- Tobacco Protest
The Tobacco Protest, a
Shi'a clerical-led revolt against tobacco concessions granted to the Western imperial power ofGreat Britain , occurred inPersia (Iran) in 1891. The protest was one of the first times the Iranian religious elite succeeded in forcing the government to retreat from a policy, and was seen as a demonstration that "theShia ulama were Iran's first line of defense" againstcolonialism . [Nasr, Vali, "The Shia Revival", Norton, (2006), p.117]Overview
In March 1890
Nasir al-Din Shah granted atobacco concession to a British company, Imperial Tobacco Company. The concession gave the company exclusive rights to produce, sell, and export all of Iran's large tobacco crop in exchange for an annual payment of 15,000 British Pounds and 25% of annual profits. Theshah was badly in need of money and had granted many such concessions toEurope an governments before.The tobacco crop was valuable not only because of the domestic market, but because Iranians cultivated a variety of tobacco "much prized in foreign markets" and not grown elsewhere. Prices were to be mutally agreed upon by the company and the Iranian sellers with disputes settled by compulsory arbitration. [Mottahedeh, Roy, "The Mantle of the Prophet : Religion and Politics in Iran", One World, Oxford, 1985, 2000, p.215] At the time the Persian tobacco industry employed over 200,000 people.
Outrage at the concession in Iran "was nearly universal," [Mottahedeh, "The Mantle of the Prophet", (1985, 2000), p.215] and described as "an outburst of religious and national feeling over what seemed to many Persians to be the surrender of their country and its resources into the hands of foreigners and infidels." [ [http://www.jstor.org/view/00220507/di975605/97p0823u/0 review] in "Journal of Economic History," 1968, p.697-698 by J.B. Kelly of "Religion and Rebellion in Iran" by Nikki R. Keddie ] Mass protests against the concession were held, many of them organized by
Shi'a ulama had a strong independent power base to attack the shah's position. By the end of the summer of 1881 there were open protests in Tabriz where mullahs stopped teaching and merchants closed the bazaar.Earlier that year in January, pan-Islamist activist Sayyed
Jamal al-Din al-Afghani was evicted from a sanctuary in the capitalTehran where he had been preaching against the Shah, and dumped across the border into Mesopotamia. He responded by writing a plea toGrand Ayatollah Mirza Shirazi , to "save and defend [the] country" from "this criminal who has offered the provinces of the land of Iran to auction amongst the Great Powers." [Mottahedeh, "The Mantle of the Prophet", (1985, 2000), p.216-7] That December, from his home in Samarra (then part of theOttoman empire ) Shirazi issued afatwa against the usage of tobacco. In a show of solidarity, Iranian merchants responded by shutting down the main bazaars throughout the country. It is said the women in the shah's harem quit smoking and his servants refused to prepare his water pipe. [Nasr, Vali, "The Shia Revival", Norton, (2006), p.122]By January 1892, when the Shah saw that the British government "was waffling in its support for the Imperial Tobacco Company," he canceled the concession. [Mottahedeh, "The Mantle of the Prophet", (1985, 2000), p.218] By January 26, Shirazi issued another fatwa repealing the first and permitting tobacco use, "and Iranians began smoking again." The fatwa has been called a "stunning" demonstration of the power of the "
Marja taqlid," [Mottahedeh, "The Mantle of the Prophet", (1985, 2000), p.218] and the protest itself has been cited as one of the issues that led to thePersian Constitutional Revolution .See also
*
Iran-Britain relations
*Persian Constitutional Revolution
*Tobacco fatwa and Smoking in IslamExternal links
* [http://www.irtobacco.com Iranian Tobacco Company official site]
References and notes
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