Un d e r Eu r o p e’s S h a d o w
95
act was to send an army against the so-called Jangalis (forest-dwellers),
an anti-landowner movement that had been
active throughout the lush
southwest Caspian province of Gilan since 1914.
With the support of the newly victorious Bolsheviks in Russia, the
Jangalis had set up a “Persian Soviet Socialist Republic” in May 1920.
Reza Khan’s forces defeated the rebels in the summer of 1921. The bor-
der between Iran and the newly formed USSR was confirmed along the
Araxes River, dividing the region of Azerbaijan into a Soviet Republic
in the north and an Iranian province in the south. Reza Khan emerged
as Iran’s most powerful political figure, overshadowing
the Ghajar king
whose rule he was charged to defend.
C h a p t e r 7
Modernization
and Dictatorship: The
Pahlavi Years (1925–1979)
A
bandoned by his erstwhile Bolshevik supporters and on the run
from Reza Khan’s reinvigorated national army, Mirza Kuchik
Khan, fugitive leader of the short-lived Persian Soviet Socialist
Republic, took refuge in the Khalkhal Mountains of northwestern Iran
accompanied by a German-Russian adventurer known only as Gauk.
On December 2, 1921, the two revolutionaries
succumbed to frost-
bite. Their frozen corpses were discovered by a local landowner, who
decapitated Kuchik Khan and sent his head to Reza Khan in Tehran as
a show of support for the new government.
Simultaneous with Kuchik Khan’s Jangali uprising in the aftermath
of World War I, a Kurdish chieftain named Simko Shikak managed to
gain control of the region west of Lake
Urmia near the Ottoman bor-
der. Iran’s Kurdish region maintained its autonomy until 1922, when
Reza Shah crushed the rebellion and drove Simko into exile.
Emboldened by his success against the Jangalis and the Kurds,
Reza Khan spent the next several years putting down revolts by
tribal warlords throughout the country and consolidating his own
authority. By 1923 he had become powerful enough to forcibly exile
the country’s nominal ruler, Ahmad Shah,
to Europe, leaving Reza
free to assemble his own government cabinet. It soon became clear
that he was now the functioning head of state, a fact confirmed in
1925 when the parliament formally deposed Ahmad and declared
Reza to be the new shah of Iran. He took the dynastic name Pahlavi,
an ancient term meaning “heroic” that consciously evoked Iran’s
pre-Islamic past.
Impressed by the modernizing changes brought about by Atatürk,
founder of the neighboring Republic of Turkey during the 1920s,
M o d e r n i z a t i o n a n d D ic t a t o r s h i p
97
Reza Shah attempted to follow the charismatic Turkish leader’s
strong-arm model in transforming Iran into a modern nation. In ad-
dition to crushing the power of the tribes
by forcing them to settle
in villages and take up agriculture, his agenda included suppress-
ing the influence of the Shi‘ite clergy; constructing Western-style
schools, hospitals, law courts, banks,
factories, and communications
systems; and opening up the public sphere to women. In an effort
to create a unified national identity—so as to thwart regional and
ethnic separatist movements among the nomads and non-Persians
who constituted half the country’s population—he banned forms of
traditional clothing and insisted on the
use of Persian as the sole
national language.
Most of these changes were instituted by force and were often met
with strong resistance. Reza Shah’s relationship with the clergy was
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