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Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani
and the Democratization of Post-Saddam Iraq
By Babak
Rahimi
This papedescribes the importance of
Ayatollah Sistani and his religious network in shaping post-Saddam
Iraq. This study shows how a moderate form Shi'i Islam can form a
powerful web of networks that could strengthen a future Shi'i civil
society in southern Iraq, playing a crucial role in the building of
democratic governance at the local level in major southern Iraqi
cities.
On August 26, 2004, after three weeks of
intense fighting between the Mahdi Army militia and U.S. and Iraqi
forces around the Imam Ali Mosque in Najaf, Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani brokered a cease-fire deal with the radical Shi'i cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr. In doing so, Sistani demonstrated that he will play
a pivotal role in the post-Saddam Iraq.[1]
In a show of strength against the young
upstart Sadr, the 74-year-old Ayatollah has shown once again to the
Interim Government (IIG) and Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA)
that he is a man to be reckoned with, someone who must play a
crucial role for there to be a peaceful transition to anything
resembling democracy in Iraq. Sistani's influence and his
traditional authority as a Maraji at-taqlid (a source of
imitation for those following the religious rulings of a prominent
mujtahid or scholar) continues to demonstrate that he is the
most respected and influential man in the country, appearing to
foster a more "moderate" form of Shi'i Islam and promoting the cause
of democracy.
However, the ayatollah's extent of influence
in advancing a democratic polity in Iraq continues to be a topic of
debate. Although his approval of the January 2005 election was
welcomed, Sistani's disapproval of the interim constitution
(Transitional Administrative Law) and challenge to the United States
regarding the post-interim electoral system and subsequent call for
Iraqis to protest has raised concerns about the possible negative
aspects of his influence.
For the most part, the overriding question
is to what extent could Sistani's authority be a positive factor in
the democratization of Iraq? Is it the case, as Juan Cole and
Yitzhak Nakash have suggested, that the ayatollah's alleged
adherence to "quietist" Shi'ism helps promote democracy?[2]
Could Sistani, in the words of a senior U.S. intelligence official,
"Prove to be one of the bigger forces of stability" bringing about a
peaceful transition to democracy?[3]
Or is it true, as Reuel Marc Gerecht has argued, that the
ayatollah's influence will "become a Trojan horse for hardcore
Iranian clerical influence throughout Iraq," jeopardizing the
transition of democracy in the country?[4]
It is evident that Sistani and his expanding
organizational network has proved to play a positive role in the
expansion of an Iraqi civil society throughout the country's
southern urban regions. The development of such a powerful civic
religious organization could be integral not only for the stability
of the country, but also for the advancement of independent
institutional and cultural elements organized along civic
lines.
However, while the authority and legitimacy
of the IIG continues to be threatened by militant uprising
throughout the country, the perils of Sistani's influence could lie
in the potential to influence the drafting of a permanent
Constitution in 2005 along Shari'a-based lines. The danger to
a full-fledged democracy in Iraq could also lie in the ayatollah's
possible meddling with the future judicial branch, on which the
legal protection of an inclusive and a pluralistic polity ultimately
depends.
Before examining Sistani's influence,
however, it is necessary first to consider the political dimensions
of Shi'i Islam--in particular its political-theology of state and
authority.
Between Activism
and Quietism
There is a sense in which one can argue that
Sistani clearly adheres to a "quietist" tradition in (Twelver) Shi'i
Islam. Like his mentor, Ayatollah Abu'l-Qasim Musawi Khoe'i,
Sistani's earlier severed relation to the Ba'thist regime in the
1990s demonstrates that he represents the classical, non-activist
tradition, which discourages the mujtahid from any
interference with political matters at the state level. In this
regard, Sistani can be identified with other prominent quietist
Shi'i maraji at-taqlid, namely Ayatollah Husayn Tabatab'i
Burujirdi and his successors, Ayatollahs Sayyid Kazim
Shari'atmadari, Muhammad Reza Gulpayagani and Shihabu'd-Din
Mar'ashi-Najafi, who refrained from claiming political authority and
temporal rule.
