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Islam in Iran

The Muslim conquest of Persia (633–654 CE) led to the end of the Sasanian Empire and triggered the decline of Zoroastrianism among the Iranian peoples due to large-scale persecution by Arab Muslims under the newly-arrived Rashidun Caliphate. Since its establishment after the 7th-century conquest, Islam has remained the official religion of Iran (also known as "Persia") except for during a short period after the Mongol invasions and subsequent establishment of the Ilkhanate in the 13th century. The 1979 Islamic Revolution brought an end to the historic Persian monarchy, after which Iran emerged as an Islamic republic.

Islam in Iran (2014)[1]

  Shia Islam (90%)
  Sunni Islam (10%)

Before the Muslim conquest, mainland Iranians primarily adhered to the Iranian religion of Zoroastrianism; there were also large and thriving Jewish and Christian communities, especially in the territories of northwestern, western, and southern Iran—mainly Caucasian Albania, Asoristan, Persian Armenia, and Caucasian Iberia. A significant number of Iranian peoples also adhered to Buddhism in what was then eastern Iran, such as the regions of Bactria and Sogdia. Following the Muslim conquest, there was a slow but steady movement of the population toward Islam, despite notable resistance. When Islam was introduced to Iranians, the nobility and city-dwellers were among the first to convert; Islam spread more slowly among the peasantry and the dehqans, or land-owning magnates. By the 10th century, the majority of Persians had become Muslims. However, the achievements of the previous Persian civilizations were not lost, but were to a great extent absorbed by the new Islamic polities.

According to the Islamic Republic's official survey, almost all of Iran's 82,000,000 people[2] are Muslims, with 90 percent adhering to Shia Islam, and a majority of that Shia populace following the Twelver branch. Another 10 percent adhere to Sunni Islam, most of them being Kurds, Achomis, Turkmens and Baloch, living in the northwest, northeast, south and southeast, respectively.[3] A 2020 survey by the World Values Survey found that 96.6 percent of Iranians believe in Islam.[4] However, according to another 2020 online survey by the GAMAAN, which provided greater anonymity, there has been a sharp decline in religiosity in Iran, and only 40 percent of Iranians who took part of the online survey identified as Muslims.[5][6][7] Something The Wall Street Journal called a "crisis of faith".[8]

Islam in Iran can be categorised into two periods: Sunni Islam as a majority from the 7th century to the 15th century, and Shia Islam as a majority from the 16th century onwards.[9][10] The Safavids made Shia Islam the official state religion in the early-16th century and aggressively proselytized the faith by forced conversion.[11][12][13] It is believed that by the mid-17th century most people in Iran, Iraq and the territory of the contemporary neighbouring Republic of Azerbaijan had become Shia from Sunni,[14] an affiliation that has continued. Over the following centuries, with the state-fostered rise of an Iran-based Shia clergy, a synthesis was formed between Iranian culture and Shia Islam that marked each indelibly with the tincture of the other.

History

Islamic conquest of Iran

 
Stages of Islamic conquest
  Expansion under Muhammad, 622-632
  Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate, 632-661
  Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate, 661-750

Muslims conquered Iran in the time of Umar (637) and conquered it after several great battles. Yazdegerd III fled from one district to another Merv in 651.[15] By 674, Muslims had conquered Greater Khorasan (which included modern Iranian Khorasan province and modern Afghanistan, Transoxania).

As Bernard Lewis has quoted[16]

"These events have been variously seen in Iran: by some as a blessing, the advent of the true faith, the end of the age of ignorance and heathenism; by others as a humiliating national defeat, the conquest and subjugation of the country by foreign invaders. Both perceptions are of course valid, depending on one's angle of vision."

Under Umar and his immediate successors, the Arab conquerors attempted to maintain their political and cultural cohesion despite the attractions of the civilizations they had conquered. The Arabs were to settle in the garrison towns rather than on scattered estates. The new non-Muslim subjects, or dhimmi, were to pay a special tax, the jizya or poll tax, which was calculated per individual at varying rates for able bodied men of military age.[17]

Iranians were among the very earliest converts to Islam, and their conversion in significant numbers began as soon as the Arab armies reached and overran the Persian plateau. Despite some resistance from elements of the Zoroastrian clergy and other ancient religions, the anti-Islamic policies of later conquerors like the Il-khanids, the impact of the Christian and secular West in modern times, and the attraction of new religious movements like Babism and the Baháʼí Faith (qq.v.), the vast majority of Iranians became and have remained Muslims. Today perhaps 98 percent of ethnic Iranians, including the population of Persia, are at least nominal Muslims. For such a fundamental, pervasive, and enduring cultural transformation, the phenomenon of Iranian conversions to Islam has received remarkably little scholarly attention.[18]

Recent research has established a general chronological framework for the process of conversion of Iranians to Islam. From a study of the probable dates of individual conversions based on genealogies in biographical dictionaries, Richard Bulliet has suggested that there was gradual and limited conversion of Persians down to the end of the Umayyad period (132/750), followed by a rapid increase in the number of conversions after the ʿAbbasid revolution, so that by the time when regional dynasties had been established in the east (ca. 338/950) 80 percent or more of Iranians had become Muslims. The data on which Bulliet's study was based limited the validity of this paradigm to generalizations about full, formal conversions in an urban environment. The situation in rural areas and individual regions may have been quite different, but the overall pattern is consistent with what can be deduced from traditional historical sources. Although in some areas, for example, Shiraz at the time of Moqaddasi's visit in about 375/985 (p. 429), there may still have been strong non-Muslim elements, it is reasonable to suppose that the Persian milieu as a whole became predominantly Islamic within the period of time suggested by Bulliet's research.[19]

Islamization of Iran

Following the Abbasid revolution of 749–51, in which Iranian converts played a major role, the Caliphate's center of gravity moved to Mesopotamia and underwent significant Iranian influences.[20] Accordingly, the Muslim population of Iran rose from approx. 40% in the mid 9th century to close to 100% by the end of 11th century.[21] Islam was readily accepted by Zoroastrians who were employed in industrial and artisan positions because, according to Zoroastrian dogma, such occupations that involved defiling fire made them impure.[22] Moreover, Muslim missionaries did not encounter difficulty in explaining Islamic tenets to Zoroastrians, as there were many similarities between the faiths. According to Thomas Walker Arnold, for the Persian, he would meet Ahura Mazda and Ahriman under the names of Allah and Iblis.[22] Muslim leaders in their effort to win converts encouraged attendance at Muslim prayer, and allowed the Quran to be recited in Persian instead of Arabic so that it would be intelligible to all.[22] The first complete translation of the Qur'an into Persian occurred during the reign of Samanids in the 9th century. Seyyed Hossein Nasr suggests that the rapid increase in conversion was aided by the Persian nationality of the rulers.[21][23]

According to Bernard Lewis:

"Iran was indeed Islamized, but it was not Arabized. Persians remained Persians. And after an interval of silence, Iran reemerged as a separate, different and distinctive element within Islam, eventually adding a new element even to Islam itself. Culturally, politically, and most remarkable of all even religiously, the Iranian contribution to this new Islamic civilization is of immense importance. The work of Iranians can be seen in every field of cultural endeavor, including Arabic poetry, to which poets of Iranian origin composing their poems in Arabic made a very significant contribution. In a sense, Iranian Islam is a second advent of Islam itself, a new Islam sometimes referred to as Islam-i Ajam. It was this Persian Islam, rather than the original Arab Islam, that was brought to new areas and new peoples: to the Turks, first in Central Asia and then in the Middle East in the country which came to be called Turkey, and India. The Ottoman Turks brought a form of Iranian civilization to the walls of Vienna..."[24]

Iran and the Islamic culture and civilization

 
Photo taken from medieval manuscript by Qotbeddin Shirazi (1236–1311), a Persian Astronomer. The image depicts an epicyclic planetary model.

The Islamization of Iran was to yield deep transformations within the cultural, scientific, and political structure of Iran's society: The blossoming of Persian literature, philosophy, medicine and art became major elements of the newly forming Muslim civilization. Inheriting a heritage of thousands of years of civilization, and being at the "crossroads of the major cultural highways",[25] contributed to Persia emerging as what culminated into the "Islamic Golden Age". During this period, hundreds of scholars and scientists vastly contributed to technology, science and medicine, later influencing the rise of European science during the Renaissance.[26]

The most important scholars of almost all of the Islamic sects and schools of thought were Persian or live in Iran including most notable and reliable Hadith collectors of Shia and Sunni like Shaikh Saduq, Shaikh Kulainy, Imam Bukhari, Imam Muslim and Hakim al-Nishaburi, the greatest theologians of Shia and Sunni like Shaykh Tusi, Imam Ghazali, Imam Fakhr al-Razi and Al-Zamakhshari, the greatest physicians, astronomers, logicians, mathematicians, metaphysicians, philosophers and scientists like Al-Farabi, Avicenna, and Nasīr al-Dīn al-Tūsī, the greatest Shaykh of Sufism like Rumi, Abdul-Qadir Gilani.

