- Mirza Reza Kermani
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Mirza Reza Kermani (in Persian: میرزارضا کرمانی), born in Kerman, Iran and died on August 10, 1896 in Tehran, was an adherent of Jamal al-Din al-Afghani and an Iranian revolutionary.[1]
He and other followers of al-Afghani were demanding that the Qajar dynasty rule Iran justly. After al-Afghani was expelled from Iran by the Qajars, Kermani began to openly and publicly criticize Qajar officials. Eventually Kermani was imprisoned, his wife divorced him, and his son was made into a servant.[2]
On April 30, 1896, Kermani assassinated Nasser-al-Din Shah in the Shah Abdol Azim shrine.[3] After months of interrogation, Kermani was executed on August 10, 1896 in order to be used as an example. Kermani's assassination of Nasser-al-Din Shah and the subsequent execution marked a turning point in Iranian political thought that would ultimately lead to the Iranian Constitutional Revolution during Mozzafar-al-Din Shah's turbulent reign; the Constitutional Revolution was the first major democratic movement in the modern Middle East.
According to Professor Nahid Pirnazar at UCLA, he is reported to have said "I had a chance to kill him (the Shah) before, but I didn't because the Jews were celebrating their picnic after the 8th day of Passover. I did not want the Jews to be accused of killing the Shah.[citation needed]
References
- ^ Dabashi, Hamid. Iran: A People Interrupted. Page 67. The New Press. Accessed 28-01-2008.
- ^ Dabashi, Hamid. Iran: A People Interrupted. Page 68. The New Press. Accessed 28-01-2008.
- ^ "Historical Personalities: Mirza Reza Kermani" Iran Chamber. Accessed 28-01-2008.
Categories:- 19th-century births
- 1896 deaths
- 1896 crimes
- People from Kerman
- Iranian activists
- Regicides
- Iranian people stubs
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