ADULATION: Khomeini greets jubilant supporters
in Tehran
Feb. 1, 1979
The Ayatullah's Return
By Bruce van Voorst
From
the perspective of nearly 2 1/2 decades, the success of the Islamic
revolution in Iran and its monumental impact across the Islamic world
may appear to have been inevitable.
He
clutched the arm of an Air France purser as he walked down the portable
ramp to touch Iranian soil ... Iran went wild with joy ... "The holy one
has come," they shouted.
Feb. 12,
1979
It seemed like anything but certain destiny, however, to those of us
on board the Air France 747 taking Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini from
Paris to Tehran that morning in 1979. The exiled Shah's Prime Minister,
Shahpour Bakhtiar, still controlled the country and commanded the armed
forces, and our immediate concern was whether the air force might decide
that the best way to solve the problem of what to do with the radical
fundamentalist leader would be to blow us out of the sky. That threat
didn't intimidate the Ayatullah, who calmly went to sleep on the cabin
floor, resting up for his arrival in Tehran, where he would be greeted
by more than 1 million cheering supporters.
It would take eight
tumultuous days before Khomeini could wrest power from Bakhtiar, but
already in his arrival speech he abandoned earlier hints of willingness
to share power and demanded that the Prime Minister get out. Tipped off
that the military was going to arrest him, Khomeini broadcast an appeal
that brought tens of thousands of Iranians into the streets. Stores of
weapons in the mosques were flowing into the hands of Khomeini
loyalists, and a bloody civil war appeared almost certain.
Shortly
before dawn on Feb. 9, amid some fighting in downtown Tehran, I was
hunkered in a bank entrance. Virtually everyone carried a weapon, even
children. Armed revolutionaries manned checkpoints at every corner. A
boy of about 11 pointed an automatic rifle at my chest, safety off, and
asked for identification, which he couldn't read. After considerable
vacillation, the military leadership declared its neutrality. The
Ayatullah went on radio to announce, "The dictatorship has abandoned its
last trench."
That November, radical supporters seized the American
embassy, provoking a 444-day confrontation with the "Great Satan" over
52 hostages. But Khomeini never was able to reconcile the widely
divergent forces in his revolution. Top aides fled into exile or were
executed, and thousands of other Iranians were imprisoned or killed.
Iran became a deeply divided country and remains so today. Despite this,
to Khomeini's neighbors in the Arab worldincluding extremist
elements in Iraqthe Ayatullah's revolution serves as a historical
beacon.
Van Voorst was the magazine's Middle East bureau chief in
1979-80
TIME Cover
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