According to this tradition, which has
always been accepted by the majority of mujtahids, a cleric's
job is to study and teach theology, law, and ethics. He requests
that the principles of Islam, revealed in the holy scriptures and
traditions of the Prophet and the Imams, be respected in public
life; but he neither demands to participate in the government nor
presumes to exercise control over the state. As the general
representative or the Na'ib al-'Amm of the Hidden Imam,
Mahdi, who is believed to have gone into the "Greater Occultation"
in 941, Sistani can remain totally aloof from all political matters.
However, at a time of moral decadence and political corruption, or a
time of great injustice, he can become more active in politics by
limiting himself to advice, guidance, and the implication of sacred
law in public life.
The
dynamics between quietist and activist forms of Shi'ism is highly
complicated and a study of this topic goes well beyond the scope of
this article. However, the key point to bear in mind is that the
degree of authority that a mujtahid can exercise in political
matters has never been clearly defined in the history of Shi'i
Islam. This is predominantly the case because what determines the
level of political participation by a Shi'i cleric primarily depends
on the particular historical and social settings the mujtahid
confronts, giving him a certain leeway in creatively overcoming
problems according to his use of reason ('aql) regarding the
best application of divine law. In other words, discussing the
politics of Shi'i Islam in terms of dichotomies, namely "activism"
or "quietism," can be misleading.
An example of this flexibility and shift
between activism and quietism among the Shi'i hierarchy is best
identified in Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's political theology.
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Khomeini's involvement in politics
resembled the more quasi-activist tradition of Shi'ism, which sought
cooperation with the state in order to help the government be
grounded on Islamic law and promote justice in society. According to
this tradition, which mainly emerged under Qajar rule in
nineteenth-century Iran, the mujtahid is allowed to accept
the spiritual legitimacy of the worldly rulers, provided that they
act benevolently and justly in accordance with Shari'a.
However with the increasing influence of the
United States in Iran and the economic and moral consequences of the
White Revolution, which threatened the feudal property rights of the
absentee landlords and the moral status of the ulamas,
Khomeini began to invent a more activist political theology. This
activism involved a call for the reform of the temporal power,
replacing it with the governance of the fuqhaha (jurists) in
terms of ulama authority, an innovative political philosophy
that later became known as the doctrine of Vilayat-i Faqih.
The central point about Khomeini's change of approach to political
activism derived mainly in a shifting political situation that
created conditions in which the ayatollah felt the need to initiate
a new political philosophy, challenging centuries of traditional
Shi'i political thought.[5]
SISTANI: ACTIVIST OR
QUIETIST?
In the case of Sistani, we can also see a
change of attitude from a more quietist pre-Saddam position to a
more activist one. His message to the Interim Deputy Prime Minster
Barhm Saleh, in which he stated that the January elections should be
held as scheduled and that he would "advise the faithful to take
active part," is a strong indicator of how the Grand Ayatollah is
politically engaged in the current political process in
Iraq.[6]
There is, however, a major difference
between Khomeini and Sistani's type of political activism. Khomeini
called for the creation of an Islamic state, made up by the legal
and the public spheres operating in accordance with the Shari'a,
along with a system of governance (state) in which the
mujtahids led the political affairs. Sistani, in contrast,
envisages active participation of the ulama and the faithful
in the public and legal spheres, though refraining from political
involvement in the governmental apparatus (i.e., the state).[7]
Unlike other Shi'i Islamist groups like the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution (SCIRI) or the al-Da'wa Party, Sistani
discourages participation of the clergy in the state. It is,
therefore, in the two former spheres, the public and the legal, that
we should examine the role of Sistani in the democratization of
Iraq.
THE SISTANI CIVIC
NETWORK
The most significant contribution that
Sistani and his type of political activism could provide in
democratization and peace-making in the country lies in its
potential to strengthen Iraqi civil society. This refers to the ways
in which Sistani's growing network organization in southern cities
like Amarah, Basra, Karbala, Kufa, Najaf and Nasiriyah could cultivate
grassroots political participation to enhance civil society that
would be independent from the state but dependent on the Shi'i
citizens of Iraq.
