Amid Israel-Iran war, this nondescript Uttar Pradesh village linked to Khomeini is back in the public eye

admin

Amid Israel-Iran war, this nondescript Uttar Pradesh village linked to Khomeini is back in the public eye



In fact, the Musavis claim descent from the Prophet through his daughter and the seventh Shia Imam — Musa-al-Kazim.The Kazmis in Kintoor say that it was a legacy which came full circle with the Musavis journeying from Nishapur in Iran to Kintoor and then back to Iran again.Local residents still point to the remnants of ‘Syed Wada’, the Musavi family’s ancestral residence in Kintoor. The once expansive structure has withered with time, but people still regard it as a sacred marker.Syed Wada, the house, though decayed, bears witness to a journey that helped forge the Islamic Republic of Iran. “Visitors from Lucknow and even farther come here just to see this place,” said Sajjad Rizvi, another local resident. With tensions running high in West Asia, many villagers in Kintoor openly express solidarity with Iran.“We are Indians, but our sentiments are with Iran. That’s the land where our bloodline now walks. The West and Israel are shedding innocent blood. We stand against injustice,” said Imran Naqvi, a local youth.Musavi’s legacy lived on in his grandson Khomeini, born in 1902 in the Iranian city of Khomein. Raised by his mother, he became a scholar of Islamic law, mysticism, and philosophy. He read widely, including the works of western thinkers, which shaped his revolutionary worldview.In 1979, Khomeini led the Islamic Revolution that dislodged Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, ending Iran’s monarchy and establishing a theocratic republic. He became its first supreme leader.After Khomeini’s death in 1989, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei took over as the supreme leader. Today, he’s at the helm as Iran grapples with another major crisis.



Source link