When it came to the funeral of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in Tehran this week, the most important man—his son and successor—did not appear. Other relatives came, as did senior officials, who spoke of loyalty and bay’a (the oath of allegiance), as the crowds were told to chant for revenge. But Mojtaba Khamenei was nowhere to be seen at the ceremony designed partly as a handover.
His absence may have been one of caution, or clerical mystique, or stagecraft, but politically, it exposed the problem the whole event was meant to hide: that Mojtaba needs his father’s legacy. He cannot simply inherit his father’s power. An office can be transferred in an afternoon, but authority cannot. The funeral tried to convert grief into legitimacy, but the empty place where the heir should have stood left the transaction visibly unfinished.
Photo by Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images
معهد الشرق الأوسط (MEI) هو منظمة تعليمية مستقلة وغير حزبية وغير ربحية. لا يشارك المعهد في أي أنشطة دعوية، وآراء الباحثين فيه تعبر عن آرائهم الشخصية. يرحب المعهد بالتبرعات المالية، لكنه يحتفظ بالسيطرة التحريرية الكاملة على أعماله، ولا تعكس منشوراته سوى آراء المؤلفين. للاطلاع على قائمة المتبرعين للمعهد، يرجى النقر هنا.
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