Sistani's network association consists of
thousand of members and activists who operate a vast network
of social services--ranging from schools (madras or
hawza) to public endowments (waqf), from hospitals to
libraries--that operate Baghdad and in southern Iraqi cities. As the
most senior of the Shi'i ulama in Najaf's Hawza
al-Ilmiyah or major seminary center, the revered Grand Ayatollah
controls most of the seminaries with a large following of students
in Iraq. These seminaries are funded through donations, which since
May 2003 have financially grown stronger with the influx of foreign
capital to the southern regions of the country.
Since the fall of Saddam, the Sistani
network has emerged as the most organized religious association,
with offices spread not only throughout Iraq,
but also in Afghanistan,
Britain, Iran, Syria, the United States and even Georgia. In
addition to the Ayatollah's website, http://www.sistani.com/, which provides the faithful with
information ranging from daily news to answers about practical
questions of a religious nature, the Sistani organization also plans
to create a satellite television program to compete with other Arab
channels like al-Arabiya and al-Jazira.
With an approximate $5 million distributed
in the form of stipends for students and teachers residing in cities
like Karbala and Qum--coming mainly in donations from countries like
India, Iran, Lebanon and Pakistan--the Najaf-based Sistani
organization is growing with the ongoing transition of the Iraqi
government.[8]
Accordingly, as more pilgrims (mainly Iranians) make their way to
the holy cities, the ayatollah's financial income through religious
taxes is also likely to grow.[9]
For the most part, Sistani remains as the preeminent and
best-financed of the ayatollahs remaining in the city of Najaf, and
by extension, in Iraq.[10]
In addition, Sistani and the Najaf-based
Hawaza al-Ilmiyah are allied with SCIRI and its partner,
Iraq's oldest Shi'i political party, al-Da'wa party. Sistani's
recent call for a pan-Shi'i electoral alliance, in that now even
includes the Sadrists, brings to light not only his influence but
also the Ayatollah's potential power to expand his civic religious
network across sectarian and political partisanship, which is
unprecedented in Iraq's history. If successful, Sistani could lead
an assorted alliance of Shi'i organizations, with the financial,
political and spiritual authority to monitor over a vast religious
network in southern Iraq.
A NEW TIDE: TOWARD AN IRAQI SHI'I CIVIL
SOCIETY
Should a legitimate political state emerge
in Iraq, accompanied by the provision of general security for its
citizens, the following points identify Sistani's most significant
potential contributions to the democratization of Iraq.
Since the fall of Baghdad in April 2003, the
reemergence of Najaf as the center of Shi'i learning, with its
non-Khomeinist notion of politics, has provided new prospects for a
peaceful transition to democracy in Iraq. In this regard, the rise
of an alternative Shi'i organization in Najaf could strengthen a
moderate theology of political participation, creating a
counterweight to the radical forces and Sadrist movement in areas
like Sadr city (Baghdad) and Kufa. Thus, Sistani's stance provides
an alternative to Shi'i Khomeinism and its messianic inclination for
revolution.[11]
Second, the growth of the Sistani network
could underpin cooperation between various moderate Shi'i
organizations in Iraq and other countries in the region--most
importantly Iran. This could, in conjunction with a new democratic
state in Iraq, resurrect the long-held tradition of clerical
non-involvement at the state level, in turn influencing Iranian
ulama to support a change in the system there.[12]
In a sense, Najaf could overshadow Qum,
the current center of Khomeinist thinking, and provide the paramount
source of religious authority for Shi'i Muslims, as it did in the
nineteenth century.
Third, and most important, the development
of the Sistani organization could restructure the fragile southern
Iraqi public life into a strong civic order, diminishing the
all-pervasive state administration of society evident in the Saddam
era. The formation of diverse, independent Iraqi Shi'i network
associations, with Sistani's organization among them, could lead to
the crystallization of a Shi'i civil society unlike anything that
ever existed before under Iraqi's authoritarian past. Coupled with
the formation of various kinds of civic associations, including
secularist Shi'i, Sunni Arab, and Kurdish organizations, Iraq could
witness the rise of a robust civil society.
