PRISDENT KHATAMI of Iran has won a significant
battle against Islamic hardliners by securing an exit visa for the
country's leading intellectual dissident, who advocates less clerical
involvement in government.
After an intense behind-the-scenes wrangle,
Professor Abdolkarim Soroush was allowed at the eleventh hour to fly to
Cyprus to address a conference on political Islam and the West. Professor
Soroush, who studied at London University, said in Nicosia: "I am trying
to give a new understanding of the content of Islam to make it more
compatible with the age we are living in."
In doing so, the mild-mannered philosopher is
challenging what clergy insists is their God-given right to be the sole
interprets of Islam, an argument they use to justify their rule. "There
cannot be any official interpretation of Islam, there cannot be any
official class of interpreter of Islam", the professor said, adding that
the clergy should "make room for others to have put forward their own
interoperations."
Professor Soroush, 52, has been dismissed from
his teaching post at a research institute and banned form speaking at
Tehran University, where one of his last lectures, attended by thousands,
was disrupted by mob of bearded street bullies brandishing a noose. Most
newspapers dare not mention his name, let alone publish his articles. His
passport was confiscated in July. Yet many of his 20 books remain
bestsellers.
"He is making people think about the
philosophical foundations of Islam and how people can wed Islam and
democracy," said Dr Farideh Farhi, a lecturer in politics and
international affairs at Tehran University. The Iranian Foreign Ministry
hand assured the organisers of the Cyprus conference that Professor
Soroush would be able to attend. But others said to be close to the office
of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, objected even though Mr
Khatami and the former President, Hashemi Rafsanjani, supported the
professor. The President finally got his way, but only after the
conference had begun.
"You can take it as a healthy sign," said
Professor Soroush, who acknowledged that the President, said to be persona
friend, hand played an important role in securing the return of his
passport.
Things were looking up for intellectuals since
Mr Khatami's surprise victory six months ago, but the President faced
"formidable" challenges, said the reclusive professor, who has no
political ambitions: "He knows what political freedom or intellectual
freedom means, and he knows that there are many enemies there to restrict
these freedoms."