Ibn Khaldun narrates in his Muqaddimah:[27]

It is a remarkable fact that, with few exceptions, most Muslim scholars… in the intellectual sciences have been non-Arabs, thus the founders of grammar were Sibawaih and after him, al-Farsi and Az-Zajjaj. All of them were of Persian descent... they invented rules of (Arabic) grammar. Great jurists were Persians. Only the Persians engaged in the task of preserving knowledge and writing systematic scholarly works. Thus the truth of the statement of the prophet (Muhammad) becomes apparent, "If learning were suspended in the highest parts of heaven the Persians would attain it"… The intellectual sciences were also the preserve of the Persians, left alone by the Arabs, who did not cultivate them… as was the case with all crafts… This situation continued in the cities as long as the Persians and Persian countries, Iraq, Khorasan and Transoxiana (modern Central Asia), retained their sedentary culture.

Shu'ubiyya movement

In the 9th and 10th centuries, non-Arab subjects of the Ummah, especially Persians created a movement called Shu'ubiyya in response to the privileged status of Arabs. This movement led to resurgence of Persian national identity.[28] Although Persians adopted Islam, over the centuries they worked to protect and revive their distinctive language and culture, a process known as Persianization. Arabs and Turks also participated in this attempt.[29][30][31]

As the power of the Abbasid caliphs diminished, a series of dynasties rose in various parts of Iran, some with considerable influence and power. Among the most important of these overlapping dynasties were the Tahirids in Khorasan (820-72); the Saffarids in Sistan (867-903); and the Samanids (875-1005), originally at Bokhara. The Samanids eventually ruled an area from central Iran to Pakistan.[32] By the early 10th century, the Abbasids almost lost control to the growing Persian faction known as the Buwayhid dynasty (934-1055). Since much of the Abbasid administration had been Persian anyway, the Buwayhid, who were Zaidi Shia, were quietly able to assume real power in Baghdad.

The Samanid dynasty was the first fully native dynasty to rule Iran since the Muslim conquest, and led the revival of Persian culture. The first important Persian poet after the arrival of Islam, Rudaki, was born during this era and was praised by Samanid kings. The Samanids also revived many ancient Persian festivals. Their successor, the Ghaznawids, who were of non-Iranian Turkic origin, also became instrumental in the revival of Persian.[33]

Sunni Sultanates

In 962 a Turkish governor of the Samanids, Alptigin, conquered Ghazna (in present-day Afghanistan) and established a dynasty, the Ghaznavids, that lasted to 1186.[32] Later, the Seljuks, who like the Ghaznavids were Turks, slowly conquered Iran over the course of the 11th century. Their leader, Tughril Beg, turned his warriors against the Ghaznavids in Khorasan. He moved south and then west, conquering but not wasting the cities in his path. In 1055 the caliph in Baghdad gave Tughril Beg robes, gifts, and the title King of the East. Under Tughril Beg's successor, Malik Shah (1072–1092), Iran enjoyed a cultural and scientific renaissance, largely attributed to his brilliant Iranian vizier, Nizam al Mulk. These leaders established the Isfahan Observatory where Omar Khayyám did much of his experimentation for a new calendar, and they built religious schools in all the major towns. They brought Abu Hamid Ghazali, one of the greatest Islamic theologians, and other eminent scholars to the Seljuk capital at Baghdad and encouraged and supported their work.[32]

A serious internal threat to the Seljuks during their reign came from the Hashshashin- Ismailis of the Nizari sect, with headquarters at Alamut between Rasht and Tehran. They controlled the immediate area for more than 150 years and sporadically sent out adherents to strengthen their rule by murdering important officials. Several of the various theories on the etymology of the word assassin derive from this group.[32]

Another notable Sunni dynasty were the Timurids. Timur was a Turco-Mongol leader from the Eurasian Steppe, who conquered and ruled in the tradition of Genghis Khan. Under the Timurid Empire, the Turco-Persian tradition which began during the Abbasid period would continue. Ulugh Beg, grandson of Timur, built an observatory of his own, and a grand madrassah at Samarkand.

Shi'ism in Iran before the rule of the Safavids

 
Imam Reza shrine, the holiest religious site in Iran, Mashhad

Although Shi'as have lived in Iran since the earliest days of Islam, the writers of the Four Books of Shi'a ahadith were Iranians of the pre-Safavid era and there was one Shi'a dynasty in part of Iran during the tenth and eleventh centuries, according to Mortaza Motahhari the majority of Iranian scholars and masses remained Sunni till the time of the Safavids.[34]

The domination of the Sunni creed during the first nine Islamic centuries characterizes the religious history of Iran during this period. There were however some exceptions to this general domination which emerged in the form of the Zaydīs of Tabaristan, the Buwayhid, the rule of Sultan Muhammad Khudabandah (r. Shawwal 703-Shawwal 716/1304-1316) and the Sarbedaran. Nevertheless, apart from this domination there existed, firstly, throughout these nine centuries, Shia inclinations among many Sunnis of this land and, secondly, original Imami Shiism as well as Zaydī Shiism had prevalence in some parts of Iran. During this period, Shia in Iran were nourished from Kufah, Baghdad and later from Najaf and Hillah.[35]

However, during the first nine centuries there are four high points in the history of this linkage:

  • First, the migration of a number of persons belonging to the tribe of the Ash'ari from Iraq to the city of Qum towards the end of the first/seventh century, which is the period of establishment of Imamī Shī‘ism in Iran.
  • Second, the influence of the Shī‘ī tradition of Baghdad and Najaf on Iran during the fifth/eleventh and sixth/twelfth centuries.
  • Third, the influence of the school of Hillah on Iran during the eighth/fourteenth century.
  • Fourth, the influence of the Shī‘ism of Jabal Amel and Bahrain on Iran during the period of establishment of the Safavid rule.[35]

Shi'ism and the Safavids

Due to their history being almost fully intertwined, Iran as well as Azerbaijan are both discussed here. Iran and Azerbaijan were predominantly Sunni until the 16th century. Changes in the religious make-up of nowadays both nations changed drastically from that time and on. In 1500 the Safavid Shah Ismail I undertook the conquering of Iran and Azerbaijan and commenced a policy of forced conversion of Sunni Muslims to Shia Islam. Many Sunnis were murdered. When Shah Ismail I conquered Iraq, Dagestan, Eastern Anatolia, and Armenia he similarly forcefully converted or murdered Sunni Muslims. The oppression and forced conversion of Sunnis would continue, mostly unabated, for the greater part of next two centuries until Iran as well as what is now Azerbaijan became predominantly Shi’ite countries.[14]

As in the case of the early caliphate, Safavid rule had been based originally on both political and religious legitimacy, with the shah being both king and divine representative. With the later erosion of Safavid central political authority in the mid-17th century, the power of the Shia scholars in civil affairs such as judges, administrators, and court functionaries, began to grow, in a way unprecedented in Shi'ite history. Likewise, the ulama began to take a more active role in agitating against Sufism and other forms of popular religion, which remained strong in Iran, and in enforcing a more scholarly type of Shi'a Islam among the masses. The development of the ta'ziah—a passion play commemorating the martyrdom of Imam Husayn and his family — and Ziarat of the shrines and tombs of local Shi'ite leaders began during this period, largely at the prompting of the Shi'ite clergy.[36] According to Mortaza Motahhari, the majority of Iranians turned to Shi'a Islam from the Safavid period onwards. Of course, it cannot be denied that Iran's environment was more favorable to the flourishing of the Shi'a Islam as compared to all other parts of the Muslim world. Shi'a Islam did not penetrate any land to the extent that it gradually could in Iran. With the passage of time, Iranians' readiness to practise Shi'a Islam grew day by day. It was the Safavids who made Iran the spiritual bastion of Shi’ism against the onslaughts of shi'as' by orthodox Sunni Islam, and the repository of Persian cultural traditions and self-awareness of Iranianhood,[37] acting as a bridge to modern Iran. According to Professor Roger Savory:[38]

In Number of ways the Safavids affected the development of the modern Iranian state: first, they ensured the continuance of various ancient and traditional Persian institutions, and transmitted these in a strengthened, or more 'national', form; second, by imposing Ithna 'Ashari Shi'a Islam on Iran as the official religion of the Safavid state, they enhanced the power of mujtahids. The Safavids thus set in train a struggle for power between the urban and the crown that is to say, between the proponents of secular government and the proponents of a theocratic government; third, they laid the foundation of alliance between the religious classes ('Ulama') and the bazaar which played an important role both in the Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1906, and again in the Islamic Revolution of 1979; fourth the policies introduced by Shah Abbas I conduced to a more centralized administrative system.