Central to the dynamics of a public Shi'i
Islam, however, will be its potential to challenge the secularist
liberal bias, in which democracy is assumed to embody a strict
differentiation between the political and the religious spheres,
with religion as a marginal and privatized phenomenon. In this
regard, what the Sistani organization and its potential public role
in the democratic culture of post-Saddam Iraq could involve is the
formation of a civic polity that is neither a theocracy nor a
liberal secular democracy. Rather, it can produce a democratic
order in which public Islam is compatible with not only the
principles of inclusion, competition, and accessibility, but also
with the basic logic of democratic governance--namely,
accountability and popular sovereignty.[13]
SISTANI'S "TROJAN
HORSE"
But before we hail Sistani's efforts in
fostering a stable Shi'i civil society as the panacea to
democratization in Iraq, a word of warning is in order. It should be
recalled that the ayatollah rejected the March 2004 interim
constitution not only because the veto guarantees enshrined in the
constitution could constrain the power of the Shi'i or that the
three-person presidential council (including a Shi'i, a Sunni and a
Kurd) could be a recipe for religious and ethnic division, but
mainly because, according to Sistani, the constitution did not
respect Shari'a.
According to Sistani, the transfer of power
to a sovereign Iraqi government should also maintain an Islamic
character and entail the institutionalization of Shari'a at
the legal level. The constitution should guarantee individual rights
insofar as it is consistent "with the religious facts and the social
values of the Iraqi people."[14]
In other words, Sistani wants Islamic law to be the main legal
source for a future democratic order.[15]
How Islamic Sistani wants the future permanent constitution to be
remains unclear, but it is most likely that he would like the
Shari'a to be a major, if not the sole, source of
legislation.
Although the provisional constitution
drafted by the IIG refers to Islam as a source, not "the source" of
legislation, Sistani appears to have plans to influence the legal
institution. In a way, through his appointed clerics, mainly trained
in his interpretation of Islamic law, Sistani could get involved in
the judiciary rather than the executive or legislative branches.
Sistani's recent opposition to the call by Sunni Arab and Kurdish
political factions to postpone the January 30 elections underlines
the Ayatollah's concern for possible delays of other important
deadlines in 2005 related to the writing of the permanent
constitution. As it appears, while leading to unite the Shi'i
political factions, Sistani is more concerned about a swift push for
drafting the constitution than merely making sure that elections are
to take place on time.
If Sistani manages to play a central role in
drafting the constitution, and hence gaining monopoly of the
judicial branch, the Ayatollah's influence could then threaten
pluralism and inclusion as protected by the constitution. Certain
democratic principles such as freedom of expression could come under
the danger of puritanical notions of moral conduct, enforcing
certain rules and values grounded upon a set of religious rather
than civic values and norms. Surely, it would be difficult to
recognize Sistani's call for stern codes of punishment for theft
(amputation), adultery (stoning), and apostasy (death penalty) for
converting from Islam to another religion as a positive contribution
to Iraqi's future democratic judicial system in the protection of
civil liberties.[16]
The main
problem in drafting of a permanent constitution for a new federated
state will be the extent to which Shari'a, interpreted by
Islamist groups like Sistani's Najaf-based organization, would
appear as a predominant feature in the future Iraqi legal
institution.
However, despite the fact that Shi'is
constitute 60% of Iraq's population, there is evidence that
Sistani's plan to influence the judiciary will, most likely, face
stiff opposition from the Iraqi public. According to the most recent
polls (November 2004), only 37.9% of Iraqis, mainly Sunnis, consent
that "religion has a special role to play in the government."[17]
It is interesting to note that most Iraqi Shi'is rejected the idea
of Islamic government 66% to 27%. Although most Iraqis appear to
strongly agree that "religious" candidates should become Iraq's
future political leaders, the polls also show that most Iraqis want
a separation between religious and state authority.[18]
But the exact "separation" between these two
spheres of authority remains unknown, since the future Iraqi
(permanent) constitution is yet to be drafted. Here, two scenarios
are possible. If Sistani is successful to lead a strong pan-Shi'i
electoral alliance in January 2005, hence marginalizing the Arab
Sunni and Kurdish population, then we could see an increase of Shi'i
Islamist influence at the electoral organizational level to shape
the future Iraqi legal sphere. If Sistani, however, fails to put
together a Shi'i alliance, the ayatollah could see his civic network
and possible plans to draft a Shari'a based constitution
marginalized in the coming political order. Under such
circumstances, he might reject the newly elected government and feel
compelled to call his followers to resist the new democratic
political order and the occupation authorities for a future that may
be determined by armed conflict involving the Shi'i population.
