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key UQKZDWVY
title The Bare Life of Iranian Bahā'īs : The Case of Shāhrūd, 1944
author Yazdani, Mina
authority
control
Mina Yazdani
item typeJournal article
publication year2023
date2023
publication titleJerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam
abstract noteThis article explores the persecution of the Bahāʾīs in Iran in the first half of the 1940s. Drawing on primary sources including government documents, memoirs, newspaper articles, and the correspondence of the Bahāʾī institutions of the time, it focuses on interactions between the Shīʿī clerics, the people who followed them, the government (both central and local), and the Bahāʾīs. It proposes that the chaotic period of 1941–1944 in Allied-occupied Iran—with an increase in the religious activities of Bahāʾīs, a resurgence in the power of the ʿulamāʾ, weak and unstable cabinets, a young and inexperienced king, and governments unwilling or unable to protect Bahāʾīs—created what Giorgio Agamben (b. 1942) calls a “state of exception.” Taking a microhistorical approach, the article then focuses on events in the north-central city of Shāhrūd in 1944, when, after a period of threats and tension, Bahāʾīs were killed and their houses were plundered. Using Agamben’s conceptualizations, the article proposes that in that “state of exception,” in the “camp” of Shāhrūd Bahāʾīs fell into the category of homo sacer: forcibly reduced to the state of “bare life,” deprived of the right to live, outside the country’s legitimate social life.
pages415-450
volume54
languageEnglish
manual tagsIRAN; PERSECUTION; 1940s; SHAHRUD

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