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some good news from Iran

🔗Dante Rosati <dante.interport@...>

6/26/2002 10:57:13 AM

I'm forwarding the text because you cant access the ny times website without
subscribing.

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IRAN'S THIRD WAVE
By Thomas L. Friedman
New York Times
June 16, 2002

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/06/16/opinion/16FRIE.html?todaysheadlines

Iran has the bomb. I know. I found it.

No, no � not that bomb. This bomb is hiding in plain sight � in high
schools, universities and coffee houses. It is a bomb that is ticking away
under Iranian society, and over the next decade it will explode in ways that
will change the face of this Islamic Republic. It's called here, for short,
"The Third Generation."

The first generation of Iranian revolutionaries overthrew the Shah in 1979
and founded the Islamic Republic. They are now old, gray and increasingly
tired, a clerical regime clinging to power more by coercion than by any
popular acceptance of their plan to Islamize all aspects of Iranian life.
The second generation came of age during the 1980's Iran-Iraq war, which
left 286,000 Iranians dead and 500,000 injured. This is a lost generation,
deflated and quiescent.

The third generation are those Iranians from 16 to 30 who have come of age
entirely under Islamic rule. They never knew the Shah's despotism. They have
known only the ayatollahs'. There are now 18 million of them � roughly a
third of Iran's population � and they include 2 million university students
and 4 million recent university grads.

"As with most revolutions, this third generation has no special sympathy for
the founders of the revolution � in fact they blame our generation for
bringing them a government they feel doesn't know how to run the country
properly," observed Mohsen Sazgara, a former aide to Ayatollah Khomeini and
now a top reformer. "They are the most significant population group in Iran
[until the fourth generation, the 24 million Iranians under 16, comes of
age], and wherever this generation decides to go is where Iran will go in
the next decade."

Where this Third Generation wants to go is already apparent. While some of
them are religious conservatives, most are not. They are young, restless,
modern-looking and often unemployed, because there are not enough good jobs.
They are connected to the world via the Internet or satellite dishes � and
they like what they see. They want the good life, a good job, more
individual freedom and more connections with the outside world � and they
are increasingly angry that they don't have those things. They embrace
Islam, but they don't want it to occupy every corner of their lives.

"They are not anti-religious, but they are anti-fundamentalism � they refuse
to be blind followers of anything," says Hamidreza Jalaeipour, a sociology
professor. His 19-year-old son, Mohammadreza, nods vigorously in agreement.

The government has already had to ease up in response to them. When I was
last here, six years ago, a friend took me to see an Iranian guitarist who
had an electric guitar but could only play songs in his bedroom, because pop
music had been banned. Today he is giving public concerts of Iranian pop
songs and cutting CD's. When I was last here women had to be covered in
black robes and their hair could not show. Now the robes are multicolored
and many push back their head scarves to show their hair. When the mullahs
shout at them, many young women shout right back. The most popular Iranian
films today are those that mock the hypocrisy of the theocracy, including
one now playing in Tehran about a 15-year-old Iranian girl who has a child
out of wedlock and decides to keep the baby, and another about a mother who
runs off with her daughter's fianc�.

This Third Generation of Iranians is quite different from its counterpart in
Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia is a country getting younger, poorer, more
Islamic and more anti-American � as young Saudis react against what they
consider a corrupt, irreligious, pro-American regime. Iran is a country
getting younger, poorer, less Islamic and less anti-American � as young
Iranians react against an anti-American theocracy, isolating them from the
world.

When Iran got the telegraph in the early 1900's it helped trigger the first
constitutional revolution against the despotic Qajar regime. When telephones
and tape cassettes spread around Iran in the 1970's, they became tools
through which Ayatollah Khomeini spread his revolution against the Shah.
Today the Internet and satellite TV have come to Iran, bringing with them
new appetites and aspirations for Iran's Third Generation.

This Third Generation hoped President Khatami's reformist candidacy would
satisfy those aspirations, but he proved to be a bust, unwilling to confront
the conservatives. No matter. The Third Generation will eventually find a
new political horse to ride and, when it does, Iran will change � with or
without the ayatollahs' blessings.