Contemporary era: Challenges of modernity and rise of Islamism

During the 20th century Iran underwent significant changes such as the 1906 Constitutional Revolution and the secularism of the Pahlavi dynasty.

According to scholar Roy Mottahedeh, one significant change to Islam in Iran during the first half of the 20th century was that the class of ulema lost its informality that allowed it to include everyone from the highly trained jurist to the "shopkeeper who spent one afternoon a week memorizing and transmitting a few traditions." Laws by Reza Shah that requiring military service and dress in European-style clothes for Iranians, gave talebeh and mullahs exemptions, but only if they passed specific examinations proving their learnedness, thus excluding less educated clerics.

In addition Islamic Madrasah schools became more like 'professional' schools, leaving broader education to secular government schools and sticking to Islamic learning. "Ptolemaic astronomy, Aveicennian medicines, and the algebra of Omar Kahayyam" was dispensed with.[39]

Deobandis

Darul Uloom Deoband was established in 1866 in the Saharanpur district of Uttar Pradesh, India, as part of the anti-British movement. It gave rise to a traditional conservative Sunni movement known as the Deobandi movement. Students from various regions, including Sistan and Baluchestan in Iran, attended Deoband, which led to the spread of its founders ideas.[40] This movement had a significant impact on some of the new generation of Iranian intellectuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[41] After entering Iran, the students of this school continued to expand this thinking and with the formation of missionary groups. These thoughts have been strengthened on one hand due to the cultural relationships between the Baloch tribes and on the other hand due to the connection of Sistan and Baluchestan's Iran and India's Hanafi religious leaders in Iran.[42] Today, Deobandi thinking is one of the intellectual currents in Sistan and Baluchestan and preaching groups are active in different cities and villages. Its playing a crucial role in Iran's political landscape. The Deobandis aimed to homogenize religious schools and were opposed to certain popular practices. The Naqshbandi order played an important role in the Deobandi school of thought in the Persian-speaking world.[43]

Iranian revolution

The Iranian Revolution (also known as the Islamic Revolution,[44][45][46][47][48][49] Persian: انقلاب اسلامی, Enghelābe Eslāmi) was the revolution that transformed Iran from a secular, westernizing monarchy under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, to an Islamic republic based on the doctrine of Velayat-e faqih (rule by an Islamic jurist), under Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the leader of the revolution and founder of the Islamic Republic.[50] It has been called "the third great revolution in history", following the French and Russian Revolutions,[51] and an event that "made Islamic fundamentalism a political force ... from Morocco to Malaysia."[52]

Current situation of Islam

Demography

Sunni Muslims constitute approximately 10% of the Iranian population. A majority of Lari people (Persians), a part of Kurds, virtually all Baluchis and Turkomans, and a minority of Arabs and Lurs are Sunnis, as are small communities of Persians in southern Iran and Khorasan.

The mountainous region of Larestan is mostly inhabited by indigenous Sunni Persians who did not convert to Shia Islam during the Safavids because the mountainous region of Larestan was too isolated. The majority of Lari people are Sunni Muslims,[53][54][55] 35% of Lari people are Shia Muslims. The people of Larestan speak the Lari language, which is a southwestern Iranian language closely related to Old Persian (pre-Islamic Persian) and Luri.[56]

Shia clergy tend to view missionary work among Sunnis to convert them to Shi'a Islam as a worthwhile religious endeavor.[57] In those towns with mixed populations in the Persian Gulf region, and Sistan and Baluchistan, tensions between Shi'as and Sunnis existed both before and after the Revolution. Religious tensions have been highest during major Shi'a observances, especially Muharram.[57]

Religious government

Iran's government is unique in following the principle of velayat-e faqih or guardianship of the jurist, according to which government must be run in accordance with traditional Islamic sharia, and for this to happen a leading Islamic jurist (faqih) must provide political "guardianship" (wilayat or velayat) over the people. Following the Iranian Revolution, the 1979 Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran made the "guardian" the Supreme Leader of Iran[58] The author of Velayat-e faqih doctrine, Ayatollah Khomeini, as the first Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic.

The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran mandates that the official religion of Iran is Shia Islam and the Twelver Ja'fari school, though it also mandates that other Islamic schools are to be accorded full respect, and their followers are free to act in accordance with their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites and recognizes Zoroastrian, Jewish, and Christian Iranians as religious minorities.

Citizens of the Islamic Republic of Iran are officially divided into four categories: Muslims, Zoroastrians, Jews and Christians. This official division ignores other religious minorities in Iran, notably those of the Baháʼí Faith. State sanctioned persecution of Bahá’ís follows from them being a "non-recognized" religious minority without any legal existence, classified as "unprotected infidels" by the authorities, and are subject to systematic discrimination on the basis of their beliefs. Similarly, atheism is officially disallowed; one must declare oneself as a member of one of the four recognized faiths in order to avail oneself of many of the rights of citizenship.[59]

Alienation

One unanticipated effect of theocratic rule in Iran is that in the last couple of decades up to at least 2018,

the state has lost much of its religious credibility among the ultra-religious communities because of widespread corruption, discrimination and its secularisation. Thus, many ultra-religious people deny the Islamic legitimacy of the government in toto and embrace this or that alternative religiosity ― with Ahmad al-Hassan offering one option among others.[60]

Religious institutions

Historically, the most important religious institution in Iran has been the mosque. In towns and cities, congregational prayers, as well as prayers and rites associated with religious observances and important phases in Muslim life, took place in mosques. Primarily an urban phenomenon, mosques did not exist in most Iranian villages. In the years preceding the Revolution, Iranian Shias generally attached diminishing significance to institutional religion, and by the 1970s there was little emphasis on mosque attendance, even for the Friday congregational prayers. During the Revolution, however, mosques in large cities played a prominent social role in organizing people for large demonstrations. Since that time, the mosques have continued to play important political and social roles, in addition to their traditional religious functions.[61] At the same time, weekly mosque attendance rate in Iran has been very low compared to other Muslim countries.[62] In particular, politicization of Friday prayers under the Islamic Republic has had the paradoxical consequence of discouraging religious people from attending Friday prayers. People who attend prayers tend to have more positive evaluation of the political system than people who do not attend.[62]: 228–9 

Another religious institution of major significance has been the hoseiniyeh, or Islamic center. Wealthy patrons financed construction of hoseiniyehs in urban areas to serve as sites for recitals and performances commemorating the martyrdom of Hussein, especially during the month of Moharram. In the 1970s, hoseiniyehs such as the Hoseiniyeh Irshad in Tehran became politicized as prominent clerical and lay preachers helped to lay the groundwork for the Revolution by referring to the symbolic deaths as martyrs of Hussein and the other imams in veiled but obvious criticism of Mohammad Reza Shah's regime. Institutions providing religious education include madrassas, or seminaries, and maktabs, or primary schools run by the clergy. The madrassas historically were important settings for advanced training in Shia theology and jurisprudence. Each madrassa generally was associated with a noted Shia scholar who had attained the rank of ayatollah. Some older madrassas functioned like religious universities at which several scholars taught diverse religious and secular subjects. Students, or talabehs, lived on the grounds of the madrassas and received stipends for the duration of their studies, usually a minimum of seven years, during which they prepared for the examinations that qualify a seminary student to be a low-level preacher, or mullah. At the time of the Revolution, there were slightly more than 11,000 talabehs in Iran, approximately 60 percent of them at the madrassas in Qom. From 1979 to 1982, the number of talabehs in Qom more than tripled from 6,500. There were just under 25,000 talabehs at all levels of study in Qom seminaries in the early 2000s, as well as about 12,000 talabehs at seminaries in other Iranian cities.[61]

Maktabs started to decline in number and importance in the first decades of the twentieth century, once the government began developing a national public school system. Nevertheless, maktabs continued to exist as private religious schools until the Revolution. Because the overall emphasis of public schools has remained secular subjects, since 1979 maktabs have continued to serve children whose parents want them to have a more religious education.[61]

