Khamenei’s New Poem: Pure Wine and Deadly Poison

Khamenei’s New Poem: Pure Wine and Deadly Poison
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Khamenei’s New Poem: Pure Wine and Deadly Poison

Khamenei’s New Poem: Pure Wine and Deadly Poison

The annual poetry congress in Tehran, held last Monday, included what state-owned controlled media have described as an “historic literary event” which, according to one establishment literary commentator, Muhammad-Ali Mojahedi, electrified those present.

The “event” was the public reading of a new ghazal (sonnet) by the Supreme Guide Ayatollah Ali Khamenei whose poetical ambitions date back to his early youth more than 60 years ago. He has often said that he wished he had spent more time and energy on his poetry rather than on politics and in anecdotal accounts of his life has depicted himself as a disciple of such great contemporary poets as Amiri Firuz-Kuhi and Muhammad Qahreman.

However, still unsure of how the public might receive his poetry, Khamenei, who uses “Amin” as his literary sobriquet (takhallos in Arabic) has always shied away from publishing a diwan or even reciting his poems in public. But because few poets could resist the temptation of reading his work to others, the “Supreme Guide” holds occasional private recitals of his poetry for a handful of confidants who have sworn never to reveal to others what they have heard.

Thus last Monday was a rare occasion when Khamenei overcame his fear of not pleasing an audience agreed to have his latest work recited to an audience of fellow poets and aspiring poets.

To be sure, Khamenei isn’t the first political leader to harbor poetical ambitions. Both Josef Stalin and Mao Zedong wrote poetry. And Iran’s own Nassereddin Shah spent more time committing poetry than running the country.

But how good is Khamenei’s new ghazal?

To start with, by classical standards it is one line (beyt) short. The standard classical ghazal consists of a minimum of seven lines (abyat) and a maximum of 13. Khamenei has stopped at six lines. Next, Khamenei’s work moves away from the classical ghazal’s thematic unity in diversity in which each line seems to have an independent content while indirectly linked to the content of other lines.

Here, Khamenei geos for a very modern introspective style in which all the lines (abyat) come together to depict the poet’s mood at a certain moment in time.

But what is this mood? As you would see in the translation of the poem which follows, the ghazal depicts the poet as a disturbed person, divided against himself and struggling with the pull of events.
Khamenei has chosen one of the favorite meters (owzan in Arabic) of the great Persian Sufi poet Molawi (known in the West as Roumi), originally developed by Arab poets of the pre-Islamic era including Labid, Zuhair Ibn Abi-Salma and the black slave warrior Antar Ibn Shaddad. This meter is extremely rhythmic and pre-Islamic (Jahiliyyah) poets regarded it as suitable for war poetry being recited with the beating of drums.

In contrast, Molwai and other Persian poets, for example Athireddin Akhsikati and Khaju Kermani used it to accompany Sufi-style dance that includes gyration to the beat of a small drum (tablah). The meter (wazn) is the double alternation of one long and one short syllable: mufta’alan mufta’al, mufta’alan mufta’al, perfect for inciting warriors to combat or inspiring Sufis to gyrate.

In his ghazal, Khamenei has gone for an interesting rhyming scheme usually used by Persian poets to evoke sorrow.

The rhyme in question uses words that contain the Arabic letter M (mim) twice like two wings of a wounded bird, inspiring a sense for forlornness. At the same time because the letter “mim” isn’t a loud one it helps create an atmosphere of intimacy, as if the poet was whispering his sufferings in your ear. However, the poet cannot keep up the chosen rhyme scheme, as for example, Amiri- Firuzkuhi or Hushang Ebtehaj would, all through the ghazal. Thus three of the six lines (abyat) stick to the scheme while three others offer words that contain only one “mim”. In two lines the Arabic letter L (lam) replaces the letter “mim”.

Such imperfections, however, don’t do much damage to the ghazal as a whole which is well crafted in terms of prosody. The poem also evokes some of the classical concerns of the Sufis as to how to liberate oneself from one’s earthly reality in the hope of reaching for a greater transcendental truth.

Khamenei uses many clichés of classical Persian poetry, including being “drunk, utterly gone”, “pure wine”, and “the skirt of love.”

Reading too much politics in this short ghazal may be out of order. However, one cannot ignore the fact that the man currently ruling Iran appears unsure of his impact on life, feels he is the victim of some unspecified injustice and sees a schizophrenic “Id” (in the Freudian sense) that is “sometimes pure wine, sometimes deadly poison.”

He craves after purity but sees himself as a “synthetic mix” which makes him cry. At times, this divided “Id” plants his claws into his own “bleeding heart”. At other times it attacks his “own flock like a wolf.”
All in all, I liked the ghazal, maybe because I am a sucker for classical Persian styles of poetry.

But, here is the translation of the ghazal by the” Supreme Guide”, judge for yourself:

I am disturbed by the cacophony in me
I wish I could get out of self-absorption

Pulls me this way and that like a straw
Obsession with this and that, capriciousness of the self

I have plunged my claws into my bleeding heart
Like a wolf I have attacked my own flock

At times I am pure wine, at others deadly poison
I cry out of the synthetic mix that I am

I am a child, resting my head on the skirt of love
Hoping that lullaby will release me from my ego.

