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REVIEW
:
Masoud Banisadr, Masoud: Memoirs of an
Iranian Rebel (London: Saqi Books, 2004).
-Reviewed by Arang Keshavarzian
The Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO),
or the People's Combatants Organization, was established in 1965 as an
armed, underground group opposed to the Pahlavi regime and seeking to
establish a "monotheistic classless society." Fusing aspects of
Marxism-Leninism and political Islam, the MKO played an important role
in mobilizing urban, educated Iranians during the Islamic Revolution,
yet quickly fell out with Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini and his inner circle in
the post-revolutionary period. Driven out of Iran, Masoud Rajavi and
the Central Committee moved the MKO's headquarters to Western Europe and
then after 1986 to Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Aside from its official
history, little has been written in English about the inner workings of
this highly secretive group.
The memoir of Masoud Banisadr, until 1996
a US and European representative of the National Council for Resistance
(NCR), the MKO's nominally independent political wing, helps present a
picture of the organization as it functioned from the late 1970s.
Masoud is especially timely, since the MKO, though deemed a
"terrorist organization" by the State Department and several European
governments, has been identified by neo-conservatives Daniel Pipes and
Patrick Clawson as a candidate to bring "the tide of freedom" to Iran.
The book seriously challenges such assumptions. In fact, Banisadr's
detailed life story corroborates a recent Human Rights Watch report,
which describes the MKO's systematic abuse and torture of members who
challenge the Central Committee or seek to defect.
Banisadr, a cousin of the first popularly
elected president of the Islamic Republic, and his wife were
postgraduate students in Britain during the 1979 revolution. They became
involved with the MKO and its affiliates after the fall of the Shah. A
self-described "social democrat" at the time of the revolution, Banisadr
was attracted to an ideology that "seemed indistinguishable from [Ali]
Shariati's," the thinker he had read and admired while still in Iran.
Interestingly, he acknowledges that many MKO supporters did not "know
much about the Mojahedin ideology, especially as it differed from that
of other Muslims and Marxists." For him, "it was enough to know that
they supported democracy, independence and progress."
At almost 500 pages, Masoud is a
meticulous, but often meandering and disjointed, book. Yet, for the
patient reader, it is crammed with poignant details of how the MKO has
maintained organizational unity despite external hostility and the many
unsavory practices described by Banisadr. He tells us how the various
"bases" scattered across Europe created a combination of complex, opaque
hierarchy and communal living arrangements, how songs and military
drills were used as rituals to develop a sense of solidarity among
middle-class college graduates, and how in order to raise funds the MKO
established businesses, such as a stand that "introduced the joys of
kebabs" to Durham.
But what will receive the most attention
are the disturbing psychological techniques employed to force members
to relinquish all sense of individual identity, to monitor each other
and to disavow feelings for all people other than the married couple who
make up the ideological and spiritual leadership of the MKO, Masoud and
Maryam Rajavi. From the outset, the MKO encouraged members to distance
themselves from their families, unless they could support the cause
monetarily or through activities in Iran. The detachment from greater
society, however, reached new levels after 1985 when the Rajavis
announced various stages of the "ideological revolution," whereby the
MKO sought to reposition itself against the more consolidated regime in
Iran. This "revolution" was initiated by the "marriage of the century,"
in which Rajavi wed Maryam Azodanlu, who had been married to another
leading member until shortly beforehand. All MKO members were expected
to go through their own "ideological revolutions" in order to become
true Mojahedin and demonstrate their loyalty. This was done at regular
group confessionals ("cooking pots") in which Mojahedin would admonish
themselves and each other, as well as through writing reports on one's
weaknesses, burning "bourgeois" luxury items, limiting and even ending
relations between the sexes, and divorcing one's spouse to prevent
"contradictions." The latter step was said to remove the main "buffer"
preventing true understanding of the revolution, embodied in "the
ideological mother" Maryam Rajavi, the only bridge to her husband. The
meetings, taped sermons by the Rajavis and limits on outside sources of
information created what Banisadr calls the "mystical efficacy of
drip-fed propaganda."
This politico-theological apparatus
surely helped to create some devoted followers, as demonstrated when
several Mojahedin set themselves on fire when France briefly arrested
Maryam Rajavi in 2003. Yet Banisadr describes how this psychologically
abusive atmosphere, combined with growing doubts about the MKO's
military capability and political skill, led many other members to
question the leadership and eventually quit. Banisadr's suggestions and
criticisms were met with indifference and public personal condemnation,
so much so that he began to doubt his own character. Unlike others who
ended up attempting suicide or in Abu Ghraib prison for their
criticisms, Banisadr was able to leave with relative ease, because he
spent much of his time abroad and still had an extended family,
including his ex-wife, living in Britain.
Masoud
does not fully explain why Banisadr
joined the MKO, as opposed to another political party, or why he left
when he did. Nor does it offer an alternative politics to the one
offered by the MKO. Like many autobiographies, it is too self-reflective
to take these analytical steps or challenge the teleology of the
narrative. Instead, Banisadr paints a picture of an organization that,
over time, corrupted its members' idealistic vigor and organizing
acumen into a means for self-abnegation with the only relationship of
any significance being that between the individual member and the
two-headed Rajavi beloved. After reading Masoud, it is difficult
to imagine, as Pipes and Clawson apparently do, that
the MKO will be able to mobilize its
small, psychologically fragile membership or recruit more Iranians in
order to overthrow the Islamic Republic, let alone establish a
transparent political regime and foster a pluralistic society. .
MIDDLE EAST
REPORT 237 · WINTER 2005 |