In 2003, Abbas William Samii estimated that there are 90,000 (media observers) to 300,000 (European sources) clerics in Iran, with, back then, 40,000 students at the religious seminaries. To this he add 60,000 "people with no formal training or qualifications who acted as urban preachers, rural prayer leaders, and procession organizers." As for the numbers of seminaries, Qom alone had 60.[63] Abbas Djavadi estimates that after the 1979 revolution, "more than 200,000 mullahs" became "receivers of government salaries and benefits".[64]

Another major religious institution in Iran is the shrine. Pilgrimage to the shrines of imams is a specific Shia custom, undertaken because Shia pilgrims believe that the imams and their relatives have the power to intercede with God on behalf of petitioners. Of the more than 1,100 shrines in Iran, the most important are those for the Eighth Imam, Ali al-Ridha, in Mashhad and for his sister Fatimah bint Musa in Qom, and for Seyyed Rouhollah Khomeini in Tehran. Each of these is a huge complex that includes the mausoleum of the venerated one, tombs of various notables, mosques, madrassas, and libraries. Imam Reza's shrine is considered the holiest. In addition to the usual shrine accoutrements, it comprises hospitals, dispensaries, a museum, and several mosques located in a series of courtyards surrounding the imam's tomb. The shrine's endowments and gifts are the largest of all religious institutions in the country. Although there are no special times for visiting this or other shrines, it is customary for pilgrimage traffic to be heaviest during Shia holy periods. Visitors represent all socioeconomic levels. Whereas piety is a motivation for many, others come to seek the spiritual grace or general good fortune that a visit to the shrine is believed to ensure. Since the nineteenth century, it has been customary among the bazaar class and members of the lower classes to recognize those who have made a pilgrimage to Mashhad by prefixing their names with the title mashti. Shrine authorities have estimated that at least 4 million pilgrims visit the shrine annually in the early 2000s. There are also important secondary shrines for other relatives of the Eighth Imam in Tehran and Shiraz. In virtually all towns and in many villages, there are numerous lesser shrines, known as imamzadehs, that commemorate descendants of the imams who are reputed to have led saintly lives. In Iraq the shrines at Karbala and An Najaf also are revered by Iranian Shias. Pilgrimages to these shrines and the hundreds of local mamzadehs are undertaken to petition the saints to grant special favors or to help one through a period of troubles. The constant movement of pilgrims from all over Iran has helped bind together a linguistically heterogeneous population. Pilgrims serve as major sources of information about conditions in different parts of the country and thus help to mitigate the parochialism of the regions.[61]

The vaqf is a traditional source of financial support for all religious institutions. It is a religious endowment by which land and other income-producing property is given in perpetuity for the maintenance of a shrine, mosque, madrassa, or charitable institution such as a hospital, library, or orphanage. A mutavalli administers a vaqf in accordance with the stipulations in the donor's bequest. In many vaqfs, the position of mutavalli is hereditary. Under the Pahlavis, the government attempted to exercise control over administration of the vaqfs, especially those of the larger shrines. This practice caused conflict with the clergy, who perceived the government's efforts as inimical to their influence and authority in traditional religious matters. The government's interference with the administration of vaqfs during the Pahlavi era led to a sharp decline in the number of vaqf bequests. Instead, wealthy and pious Shias chose to give financial contributions directly to the leading ayatollahs in the form of zakat, or obligatory alms. The clergy, in turn, used the funds to administer their madrassas and to institute various educational and charitable programs, which indirectly provided them with more influence in society. The access of the clergy to a steady and independent source of funding was an important factor in their ability to resist state controls, and ultimately helped them direct the opposition to the shah.[61]

Statistics of religious buildings according to آمارنامه اماکن مذهبی (Statistics of Religious Places) which has been gathered in 2003.

Structure Mosque Jame Hussainia Imamzadeh Dargah Hawza
Number 48983[65] 7877[65] 13446[66] 6461[67] 1320[67]

See also

Notes and references

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  2. ^ Iran statistics portal amar.org.ir Retrieved 3 Dec 2018
  3. ^ "Middle East :: IRAN". CIA The World Factbook. 21 December 2021.
  4. ^ "WVS Database".
  5. ^ "IRANIANS' ATTITUDES TOWARD RELIGION: A 2020 SURVEY REPORT". GAMAAN (The Group for Analyzing and Measuring Attitudes in Iran). 2020-09-16. from the original on 2022-12-13. Retrieved 2020-09-16.
  6. ^ Maliki,Tamimi Arab, Ammar ,Pooyan (2020-09-16). "Iran's secular shift: new survey reveals huge changes in religious beliefs". Retrieved 2020-09-16.
  7. ^ "IRANIANS HAVE LOST FAITH ACCORDING TO SURVEY". 2020-08-25. Retrieved 2020-09-16.
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Bibliography

  • Petrushevsky, I. P.,(1985) Islam in Iran, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0-88706-070-0
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  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Curtis, Glenn E.; Hooglund, Eric, eds. (2008). Iran: A Country Study (5 ed.). Federal Research Division. Sunni Muslims.

External links

  • [2], Encyclopædia Iranica (a series of 18 articles on this subject)

