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CIAO DATE: 11/06
Fall 2003
The Resilience of the Traditional Clergy to the Hardline Challenge in Post-Revolutionary Iran
Ijlal Naqvi
The post-revolutionary period in Iran has seen new challenges to the institution of the clergy that threaten its continued existence in its traditional form. The challenges come mostly from the clerics in government who enforce the official state ideology (the hardliners), and it remains to be seen how much change will occur in the traditional clergy. This paper will argue that the traditional institution of the clergy is resilient enough to survive largely intact thanks to the nature of the legitimacy wielded by a genuine senior ayatollah and the deeply rooted culture of critical discourse in the madrasa (shi'i seminary).
Full Text (PDF, 7 pages, 236 KB)
The Shi'i Perception of Jihad
Assaf Moghadam
The concept of jihad has generated a storm of interest in recent years, particularly in the Western world. While the concept of jihad and its meaning in Islam is often misunderstood, an even deeper lack of knowledge is apparent over how Shi'a Muslims relate to the concept of jihad. The purpose of this study is hence to examine the concept of jihad as it is approached by the Shi'a stream within Islam.
Full Text (PDF, 8 pages, 237 KB)
The Precipitants of the Tehran Hostage Crisis
Roham Alvandi
The Tehran hostage crisis lasted for almost 15 months. It began on November 4, 1979, when Iranian revolutionaries captured the U.S. embassy in Tehran and its staff, holding 52 of them hostage. It ended on January 20, 1981, when the captive Americans departed Iran from Tehran's Mehrabad airport. The television images of Iranian revolutionaries leading blindfolded diplomats down the steps of the U.S. embassy chancery are emblazoned on the minds of an entire generation of Americans and therefore, the hostage crisis continues to cast a shadow over Iranian-American relations.
Full Text (PDF, 6 pages, 177 KB)
Untangling the Complex Web of Islamic Law: Revolutionizing the Sharia
Maliha Masood
When scholars, politicians or lay observers speak of "Islamic law" it is presumed that they are referring to "the sharia." However, as demonstrated in this analysis, there is a subtle, but important, distinction between these two terms. The sharia is the totality of divine categorizations of human acts as laid out in the Quran and the Hadith, constituting issues of both legality and morality.
Full Text (PDF, 7 pages, 191 KB)