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Iran’s Green Revolution Gaining Traction, Sustainability
At the time, he suggested that the key for the dissident movement would be whether or not they could sustain themselves over a long period of time, because the effort to effect change would be long in coming. The good news, he said, was that the Iranian people are a very patient lot, and that there were certain common cultural traditions that might naturally aid in this sustainability. Among those traditions are a multitude of religious and political holidays that provide the Green Revolutionaries with opportunities to demonstrate. And when one of their own is killed in the regime's crackdown, that spawns a new occasion, as the seventh day of mourning has a profound religious significance for Iranians.
Yesterday, Javedanfar posted an analysis piece over at "Frontline", and it would seem that those traditions have become something of an engine for this movement, one that the regime is now basically helping to sustain:
This all tends to indicate that Iran may be drawing close to a tipping point. Javedanfar says in his article that post-Ashura, there now exists the "potential" for a "a full scale-civil disobedience campaign" that he likens to an "Iranian intifada."
"This is a battle," Javedanfar says, "that [Supreme Leader] Khamenei will find extremely difficult to win. In fact, if developments continue in their current form, they can result in significant changes to the structure of his regime, or more drastically, lead to its total demise."
Of further significance:
And also this:
RELATED:
The start of an Iranian intifada [Frontline]
'Death to Khamenei' [The Washington Independent]
One Simple Thing [Andrew Sullivan's Daily Dish]
PREVIOUSLY, on the HUFFINGTON POST:
Meir Javedanfar and Dex Torricke-Barton: Iran Will Never Be the Same Again
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Read more: Ashura, Iran, Meir Javedanfar, Iran Protests 2009, Iran Protests, The Green Revolution, World News