islam, iran, muslim, conquest, persia, sasanian, empire, triggered, decline, zoroastrianism, among, iranian, peoples, large, scale, persecution, arab, muslims, under, newly, arrived, rashidun, caliphate, since, establishment, after, century, conquest, islam, r. The Muslim conquest of Persia 633 654 CE led to the end of the Sasanian Empire and triggered the decline of Zoroastrianism among the Iranian peoples due to large scale persecution by Arab Muslims under the newly arrived Rashidun Caliphate Since its establishment after the 7th century conquest Islam has remained the official religion of Iran also known as Persia except for during a short period after the Mongol invasions and subsequent establishment of the Ilkhanate in the 13th century The 1979 Islamic Revolution brought an end to the historic Persian monarchy after which Iran emerged as an Islamic republic Islam in Iran 2014 1 Shia Islam 90 Sunni Islam 10 Before the Muslim conquest mainland Iranians primarily adhered to the Iranian religion of Zoroastrianism there were also large and thriving Jewish and Christian communities especially in the territories of northwestern western and southern Iran mainly Caucasian Albania Asoristan Persian Armenia and Caucasian Iberia A significant number of Iranian peoples also adhered to Buddhism in what was then eastern Iran such as the regions of Bactria and Sogdia Following the Muslim conquest there was a slow but steady movement of the population toward Islam despite notable resistance When Islam was introduced to Iranians the nobility and city dwellers were among the first to convert Islam spread more slowly among the peasantry and the dehqans or land owning magnates By the 10th century the majority of Persians had become Muslims However the achievements of the previous Persian civilizations were not lost but were to a great extent absorbed by the new Islamic polities According to the Islamic Republic s official survey almost all of Iran s 82 000 000 people 2 are Muslims with 90 percent adhering to Shia Islam and a majority of that Shia populace following the Twelver branch Another 10 percent adhere to Sunni Islam most of them being Kurds Achomis Turkmens and Baloch living in the northwest northeast south and southeast respectively 3 A 2020 survey by the World Values Survey found that 96 6 percent of Iranians believe in Islam 4 However according to another 2020 online survey by the GAMAAN which provided greater anonymity there has been a sharp decline in religiosity in Iran and only 40 percent of Iranians who took part of the online survey identified as Muslims 5 6 7 Something The Wall Street Journal called a crisis of faith 8 Islam in Iran can be categorised into two periods Sunni Islam as a majority from the 7th century to the 15th century and Shia Islam as a majority from the 16th century onwards 9 10 The Safavids made Shia Islam the official state religion in the early 16th century and aggressively proselytized the faith by forced conversion 11 12 13 It is believed that by the mid 17th century most people in Iran Iraq and the territory of the contemporary neighbouring Republic of Azerbaijan had become Shia from Sunni 14 an affiliation that has continued Over the following centuries with the state fostered rise of an Iran based Shia clergy a synthesis was formed between Iranian culture and Shia Islam that marked each indelibly with the tincture of the other Contents 1 History 1 1 Islamic conquest of Iran 1 2 Islamization of Iran 1 3 Iran and the Islamic culture and civilization 1 4 Shu ubiyya movement 1 5 Sunni Sultanates 1 6 Shi ism in Iran before the rule of the Safavids 1 7 Shi ism and the Safavids 1 8 Contemporary era Challenges of modernity and rise of Islamism 1 9 Deobandis 1 10 Iranian revolution 2 Current situation of Islam 2 1 Demography 2 2 Religious government 2 3 Religious institutions 3 See also 4 Notes and references 5 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory EditIslamic conquest of Iran Edit Main article Islamic conquest of Iran Stages of Islamic conquest Expansion under Muhammad 622 632 Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate 632 661 Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate 661 750 Muslims conquered Iran in the time of Umar 637 and conquered it after several great battles Yazdegerd III fled from one district to another Merv in 651 15 By 674 Muslims had conquered Greater Khorasan which included modern Iranian Khorasan province and modern Afghanistan Transoxania As Bernard Lewis has quoted 16 These events have been variously seen in Iran by some as a blessing the advent of the true faith the end of the age of ignorance and heathenism by others as a humiliating national defeat the conquest and subjugation of the country by foreign invaders Both perceptions are of course valid depending on one s angle of vision Under Umar and his immediate successors the Arab conquerors attempted to maintain their political and cultural cohesion despite the attractions of the civilizations they had conquered The Arabs were to settle in the garrison towns rather than on scattered estates The new non Muslim subjects or dhimmi were to pay a special tax the jizya or poll tax which was calculated per individual at varying rates for able bodied men of military age 17 Iranians were among the very earliest converts to Islam and their conversion in significant numbers began as soon as the Arab armies reached and overran the Persian plateau Despite some resistance from elements of the Zoroastrian clergy and other ancient religions the anti Islamic policies of later conquerors like the Il khanids the impact of the Christian and secular West in modern times and the attraction of new religious movements like Babism and the Bahaʼi Faith qq v the vast majority of Iranians became and have remained Muslims Today perhaps 98 percent of ethnic Iranians including the population of Persia are at least nominal Muslims For such a fundamental pervasive and enduring cultural transformation the phenomenon of Iranian conversions to Islam has received remarkably little scholarly attention 18 Recent research has established a general chronological framework for the process of conversion of Iranians to Islam From a study of the probable dates of individual conversions based on genealogies in biographical dictionaries Richard Bulliet has suggested that there was gradual and limited conversion of Persians down to the end of the Umayyad period 132 750 followed by a rapid increase in the number of conversions after the ʿAbbasid revolution so that by the time when regional dynasties had been established in the east ca 338 950 80 percent or more of Iranians had become Muslims The data on which Bulliet s study was based limited the validity of this paradigm to generalizations about full formal conversions in an urban environment The situation in rural areas and individual regions may have been quite different but the overall pattern is consistent with what can be deduced from traditional historical sources Although in some areas for example Shiraz at the time of Moqaddasi s visit in about 375 985 p 429 there may still have been strong non Muslim elements it is reasonable to suppose that the Persian milieu as a whole became predominantly Islamic within the period of time suggested by Bulliet s research 19 Islamization of Iran Edit See also Islamization of Iran and Anarchy at Samarra Following the Abbasid revolution of 749 51 in which Iranian converts played a major role the Caliphate s center of gravity moved to Mesopotamia and underwent significant Iranian influences 20 Accordingly the Muslim population of Iran rose from approx 40 in the mid 9th century to close to 100 by the end of 11th century 21 Islam was readily accepted by Zoroastrians who were employed in industrial and artisan positions because according to Zoroastrian dogma such occupations that involved defiling fire made them impure 22 Moreover Muslim missionaries did not encounter difficulty in explaining Islamic tenets to Zoroastrians as there were many similarities between the faiths According to Thomas Walker Arnold for the Persian he would meet Ahura Mazda and Ahriman under the names of Allah and Iblis 22 Muslim leaders in their effort to win converts encouraged attendance at Muslim prayer and allowed the Quran to be recited in Persian instead of Arabic so that it would be intelligible to all 22 The first complete translation of the Qur an into Persian occurred during the reign of Samanids in the 9th century Seyyed Hossein Nasr suggests that the rapid increase in conversion was aided by the Persian nationality of the rulers 21 23 According to Bernard Lewis Iran was indeed Islamized but it was not Arabized Persians remained Persians And after an interval of silence Iran reemerged as a separate different and distinctive element within Islam eventually adding a new element even to Islam itself Culturally politically and most remarkable of all even religiously the Iranian contribution to this new Islamic civilization is of immense importance The work of Iranians can be seen in every field of cultural endeavor including Arabic poetry to which poets of Iranian origin composing their poems in Arabic made a very significant contribution In a sense Iranian Islam is a second advent of Islam itself a new Islam sometimes referred to as Islam i Ajam It was this Persian Islam rather than the original Arab Islam that was brought to new areas and new peoples to the Turks first in Central Asia and then in the Middle East in the country which came to be called Turkey and India The Ottoman Turks brought a form of Iranian civilization to the walls of Vienna 24 Iran and the Islamic culture and civilization Edit Photo taken from medieval manuscript by Qotbeddin Shirazi 1236 1311 a Persian Astronomer The image depicts an epicyclic planetary model The Islamization of Iran was to yield deep transformations within the cultural scientific and political structure of Iran s society The blossoming of Persian literature philosophy medicine and art became major elements of the newly forming Muslim civilization Inheriting a heritage of thousands of years of civilization and being at the crossroads of the major cultural highways 25 contributed to Persia emerging as what culminated into the Islamic Golden Age During this period hundreds of scholars and scientists vastly contributed to technology science and medicine later influencing the rise of European science during the Renaissance 26 The most important scholars of almost all of the Islamic sects and schools of thought were Persian or live in Iran including most notable and reliable Hadith collectors of Shia and Sunni like Shaikh Saduq Shaikh Kulainy Imam Bukhari Imam Muslim and Hakim al Nishaburi the greatest theologians of Shia and Sunni like Shaykh Tusi Imam Ghazali Imam Fakhr al Razi and Al Zamakhshari the greatest