I am drunk, utterly gone, Amin, heedless of was and is
From whom can I seek redress for the injustice done to me?



Report: Israel Faces Possible Shortage of Interceptor Missiles

An Arrow II missile interceptor is displayed in front of journalists at an Israeli air defense command in the Palmahim military base south of Tel Aviv May 12, 2011. (Reuters)
An Arrow II missile interceptor is displayed in front of journalists at an Israeli air defense command in the Palmahim military base south of Tel Aviv May 12, 2011. (Reuters)
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Report: Israel Faces Possible Shortage of Interceptor Missiles

An Arrow II missile interceptor is displayed in front of journalists at an Israeli air defense command in the Palmahim military base south of Tel Aviv May 12, 2011. (Reuters)
An Arrow II missile interceptor is displayed in front of journalists at an Israeli air defense command in the Palmahim military base south of Tel Aviv May 12, 2011. (Reuters)

Israel is encountering a potential shortage of rocket and missile interceptors in its air defenses, reports revealed on Tuesday a day after the country’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant admitted Israel needs US support in air armament.

The Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper said that during the security review presented to Israeli ministers Monday, Gallant was asked about armaments.

He replied that there was a large gap when he entered the Defense Ministry, which he instructed to be filled before the start of the war.

Gallant said, “We are still dependent in air armaments and American planes,” but he clarified that “we are working with all our might to promote blue-white production and the development of independence” on the issue of armaments.

Gallant’s comments were confirmed by the London-based Financial Times, which on Tuesday said that Israel faces a severe shortage of interceptor missiles, detailing how the US is rushing to help close the gaps.

According to the report, the Pentagon on Sunday announced the deployment of the THAAD system that will arrive in Israel, in preparation for the expected attack in Iran, which could lead to further regional escalation.

“Israel’s munitions issue is serious,” Dana Stroll, a former senior official at the US Department of Defense, responsible for the Middle East, explained to the newspaper.

“If Iran responds to an Israel attack [with a massive air strike campaign], and Hezbollah joins in too, Israel air defenses will be stretched,” she said, adding that US stockpiles are not limitless. “The US can’t continue supplying Ukraine and Israel at the same pace. We are reaching a tipping point,” she added.

Replenishing stocks

Boaz Levy, chief executive of Israel Aerospace Industries, a state-owned company which makes the Arrow interceptors used to shoot down ballistic missiles, told the newspaper he is running triple shifts to keep production lines running.

“Some of our lines are working 24 hours, seven days a week. Our goal is to meet all our obligations,” Levy said, adding that the time required to produce interceptor missiles is “not a matter of days”.

While Israel does not disclose the size of its stockpiles, he added: “It is no secret that we need to replenish stocks.”

The British newspaper explained that until this week, Israel's three-tiered air defense systems have succeeded in intercepting most of the UAVs and missiles fired by Iran and its proxies at the country.

The Iron Dome system intercepted short-range rockets and UAVs fired by Hamas from Gaza, while the David Slingshot intercepted heavier rockets fired from Lebanon, and the Arrow system stopped ballistic missiles from Iran.

During the Iranian attack in April, according to the Israeli army, a 99% interception rate was achieved against the barrage, which included 170 drones, 30 cruise missiles and 120 ballistic missiles.

Israel reportedly had less success in repelling the second barrage, that took place at the beginning of the month, which included more from 180 ballistic missiles.

Intelligence sources told the newspaper that nearly 30 missiles hit the Nevatim Airbase in southern Israel near Be'er Sheva.

200 missiles

The FT report stirred heated debate in Israel. Brigadier General Zvika Chaimovitz, former commander of the air defense system, told Ynet on Tuesday: “The THAAD system is a significant force component and I don't want to compare it with the Arrow system, but in the end, you add dozens more interceptors.”

“It is a significant force that joins our forces, and we have seen scenarios of 200 missiles. It is assumed that if the conflict with Iran continues, we are expected to see more here.”

“The US is a great power. When you look at capabilities, it's not a numbers game. In the end it's a combination of defense and attack,” he remarked.

Yedioth Ahronoth commentator Ron Ben Yishai pointed out in a recent piece that the agreement being formed with the US to place THAAD in Israel is as much a result of American coercion as it is of Israeli necessity.

“The Israeli army’s need is clear: It needs the addition of American interceptor missiles and launchers to deal with the hundreds of missiles that the Iranians may launch, if and when Israel responds to the attack against it on October 1,” he said.

In this case, the quantities and numbers speak for themselves, noted Ben Yishai. “The more missiles are launched in one or two small volleys in order to saturate the defense systems - the more launchers, interceptor missiles and radars are needed,” he continued.

Yair Katz, the head of the workers union at Israel Aircraft Industries, dismissed the claims, stating that “The Financial Times headline is wrong. Israel has enough interceptors to maintain a war on multiple fronts.”