries. For the Islamic Republic, secularism is neither
natural nor the culmination of a historical process; rather, it is a
disciplinary discourse, a political modality that validates certain political
sensitivities while excluding others by deeming them threats.
The use of religious language is not merely a descriptive
exercise but carries a clear prescriptive intention: the ultimate goal is to
regulate the space of Islam.
Imam Khomeini captures this idea that Islam cannot be
reduced to the colonial category of “religion” when he states:
“If we Muslims did nothing but pray, beg God, and invoke His
name, imperialists and oppressive governments would leave us alone. If we had
said: let us focus all our energies on the call to prayer for 24 hours and
simply pray, or: let them steal everything we have, for God will take care of
it, since there is no power greater than God and we will be rewarded in the
hereafter—then they would not have bothered us.”
Imam Khomeini’s point is that Islam cannot be reduced to a
ritualistic or moralistic matter devoid of political essence. It is precisely
Islam’s political articulation that prevents its dissolution.
The Islamism of the Islamic Republic
One of the fundamental differences expressed by Iranian
Islamism, in contrast to other regional Islamization projects, is that Islam
cannot be reduced to a fixed and limited set of characteristics. This idea is
reflected in several letters that Imam Khomeini addressed to the then-president
and current Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei. In these writings,
Imam Khomeini asserts that the Islamic Republic can modify or even repeal any
concrete manifestation of Islam if necessary to ensure its survival. While some
experts interpret this stance as an expression of Imam Khomeini’s nationalist
thinking, others see it as the affirmation of an Islam that transcends its
historical manifestations and is always projected beyond them.
Another characteristic of Khomeinism is that, although Imam
Khomeini considered himself a follower of Shia Islam, his political practice is
understood as an attempt to bring Sunni and Shia closer together under what
experts call a “post-mazhabi” vision—mazhab or madhhab meaning “legal school”
in Arabic. This search for Islamic unity is key to understanding the Islamic
Republic’s self-definition as a political home for all Muslims, positioning
itself as a power capable of defending the entire Islamic community against
Western aggression.
A final fundamental pillar of Khomeinism is the doctrine of
Wilayat al-faqih, translated as “government of the jurist,” which represents
the most important political vision of this current. Imam Khomeini understood
that the solution to the problems of Iran and the Islamic community in general
is not merely theological but a political challenge requiring concrete
responses in that sphere.
In fact, Imam Khomeini succeeded in creating an Islamic
political identity capable of transcending national and sectarian divisions. His
proposal conceives political agency as the capacity of Muslims to decolonize
themselves and reweave their societies within an Islamic historical tradition.
This decolonization aims at dismantling the global colonial order.
Therefore, for his followers, Imam Khomeini’s importance
lies in his ability to break the identification between “universal” and “the
West.” In other words, thanks to Khomeinism, the West is revealed as just
another particularism within the global political world.
The experiment of the Islamic Revolution offered a unique
opportunity for a mobilized Muslim subjectivity to construct a political order
virtually ex nihilo. This revolution marked a profound rupture with modern
hegemony, the paradigm of Westernesse, and the nation-state and ethnonational
identity-based politics. The idea of the Islamic Republic was grounded in the
mobilization of political subjects not around ethnic, linguistic, or national
categories, but around a shared identity as Muslims. This politicization of
Islam was precisely the discourse that Westernesse—with its strong drive
toward secularization and cultural homogenization—sought to suppress and
confine to the private sphere.
Imam Khomeini, however, was not merely the symbol of the
revolution, but also the most powerful advocate of a political vision of Islam
that rejected the role assigned to it by the machinery of modernity. His figure
represents a deep and radical critique of that machinery. This critique was not
limited to a literal or occasional refutation of Westernesse’s assumptions,
but embodied the projection of a radically different future—one that overflowed
the categories imposed by the hegemonic center of modern power.
Courtesy: Tehran Times
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