physicians astronomers logicians mathematicians metaphysicians philosophers and scientists like Al Farabi Avicenna and Nasir al Din al Tusi the greatest Shaykh of Sufism like Rumi Abdul Qadir Gilani Ibn Khaldun narrates in his Muqaddimah 27 It is a remarkable fact that with few exceptions most Muslim scholars in the intellectual sciences have been non Arabs thus the founders of grammar were Sibawaih and after him al Farsi and Az Zajjaj All of them were of Persian descent they invented rules of Arabic grammar Great jurists were Persians Only the Persians engaged in the task of preserving knowledge and writing systematic scholarly works Thus the truth of the statement of the prophet Muhammad becomes apparent If learning were suspended in the highest parts of heaven the Persians would attain it The intellectual sciences were also the preserve of the Persians left alone by the Arabs who did not cultivate them as was the case with all crafts This situation continued in the cities as long as the Persians and Persian countries Iraq Khorasan and Transoxiana modern Central Asia retained their sedentary culture Shu ubiyya movement Edit See also Shu ubiyya In the 9th and 10th centuries non Arab subjects of the Ummah especially Persians created a movement called Shu ubiyya in response to the privileged status of Arabs This movement led to resurgence of Persian national identity 28 Although Persians adopted Islam over the centuries they worked to protect and revive their distinctive language and culture a process known as Persianization Arabs and Turks also participated in this attempt 29 30 31 As the power of the Abbasid caliphs diminished a series of dynasties rose in various parts of Iran some with considerable influence and power Among the most important of these overlapping dynasties were the Tahirids in Khorasan 820 72 the Saffarids in Sistan 867 903 and the Samanids 875 1005 originally at Bokhara The Samanids eventually ruled an area from central Iran to Pakistan 32 By the early 10th century the Abbasids almost lost control to the growing Persian faction known as the Buwayhid dynasty 934 1055 Since much of the Abbasid administration had been Persian anyway the Buwayhid who were Zaidi Shia were quietly able to assume real power in Baghdad The Samanid dynasty was the first fully native dynasty to rule Iran since the Muslim conquest and led the revival of Persian culture The first important Persian poet after the arrival of Islam Rudaki was born during this era and was praised by Samanid kings The Samanids also revived many ancient Persian festivals Their successor the Ghaznawids who were of non Iranian Turkic origin also became instrumental in the revival of Persian 33 Sunni Sultanates Edit In 962 a Turkish governor of the Samanids Alptigin conquered Ghazna in present day Afghanistan and established a dynasty the Ghaznavids that lasted to 1186 32 Later the Seljuks who like the Ghaznavids were Turks slowly conquered Iran over the course of the 11th century Their leader Tughril Beg turned his warriors against the Ghaznavids in Khorasan He moved south and then west conquering but not wasting the cities in his path In 1055 the caliph in Baghdad gave Tughril Beg robes gifts and the title King of the East Under Tughril Beg s successor Malik Shah 1072 1092 Iran enjoyed a cultural and scientific renaissance largely attributed to his brilliant Iranian vizier Nizam al Mulk These leaders established the Isfahan Observatory where Omar Khayyam did much of his experimentation for a new calendar and they built religious schools in all the major towns They brought Abu Hamid Ghazali one of the greatest Islamic theologians and other eminent scholars to the Seljuk capital at Baghdad and encouraged and supported their work 32 A serious internal threat to the Seljuks during their reign came from the Hashshashin Ismailis of the Nizari sect with headquarters at Alamut between Rasht and Tehran They controlled the immediate area for more than 150 years and sporadically sent out adherents to strengthen their rule by murdering important officials Several of the various theories on the etymology of the word assassin derive from this group 32 Another notable Sunni dynasty were the Timurids Timur was a Turco Mongol leader from the Eurasian Steppe who conquered and ruled in the tradition of Genghis Khan Under the Timurid Empire the Turco Persian tradition which began during the Abbasid period would continue Ulugh Beg grandson of Timur built an observatory of his own and a grand madrassah at Samarkand Shi ism in Iran before the rule of the Safavids Edit Imam Reza shrine the holiest religious site in Iran Mashhad Although Shi as have lived in Iran since the earliest days of Islam the writers of the Four Books of Shi a ahadith were Iranians of the pre Safavid era and there was one Shi a dynasty in part of Iran during the tenth and eleventh centuries according to Mortaza Motahhari the majority of Iranian scholars and masses remained Sunni till the time of the Safavids 34 The domination of the Sunni creed during the first nine Islamic centuries characterizes the religious history of Iran during this period There were however some exceptions to this general domination which emerged in the form of the Zaydis of Tabaristan the Buwayhid the rule of Sultan Muhammad Khudabandah r Shawwal 703 Shawwal 716 1304 1316 and the Sarbedaran Nevertheless apart from this domination there existed firstly throughout these nine centuries Shia inclinations among many Sunnis of this land and secondly original Imami Shiism as well as Zaydi Shiism had prevalence in some parts of Iran During this period Shia in Iran were nourished from Kufah Baghdad and later from Najaf and Hillah 35 However during the first nine centuries there are four high points in the history of this linkage First the migration of a number of persons belonging to the tribe of the Ash ari from Iraq to the city of Qum towards the end of the first seventh century which is the period of establishment of Imami Shi ism in Iran Second the influence of the Shi i tradition of Baghdad and Najaf on Iran during the fifth eleventh and sixth twelfth centuries Third the influence of the school of Hillah on Iran during the eighth fourteenth century Fourth the influence of the Shi ism of Jabal Amel and Bahrain on Iran during the period of establishment of the Safavid rule 35 Shi ism and the Safavids Edit See also Safavid conversion of Iran to Shia Islam Due to their history being almost fully intertwined Iran as well as Azerbaijan are both discussed here Iran and Azerbaijan were predominantly Sunni until the 16th century Changes in the religious make up of nowadays both nations changed drastically from that time and on In 1500 the Safavid Shah Ismail I undertook the conquering of Iran and Azerbaijan and commenced a policy of forced conversion of Sunni Muslims to Shia Islam Many Sunnis were murdered When Shah Ismail I conquered Iraq Dagestan Eastern Anatolia and Armenia he similarly forcefully converted or murdered Sunni Muslims The oppression and forced conversion of Sunnis would continue mostly unabated for the greater part of next two centuries until Iran as well as what is now Azerbaijan became predominantly Shi ite countries 14 As in the case of the early caliphate Safavid rule had been based originally on both political and religious legitimacy with the shah being both king and divine representative With the later erosion of Safavid central political authority in the mid 17th century the power of the Shia scholars in civil affairs such as judges administrators and court functionaries began to grow in a way unprecedented in Shi ite history Likewise the ulama began to take a more active role in agitating against Sufism and other forms of popular religion which remained strong in Iran and in enforcing a more scholarly type of Shi a Islam among the masses The development of the ta ziah a passion play commemorating the martyrdom of Imam Husayn and his family and Ziarat of the shrines and tombs of local Shi ite leaders began during this period largely at the prompting of the Shi ite clergy 36 According to Mortaza Motahhari the majority of Iranians turned to Shi a Islam from the Safavid period onwards Of course it cannot be denied that Iran s environment was more favorable to the flourishing of the Shi a Islam as compared to all other parts of the Muslim world Shi a Islam did not penetrate any land to the extent that it gradually could in Iran With the passage of time Iranians readiness to practise Shi a Islam grew day by day It was the Safavids who made Iran the spiritual bastion of Shi ism against the onslaughts of shi as by orthodox Sunni Islam and the repository of Persian cultural traditions and self awareness of Iranianhood 37 acting as a bridge to modern Iran According to Professor Roger Savory 38 In Number of ways the Safavids affected the development of the modern Iranian state first they ensured the continuance of various ancient and traditional Persian institutions and transmitted these in a strengthened or more national form second by imposing Ithna Ashari Shi a Islam on Iran as the official religion of the Safavid state they enhanced the power of mujtahids The Safavids thus set in train a struggle for power between the urban and the crown that is to say between the proponents of secular government and the proponents of a theocratic government third they laid the foundation of alliance between the religious classes Ulama and the bazaar which played an important role both in the Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1905 1906 and again in the Islamic Revolution of 1979 fourth the policies introduced by Shah Abbas I conduced to a more centralized administrative system Contemporary era Challenges of modernity and rise of Islamism Edit See also Islam and modernity and History of Islamism in Iran During the 20th century Iran underwent significant changes such as the 1906 Constitutional Revolution and the secularism of the Pahlavi dynasty According to scholar Roy Mottahedeh one significant change to Islam in Iran during the first half of the 20th century was that the class of ulema lost its informality that allowed it to include everyone from the highly trained jurist to the shopkeeper who spent one afternoon a week memorizing and transmitting a few traditions Laws by Reza Shah that requiring military service and dress in European style clothes for Iranians gave talebeh and mullahs exemptions but only if they passed specific examinations proving their learnedness thus excluding less educated clerics In addition Islamic Madrasah schools became more like professional schools leaving broader education to secular government schools and sticking to Islamic learning Ptolemaic astronomy Aveicennian medicines and the algebra of Omar Kahayyam was dispensed with 39 Deobandis Edit Main article Deobandi movement in Iran