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Ahmad Khomeini

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Nationality
  
Iranian

Religion
  
Islam


Name
  
Ahmad Khomeini

Role
  
Ahmad Khomeini khameneiahmadkhomeini1 Rebher39s Photo blog

Born
  
15 March 1946 (
1946-03-15
)
Qom, Iran

Known for
  
Son of Ruhollah Khomeini and Khadijeh Saqafi

Died
  
March 17, 1995, Tehran, Iran

Spouse
  
Fatemeh Soltani Tabatabai (m. ?–1995)

Parents
  
Ruhollah Khomeini, Khadijeh Saqafi

Children
  
Hassan Khomeini, Seyyed Yaser Khomeini, Syed Ali Khomeini

Grandchildren
  
Fereshteh Khomeini, Narges Khomeini, Ahmad Khomeini, Mohammad Hadi Khomeini

Similar People
  
Ruhollah Khomeini, Hassan Khomeini, Mostafa Khomeini, Khadijeh Saqafi, Zahra Mostafavi Khomeini

Iran - Khomeini's Son Dies


Iran - Khomeini Buried


Sayyid Ahmad Khomeini (Persian: سید احمد خمینی‎‎;‎ 15 March 1946 – 16 March 1995) was the younger son of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and father of Hassan Khomeini. He was the "right-hand" of his father before, during and after the revolution of Iran. He was a link between Ruholah Khomeini and officials and people. He had several decision-making positions.

Contents

Ahmad Khomeini khameneiahmadkhomeini3 Rebher39s Photo blog

He died because of a heart disease and was buried next to his father.

Ahmad Khomeini Khomeini and Pahlavis of the World Golbarg Bashi

Early life and education

Ahmad Khomeini Imam Khomeini and his son Sayed Ahmad Khomeini The

Ahmad Khomeini was born in Qom on 14 March 1946, where he did his primary and secondary education in Owhadi and Hakin Nezami school, respectively. and then started seminary studies and accomplished primary and secondary hawza courses. He secretly joined his father, Ruhollah Khomeini, after his father was exiled to Najaf.

Career and activities

Ahmad was regarded as Khomeini's "right-hand man", the "torch-bearer for his father's anti-Western radicalism" and was close to his father, the leader of the Iranian Revolution of 1979. He helped coordinate affairs during and after the Iranian Revolution, in Khomeini's office in Najaf, Paris and subsequent to the ayatollah's return to Iran in February 1979. He used to visit the deprived areas to learn their shortages and reported his findings to Imam Khomeini. His letters containing the issues he had encountered is available. He was among the officials went through Fatah training.

His political life career commenced after death of his brother, Mostafa. In the 6 years after the death of his father, he had several decision-making positions. He served as his father's chief of staff until his father's death in 1989. From the summer of 1988 to 1989, death of Khomeini, he was one of the decision-makers in all official issues along with Rafsanjani and Khamenei. He was a member of Iran's Supreme National Security Council without assuming any executive position. He was a member of Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution by Ali Khamenei's official order. He became the overseer of the Mausoleum of Khomeini. He spoke against America, Israel and what he called "exploitative Iranian capitalists," on several occasions.

During hostage crisis

During the Iran hostage crisis, he had a "prominent role" and made "tough anti-American statements". According to the hostages, after Ahmad's visit to the then taken over embassy, he greeted the students and congratulated them for their action. Emphasizing on that some of the hostages were CIA agents based on the discovered documents, he repeated his father's threat "to put some of the captives on trial for spying" if the recently toppled Shah was "not returned to Iran."

During Iran-Iraq war

During the war, he had an important role reporting government general issues to his father and relaying the Imam's messages to officials and others. He also used to act as counsel for his father and other high-ranking officials.

Letter to Ayatollah Montazeri

On 29 April 1989, Ahmad Khomeini wrote a "more than three pages" letter addressing Ayatollah Monatzeri saying that he was regretful for Monatzeri's being heedless of "Imam's calls." Producing a list of accusations, Ahmad Khomeini tried to show that Montazeri's leadership would be harmful to the revolution. "Was it not because of your affection for Mehdi Hashemi that you created so many problems for Islam and the revolution?" said Ahmad Khomeini in a part of the letter. In response, Montazeri defended Mehdi Hashemi, an Iranian Shia cleric who was defrocked later, and said that he would "stay away from politics."

Personal life

His wife was Fatemeh Soltani Tabatabai, daughter of Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Bagher Soltani Tabatabai Borujerdi, niece of Imam Musa Sadr, the Shia religious leader of Lebanon. She was also the sister of Sadegh Tabatabai.

Death

Khomeini suffered a cardiac arrest on 12 March 1995, and went into a coma. He died five days later, on 17 March 1995, hours after being connected to life support machinery. Iran government announced two days of national mourning after Ahmad Khomeini's death. Ahmad Khomeini is entombed next to his father in a grand shrine south of Tehran, where his son, Hassan Khomeini, is the superintendent.

At least one author regarded his death as suspicious, stating that "he died in his sleep", without mentioning the heart attack five days prior and subsequent coma. According to Assembly of the Forces of Imam's Line, Tehran times reported that the rumors regarding Ahmad Khomeini's death was originally published by, Alireza Nourizadeh, an England spy. His son, Hassan Khomeini, called the rumors baseless and repeated that they were created by an England spy.

Reception

Ahmads's father, Ruhollah, described him as such:

"I bear witness that since the time my son Ahmad has entered the issues of the day, had contact with my works up to the present time I am writing these few lines, I have not experienced a single case of violation of my orders. In statements, communique and the like, he has not garbled or interfered in them without my satisfaction, nor has he attributed anything contrary to my words. In a word, I have not observed any offence from him."

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Current supreme leader of Iran, described him as who solved many problems and did many things throughout the revolution. Khamenei called him capable and a unique and necessary element besides Khomeini. According to Ayatollah Mohammad Fazel Lankarani, Ahmad was a strong column, a capable arm for the government, supreme leader and the officials.

References

Ahmad Khomeini Wikipedia