Nader
Hashemi and Danny Postel, Editors, The
People Reloaded: The Green Movement and the Struggle for
Iran's Future
, Brooklyn, New York: Melville House Publishing,
2011, 440 pp.
Nader Hashemi and Danny Postel have produced one of the
most interesting, informative and timely pieces of work
on Iran that I have seen in some time. Hashemi and Postel,
as co-editors, assembled the works of an impressive collection
of authors to tell the story of the Green Movement of Iran,
i.e., the opposition that arose out of the response to the
2009 Presidential elections. What makes this timely, though,
is less about Iran, ironically, and more about the framework
which is presented that helps one better understand the
Arab democratic uprising that has been unfolding in North
Africa and the Middle East, this despite the fact that the
Iranians are not Arabs. In a word, this book forces the
reader to look beneath the surface and not be swayed by
the superficial analyses so common in mainstream/elite Western
media.
The People Reloaded is a long book, but what makes
it quite interesting is the variety of articles, in content,
style and length. This ranges from very brief pieces that
remind me of blog entries, to longer and more in depth analyses.
As such, this is not a book to rush through; it is one that
you feel you have to complete in one or two sittings. In
fact, I found myself reflecting on various pieces after
a good reading and was not always prepared to move to another
article.
There are several features of this book that make it well
worth the read. The first, of course, is that most of the
authors are Iranian and all of the authors have approached
the subject matter with an important degree of rigorousness
that makes the entire volume authoritative. Hearing Iranian
voices, and particularly ones that are not generally associated
with mainstream Western institutes and media outlets, makes
the book an essential instrument in critically analyzing
both the Iranian capitalist-theocracy and the Iranian opposition
movement.
A second feature is something that will unsettle some North
American readers. Several of the articles contain a quasi-anger
towards many progressives and leftists from the West who
have either thrown their support to the alleged “anti-imperialist”
regime of Iranian President Ahmadinejad or have taken an
agnostic course because the opposition movement is not entirely
a secular movement. This quasi-anger was something that
I encountered several years ago in a different setting,
in Zimbabwe when I addressed a leadership body of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions. Although I was politely received,
when I had concluded my remarks, I was asked by one of the
delegates how was it that many African Americans continued
to support Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe despite the
repression that he had (and continues to) unleashed against
opponents over the years. This quasi-anger or defiance
seemed to draw from a similar source as that which I sensed
in the articles in The People Reloaded: a
self-confidence in the integrity of their respective struggles
and a sense that many of us in the West are terribly unsophisticated
and one dimensional when we view foreign phenomenon.
A third important feature, discussed in several articles,
was the question of non-violence. The authors took the
time to walk the readers through the complicated question
as to why the opposition has relied on non-violence despite
repeated provocations from the Ahmadinejad clique. For
some, the question was a moral or philosophical one. For
others, it was a highly practical one, specifically, that
resorting to violence would not only result in even more
repression but it would also likely result in the regime
using this as something akin to the 1979 takeover of the
US embassy: a means to inspire pro-government, nationalist
consciousness against the opposition.
In the immediate aftermath of the 2009 election there were
several left and progressive commentators in the USA who
challenged the notion that the election had been stolen.
Using various polling numbers they concluded that the election
results were consistent. The authors handle this issue
in some interesting ways. For some, the fact that the results
were so peculiar, including in districts that were assumed
to be Ahmadinejad bases, was enough to raise doubts (e.g.,
where Ahmadinejad won more than 100% of the vote). For
others, their experience with the highly repressive Iranian
capitalist-theocracy was simply enough to call into question
virtually any election. And for others, the election results
were themselves not the key matter; rather the election
was the catalyst for an opposition movement that had been
gaining steam, quietly, for some time.
There are those in the USA and other parts of the West who
have become entranced by Ahmadinejad’s rhetoric. His anti-USA
and anti-Israeli rants inspire some in the Western left
who would rather not spend the time coming to grips with
the complexity of Iranian politics. Instead we are treated
to a variant of knee-jerk anti-imperialism, that is, if
an international leader attacks imperialism generally, or
US policies in particular, there are some progressives who
believe that they should be supported, irrespective of the
actual policies of the particular regime. For these friends,
the facts do not matter if they get in the way of a persuasive
story-line. One is reminded of how many genuine anti-imperialists
in both Asia and the USA were initially fooled by the anti-imperialist/anti-Western
rhetoric of Japanese imperialism in the 1930s and early
1940s.
The People Reloaded compels the reader to dig a bit
deeper. One is introduced to the world of the Iranian opposition
and the often contradictory politics that exist within it.
One almost experiences the excitement of the 2009 protests
with the hundreds of thousands of people who took to the
streets. What also comes through in this book is the strategic
dilemma faced by the opposition in a situation where the
ruling elite of Iran has fractured but not split and this
same regime, along similar lines to the situation in Libya
with the Qaddafi regime, is quite prepared to unleash the
dogs of war against its own people in order to ensure its
own continuity.
The People Reloaded is a book not only to be read,
but to be studied. It provides a means to better understand
the nature of the struggle for justice and democracy in
Iran. Through such an understanding the basis can be laid
for a constructive dialogue between progressive forces in
the Western World and those in the Iranian democratic opposition.
That democratic opposition desperately needs foreign allies
but does not need or want governments—such as that of the
USA or Israel—militarily intervening. The People
Reloaded leaves one with the sense that the Iranian
people will, ultimately, settle accounts with their own
tyrants.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member,
Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies, the immediate past
president ofTransAfrica Forum and co-author of Solidarity
Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward
Social Justice(University of California Press), which examines
the crisis of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.
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