But the above-suggested scenarios are only
speculations, which their reality cannot be determined until the end
of elections next year. It remains to be seen how effectively
Sistani will be able to wield his influence as a way of empowering
the Shi'i Islamist groups; the chances are that he will be of great
significance unless certain legal limitations are placed before he
helps draft the constitution.
THE POST-SISTANI SHI'I
IRAQ
With these caveats in mind, however the most
troubling aspect of Sistani's influence could lie with respect to
the impact of his death. Since the 74-year-old cleric has not yet
appointed a successor, it remains unclear what sort of political
vacuum his death could create in the Shi'i Iraqi community.
Who
will replace Sistani? The Qum-based Grand Ayatollah Kazem al-Haeri
could emerge as a strong candidate. But Haeri's Khomeinist position,
with a strong belief in the ideology of Velayat-i Faqih,
could cause serious problem for the democratization of Iraq.
Although Haeri could limit the growth of the Sadrist movement, the
Iran-based ayatollah will nevertheless have a limited role in the
future of the country. The Iraqi-based Grand Ayatollahs Muhammad
Isahq Fayadh and Bashir Hussein al-Najafi, the two other Marja'at
at-taqlids from the non-Khomeinist Shi'i school of thought,
could also emerge as strong candidates. Although they are not at the
level of Sistani, their status could increase with the death of
Sistani, and correspondingly the influence of their organizations.
The
main question though is whether Sistani will appoint a successor in
a near future. Like his predecessor, Ayatollah Khoe'i, his ruling
may come as the political situation in Iraq continues to face
increasing security problems. The need to declare a successor by
Sistani would therefore become more urgent in order to avoid the
vacuum of religious leadership in the Shi'i community.
CONCLUSION
With these possible scenarios in mind, a few
tentative conclusions may be drawn. Since the transition to
democracy in Iraq has been sailing into a very turbulent sea of
violence and a rising tide of factionalism and sectarianism, the
attempt to foster a stable post-Saddam civil society with the
backing of a centralized state will prove to be most challenging.
Until such institutions take shape and attain legitimacy, an Iraqi
Shi'i civil society will remain more theoretical than a reality.
However, despite these problems, democracy's prospect has never been
more favorable in Iraq.
With regard to the growth of civil society
among the Shi'i population, it is far too early to tell what will
take place in Iraq--especially after the death of Sistani. So
far, it is the Sadrist movement that appears to gradually gain more
strength with its ability to organize and mobilize the impoverished
young Shi'i--especially in urban areas. The militant Sunni
Islamists, too, have begun to show off their political clout, as
Sunni cities like Ramadi continue to defy the rule of the IIG and
the military power of the coalition forces--even with the onslaught
of military operations in the city of Falluja.
But to what extent could Ayatollah Sistani
influence Iraq's progress of democracy is likely to depend on how
the IIG, and the coalition forces that enforce its activities, will
manage the constitution and election questions, and how smoothly the
transition can take place to establish a sovereign, elected Iraqi
government.
In particular, the IIG will do well to
consider both the negative and positive aspects of Sistani's
authority for the future of Iraq and acknowledge its potential to
foster civil society and create a full-fledged democracy, while
simultaneously recognizing how his influence could also undermine a
democratic political order. In broad terms, the transition of
democracy in Iraq is going to need a careful cooperation between the
state with various local and network organizations in the Sunni,
Kurdish and Shi'i enclaves.
The process is going to be complicated and
it will require an ongoing, thorough examination of the various
emerging organizations that will lay the foundation for the future
of Iraqi civil society. However, until a centralized federated state
with a monopoly of indigenous military force is established, the
prospects of democracy in Iraq will remain a distant glimmer.