Darul Uloom Deoband was established in 1866 in the Saharanpur district of Uttar Pradesh India as part of the anti British movement It gave rise to a traditional conservative Sunni movement known as the Deobandi movement Students from various regions including Sistan and Baluchestan in Iran attended Deoband which led to the spread of its founders ideas 40 This movement had a significant impact on some of the new generation of Iranian intellectuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries 41 After entering Iran the students of this school continued to expand this thinking and with the formation of missionary groups These thoughts have been strengthened on one hand due to the cultural relationships between the Baloch tribes and on the other hand due to the connection of Sistan and Baluchestan s Iran and India s Hanafi religious leaders in Iran 42 Today Deobandi thinking is one of the intellectual currents in Sistan and Baluchestan and preaching groups are active in different cities and villages Its playing a crucial role in Iran s political landscape The Deobandis aimed to homogenize religious schools and were opposed to certain popular practices The Naqshbandi order played an important role in the Deobandi school of thought in the Persian speaking world 43 Iranian revolution Edit Main article Iranian Revolution The Iranian Revolution also known as the Islamic Revolution 44 45 46 47 48 49 Persian انقلاب اسلامی Enghelabe Eslami was the revolution that transformed Iran from a secular westernizing monarchy under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to an Islamic republic based on the doctrine of Velayat e faqih rule by an Islamic jurist under Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini the leader of the revolution and founder of the Islamic Republic 50 It has been called the third great revolution in history following the French and Russian Revolutions 51 and an event that made Islamic fundamentalism a political force from Morocco to Malaysia 52 Current situation of Islam EditDemography Edit Sunni Muslims constitute approximately 10 of the Iranian population A majority of Lari people Persians a part of Kurds virtually all Baluchis and Turkomans and a minority of Arabs and Lurs are Sunnis as are small communities of Persians in southern Iran and Khorasan The mountainous region of Larestan is mostly inhabited by indigenous Sunni Persians who did not convert to Shia Islam during the Safavids because the mountainous region of Larestan was too isolated The majority of Lari people are Sunni Muslims 53 54 55 35 of Lari people are Shia Muslims The people of Larestan speak the Lari language which is a southwestern Iranian language closely related to Old Persian pre Islamic Persian and Luri 56 Shia clergy tend to view missionary work among Sunnis to convert them to Shi a Islam as a worthwhile religious endeavor 57 In those towns with mixed populations in the Persian Gulf region and Sistan and Baluchistan tensions between Shi as and Sunnis existed both before and after the Revolution Religious tensions have been highest during major Shi a observances especially Muharram 57 Religious government Edit See also Islamic republic Iran s government is unique in following the principle of velayat e faqih or guardianship of the jurist according to which government must be run in accordance with traditional Islamic sharia and for this to happen a leading Islamic jurist faqih must provide political guardianship wilayat or velayat over the people Following the Iranian Revolution the 1979 Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran made the guardian the Supreme Leader of Iran 58 The author of Velayat e faqih doctrine Ayatollah Khomeini as the first Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran mandates that the official religion of Iran is Shia Islam and the Twelver Ja fari school though it also mandates that other Islamic schools are to be accorded full respect and their followers are free to act in accordance with their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites and recognizes Zoroastrian Jewish and Christian Iranians as religious minorities Citizens of the Islamic Republic of Iran are officially divided into four categories Muslims Zoroastrians Jews and Christians This official division ignores other religious minorities in Iran notably those of the Bahaʼi Faith State sanctioned persecution of Baha is follows from them being a non recognized religious minority without any legal existence classified as unprotected infidels by the authorities and are subject to systematic discrimination on the basis of their beliefs Similarly atheism is officially disallowed one must declare oneself as a member of one of the four recognized faiths in order to avail oneself of many of the rights of citizenship 59 AlienationOne unanticipated effect of theocratic rule in Iran is that in the last couple of decades up to at least 2018 the state has lost much of its religious credibility among the ultra religious communities because of widespread corruption discrimination and its secularisation Thus many ultra religious people deny the Islamic legitimacy of the government in toto and embrace this or that alternative religiosity with Ahmad al Hassan offering one option among others 60 Religious institutions Edit Historically the most important religious institution in Iran has been the mosque In towns and cities congregational prayers as well as prayers and rites associated with religious observances and important phases in Muslim life took place in mosques Primarily an urban phenomenon mosques did not exist in most Iranian villages In the years preceding the Revolution Iranian Shias generally attached diminishing significance to institutional religion and by the 1970s there was little emphasis on mosque attendance even for the Friday congregational prayers During the Revolution however mosques in large cities played a prominent social role in organizing people for large demonstrations Since that time the mosques have continued to play important political and social roles in addition to their traditional religious functions 61 At the same time weekly mosque attendance rate in Iran has been very low compared to other Muslim countries 62 In particular politicization of Friday prayers under the Islamic Republic has had the paradoxical consequence of discouraging religious people from attending Friday prayers People who attend prayers tend to have more positive evaluation of the political system than people who do not attend 62 228 9 Another religious institution of major significance has been the hoseiniyeh or Islamic center Wealthy patrons financed construction of hoseiniyehs in urban areas to serve as sites for recitals and performances commemorating the martyrdom of Hussein especially during the month of Moharram In the 1970s hoseiniyehs such as the Hoseiniyeh Irshad in Tehran became politicized as prominent clerical and lay preachers helped to lay the groundwork for the Revolution by referring to the symbolic deaths as martyrs of Hussein and the other imams in veiled but obvious criticism of Mohammad Reza Shah s regime Institutions providing religious education include madrassas or seminaries and maktabs or primary schools run by the clergy The madrassas historically were important settings for advanced training in Shia theology and jurisprudence Each madrassa generally was associated with a noted Shia scholar who had attained the rank of ayatollah Some older madrassas functioned like religious universities at which several scholars taught diverse religious and secular subjects Students or talabehs lived on the grounds of the madrassas and received stipends for the duration of their studies usually a minimum of seven years during which they prepared for the examinations that qualify a seminary student to be a low level preacher or mullah At the time of the Revolution there were slightly more than 11 000 talabehs in Iran approximately 60 percent of them at the madrassas in Qom From 1979 to 1982 the number of talabehs in Qom more than tripled from 6 500 There were just under 25 000 talabehs at all levels of study in Qom seminaries in the early 2000s as well as about 12 000 talabehs at seminaries in other Iranian cities 61 Maktabs started to decline in number and importance in the first decades of the twentieth century once the government began developing a national public school system Nevertheless maktabs continued to exist as private religious schools until the Revolution Because the overall emphasis of public schools has remained secular subjects since 1979 maktabs have continued to serve children whose parents want them to have a more religious education 61 In 2003 Abbas William Samii estimated that there are 90 000 media observers to 300 000 European sources clerics in Iran with back then 40 000 students at the religious seminaries To this he add 60 000 people with no formal training or qualifications who acted as urban preachers rural prayer leaders and procession organizers As for the numbers of seminaries Qom alone had 60 63 Abbas Djavadi estimates that after the 1979 revolution more than 200 000 mullahs became receivers of government salaries and benefits 64 Another major religious institution in Iran is the shrine Pilgrimage to the shrines of imams is a specific Shia custom undertaken because Shia pilgrims believe that the imams and their relatives have the power to intercede with God on behalf of petitioners Of the more than 1 100 shrines in Iran the most important are those for the Eighth Imam Ali al Ridha in Mashhad and for his sister Fatimah bint Musa in Qom and for Seyyed Rouhollah Khomeini in Tehran Each of these is a huge complex that includes the mausoleum of the venerated one tombs of various notables mosques madrassas and libraries Imam Reza s shrine is considered the holiest In addition to the usual shrine accoutrements it comprises hospitals dispensaries a museum and several mosques located in a series of courtyards surrounding the imam s tomb The shrine s endowments and gifts are the largest of all religious institutions in the country Although there are no special times for visiting this or other shrines it is customary for pilgrimage traffic to be heaviest during Shia holy periods Visitors represent all socioeconomic levels Whereas piety is a motivation for many others come to seek the spiritual grace or general good fortune that a visit to the shrine is believed to ensure Since the nineteenth century it has been customary among the bazaar class and members of the lower classes to recognize those who have made a pilgrimage to Mashhad by prefixing their names with the title mashti Shrine authorities have estimated that at least 4 million pilgrims visit the shrine annually in the early 2000s There are also important secondary shrines for other relatives of the Eighth