NOTES
[1] The present article, a
preliminary version of which was read as a paper at the American
Political Science Association Conference at Chicago September 2004,
has benefited from the comments of a number of colleagues and
professors. I would like to thank Svet Andreev, Anisseh Van Engelend
Nourai, Ahmed Jiyad, Masoud Kazemzadeh, Rachael Rudolph, Karen
Ruffle and Emma Swart for providing useful comments and critical
feedback, enabling me to further clarify my arguments in the earlier
version of the article.
[3]
"Dealing with the Cleric," Time, February 2, 2004.
[4]
Reuel Marc Gerecht, "The Standoff with Iraqi Shiites over Direct
Elections," American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy
Research, February, 2004, http://www.aei.org/.
[5]
For the best exposition of Khomeini's political activism, see Ervand
Abrahamian, Khomeinism (London: I.B. Tauris, 1993).
[6]
"Sistani Supports Elections," Arab News, October 29, 2004.
Sistani has even claimed that failure to register is a "betrayal of
the nation," declaring it a religious obligation. See "The election
season begins," Economist, November 6, 2004.
[7]
It is interesting to note that Ayatollah Sistani refused to take
part in Khomeini's lectures during his stay in Najaf in the 1960s
and 1970s. When Khomeini came to power in Iran after the 1979
revolution, the new regime confiscated Ayatollah Khoei's properties
in Mashhad, where he was born in 1929, and threatened Sistani's
relatives in Mashhad and the southeastern Iranian city of Zabol.
[8]
For a rough account of Sistani's financial sources, see Sandro
Magister, "Shiite Islam: The Grand Ayatollah Sistani Wants Najaf as
the Capital," April, 3, 2004, http://www.chiesa/. The
monetary income of the Sistani organization is unknown; the actual
number is yet to be determined.
[9]
Vali Nasr, "Understanding Sistani's Role," Washington Post,
April 19, 2004.
[10]
Although the precise financial income of the organization remains
unknown, it is most likely the case that, being the most influential
of all Iraq's Shi'i clerics, Sistani maintains the highest source of
revenues from his followers around the world on an annual basis.
[11]
For a study of the Sadrists as a sectarian youth movement, see Juan
Cole, "The United States and Shi'ites Religious Factions in
Post-Ba'thist Iraq," Middle East Journal, Vol. 57, No. 4,
autumn 2003.
[12]
This argument can also be extended to Lebanon, where Shaykh Muhammad
Hussein Fadlallah, the spiritual leader of Hizbollah, has echoed
calls by the Sunni Muslim groups at al-Azhar University in Cairo for
a jihad against the coalition forces. Sistani's status as an
undisputed leading mujtahid can overshadow the radicalism of
Shaykh Fadlallah and, with the increasing prominence of Najaf, end
his dream to make Lebanon as a center for Arab Shi'is.
[13]
According to Armando Salvatore and Dale F. Eickelman, public Islam
"refers to the highly diverse invocations of Islam as ideas and
practices that religious scholars, self-ascribed religious
authorities, secular intellectuals, and many others make to civic
debate and public life. In this 'public' capacity, 'Islam' makes a
difference in configuring the politics and social life of large
parts of the globe, and not just for self-ascribed religious
authorities. It makes this difference not only as a template for
ideas and practices but also as a way of envisioning alternative
political realities and, increasingly, in acting on both global and
local stages, thus reconfiguring established boundaries of civil and
social life." Armando Salvatore and Dale F. Eickelman, editors,
Public Islam and the Common Good (Leiden: Brill, 2004), p.
xii.
[16]
This problem is mainly evident with the IIG's declaration that laws
governing marriage and child custody would follow Islamic rules and
practices— a huge obstacle in developing women's rights in
post-Saddam Iraq.
[18]
The Zogby poll of four cities shows that 60% of Iraqis rejected an
Islamic state, while only 33 % desired it. Ibid, p. 19.
Dr. Babak Rahimi has
recently received his PhD from the Department of Political and
Social Sciences at the European University Institute in Florence,
Italy.
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