Imam in Tehran and Shiraz In virtually all towns and in many villages there are numerous lesser shrines known as imamzadehs that commemorate descendants of the imams who are reputed to have led saintly lives In Iraq the shrines at Karbala and An Najaf also are revered by Iranian Shias Pilgrimages to these shrines and the hundreds of local mamzadehs are undertaken to petition the saints to grant special favors or to help one through a period of troubles The constant movement of pilgrims from all over Iran has helped bind together a linguistically heterogeneous population Pilgrims serve as major sources of information about conditions in different parts of the country and thus help to mitigate the parochialism of the regions 61 The vaqf is a traditional source of financial support for all religious institutions It is a religious endowment by which land and other income producing property is given in perpetuity for the maintenance of a shrine mosque madrassa or charitable institution such as a hospital library or orphanage A mutavalli administers a vaqf in accordance with the stipulations in the donor s bequest In many vaqfs the position of mutavalli is hereditary Under the Pahlavis the government attempted to exercise control over administration of the vaqfs especially those of the larger shrines This practice caused conflict with the clergy who perceived the government s efforts as inimical to their influence and authority in traditional religious matters The government s interference with the administration of vaqfs during the Pahlavi era led to a sharp decline in the number of vaqf bequests Instead wealthy and pious Shias chose to give financial contributions directly to the leading ayatollahs in the form of zakat or obligatory alms The clergy in turn used the funds to administer their madrassas and to institute various educational and charitable programs which indirectly provided them with more influence in society The access of the clergy to a steady and independent source of funding was an important factor in their ability to resist state controls and ultimately helped them direct the opposition to the shah 61 Statistics of religious buildings according to آمارنامه اماکن مذهبی Statistics of Religious Places which has been gathered in 2003 Structure Mosque Jame Hussainia Imamzadeh Dargah HawzaNumber 48983 65 7877 65 13446 66 6461 67 1320 67 See also EditInternational Rankings of Iran in Religion Islam by country History of Iran Islamicization in post conquest Iran History of political Islam in Iran Religious minorities in Iran Christians in Iran Judaism in Iran Institute for Interreligious Dialogue Status of religious freedom in Iran Religion of Iranian Americans Turko Persian tradition Clericalism in Iran Fatima Masumeh Shrine Society of Seminary Teachers of Qom History of Iran after IslamNotes and references Edit Archived copy Archived from the original on 2021 08 12 Retrieved 2021 08 14 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Iran statistics portal amar org ir Retrieved 3 Dec 2018 Middle East IRAN CIA The World Factbook 21 December 2021 WVS Database IRANIANS ATTITUDES TOWARD RELIGION A 2020 SURVEY REPORT GAMAAN The Group for Analyzing and Measuring Attitudes in Iran 2020 09 16 Archived from the original on 2022 12 13 Retrieved 2020 09 16 Maliki Tamimi Arab Ammar Pooyan 2020 09 16 Iran s secular shift new survey reveals huge changes in religious beliefs Retrieved 2020 09 16 IRANIANS HAVE LOST FAITH ACCORDING TO SURVEY 2020 08 25 Retrieved 2020 09 16 Rasmussen Sune Engel Iran s Islamic Leaders Face a Crisis of Faith as Protests Swell WSJ Retrieved 2022 12 29 The Origins Of The Shiite Sunni Split NPR org Retrieved 14 February 2021 John Obert Voll 1994 Islam continuity and change in the modern world Internet Archive Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2639 8 Arshin Adib Moghaddam 2017 Psycho nationalism Cambridge University Press p 40 ISBN 9781108423076 Shah Ismail pursued a relentless campaign of forced conversion of the majority Sunni population in Iran to Twelver Shia Islam Conversion and Islam in the Early Modern Mediterranean The Lure of the Other Routledge 2017 p 92 ISBN 9781317159780 Islam Art and Architecture Konemann 2004 p 501 ISBN 9783833111785 Shah persecuted the philosophers mystics and Sufis who had been promoted by his grandfather and unleashed fanatical campaigns of forcible conversion on Sunnis Jews Christians and other religious minorities a b Akiner Shirin 5 July 2004 The Caspian politics energy and security By Shirin Akiner pg 158 ISBN 9780203641675 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Iran Encyclopaedia Britannica Lewis Bernard Iran in history Tel Aviv University Archived from the original on 2007 04 29 Retrieved 2007 04 03 Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates Longman p 68 for an early and still worthwhile survey of the subject see Arnold pp 209 20 for significant recent advances see Bulliet 1979a idem 1979b electricpulp com CONVERSION ii Of Iranians to Islam Encyclopaedia Iranica www iranicaonline org Retrieved 7 April 2018 Foltz Richard 2013 Religions of Iran From Prehistory to the Present London Oneworld publications pp 169 173 ISBN 978 1 78074 308 0 a b Tobin 113 115 a b c The preaching of Islam a history of the propagation of the Muslim faith By Sir Thomas Walker Arnold pg 170 180 Nasr Hossein Islam and the Plight of Modern Man New Document Archived from the original on 2007 04 29 Retrieved 2007 04 03 Caheb C Cambridge History of Iran Tribes Cities and Social Organization vol 4 p305 328 Kuhnel E in Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenlandischen Gesell Vol CVI 1956 Translated by F Rosenthal III pp 311 15 271 4 Arabic R N Frye p 91 Enderwitz S Shu ubiyya Encyclopedia of Islam Vol IX 1997 pp 513 14 Richard Frye The Heritage of Persia p 243 Rayhanat al adab 3rd ed vol 1 p 181 Encyclopaedia Britannica Seljuq Online Edition LINK a b c d History of Iran Islamic Conquest www iranchamber com Retrieved 7 April 2018 History of Iran Samanid Dynasty www iranchamber com Retrieved 7 April 2018 Islam and Iran A Historical Study of Mutual Services Al Islam org 13 March 2013 Retrieved 7 April 2018 a b Four Centuries of Influence of Iraqi Shiism on Pre Safavid Iran Al Islam org 27 February 2013 Retrieved 7 April 2018 Iran Janet Afary Encyclopaedia Britannica Hillenbrand R Islamic art and Architecture London 1999 p228 ISBN 0 500 20305 9 R M Savory Rise of a Shi i State in Iran and New Orientation in Islamic Thought and Culture in UNESCO History of Humanity Volume 5 From the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century London New York Routledge Paris pg 263 1 Mottahedeh Roy The Mantle of the Prophet Religion and Politics in Iran One World Oxford 1985 2000 p 232 4 7 Durani Abdul Gufur 2013 Advent of Deobandi Thinking in India and Its Impact on Iranian Baluchistan Journal of Subcontinent Researches 4 22 doi 10 22111 jsr 2013 848 inactive 2023 03 27 Archived from the original on 1 November 2022 Retrieved 14 February 2023 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of March 2023 link Ahmad Ashraf 2000 Islam In Iran Xiii Islamic Political Movements In 20th Century Iran In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Online Edition Encyclopaedia Iranica Foundation Retrieved 31 March 2021 Durani 2013 p 22 Salman Peerzada 21 May 2015 The role of Deobandi school of thought in Iran discussed Dawn Archived from the original on 14 February 2023 Retrieved 14 February 2023 Islamica Revolution Archived 2011 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Iran Chamber Islamic Revolution of Iran MS Encarta 2009 10 31 The Islamic Revolution Archived 2009 02 27 at the Wayback Machine Internews Iranian Revolution Iran Profile Archived 2006 08 06 at the Wayback Machine PDF The Shah and the Ayatollah Iranian Mythology and Islamic Revolution Hardcover ISBN 0 275 97858 3 by Fereydoun Hoveyda brother of Amir Abbas Hoveyda Encyclopaedia Britannica Marvin Zonis quoted in Wright Sacred Rage 1996 p 61 Nasr Vali The Shia Revival Norton 2006 p 121 Frye Richard Nelson 1984 The History of Ancient Iran Part 3 Volume 7 Richard Nelson Frye p 27 ISBN 9783406093975 Van Donzel E J January 1994 Islamic Desk Reference E J Van Donzel p 225 ISBN 9004097384 Matthee Rudi 2012 Persia in Crisis Safavid Decline and the Fall of Isfahan Rudi Matthee p 174 ISBN 9781845117450 Frye Richard Nelson 1984 The History of Ancient Iran Part 3 Volume 7 Richard Nelson Frye pp 27 29 ISBN 9783406093975 a b gt Curtis Glenn E Hooglund Eric eds 2008 Iran a country study 5 ed Washington DC Federal Research Division Library of Congress p 128 ISBN 978 0844411873 Iranian Government Constitution Archived 2013 08 19 at the Wayback Machine English Text International Federation for Human Rights 2003 08 01 Discrimination against religious minorities in Iran PDF fdih org Retrieved 2006 10 20 Mahmoud Pargoo April 2019 Who is Ahmad al Hassan al Yamani and why do so many Shiʿas think he is the promised messiah ABC Retrieved 31 May 2022 a b c d e This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Curtis Glenn E Hooglund Eric eds 2008 Iran a country study PDF Hand book Fifth ed Federal Research Division Library of Congre Archived from the original PDF on 15 February 2013 a b Gunes Murat Tezcur Taghi Azadarmaki and Bahar Mehri Religious Participation among Muslims Iranian Exceptionalism Middle East Critique 15 3 Fall 2006 217 232 Abbas William Samii The Iranian nuclear issue and informal networks in Naval War College Review Winter 2006 Vol 59 No 1 pp 68 69 Djavadi Abbas 25 February 2010 The Difference Between A Marja And A Supreme Leader RLRFE Retrieved 29 April 2023 a b یافته های طرح آمارگیری جامع فرهنگی کشور فضاهای فرهنگی ایران آمارنامه اماکن مذهبی 2003 وزارت فرهنگ و ارشاد اسلامی ص 39 یافته های طرح آمارگیری جامع فرهنگی کشور فضاهای فرهنگی ایران آمارنامه اماکن مذهبی 2003 وزارت فرهنگ و ارشاد اسلامی ص 154 a b یافته های طرح آمارگیری جامع فرهنگی کشور فضاهای فرهنگی ایران آمارنامه اماکن مذهبی 2003 وزارت فرهنگ و ارشاد اسلامی ص 263Bibliography EditPetrushevsky I P 1985 Islam in Iran State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 88706 070 0 Frye Richard 1975 The Golden Age of Persia London Weidenfeld and Nicolson Hovannisian Richard 1998 The Persian Presence in the Islamic World Cambridge Cambridge University Press Foltz Richard 2013 Religions of Iran From Prehistory to the Present London Oneworld publications ISBN 978 1 78074 308 0 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Curtis Glenn E Hooglund Eric eds 2008 Iran A Country Study 5 ed Federal Research Division Sunni Muslims External links Edit 2 Encyclopaedia Iranica a series of 18 articles on this subject Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islam in Iran amp oldid 1152347110, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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