Friedman: Iranian and Saudi youth try to bury 1979

In this Dec. 30, 2017, photo, Iranian protesters chant slogans at a rally in Tehran, Iran. The Trump administration is calling on Iran's government to stop blocking Instagram and other popular social media sites as Iranians demonstrate in the streets. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)
In this Dec. 30, 2017, photo, Iranian protesters chant slogans at a rally in Tehran, Iran. The Trump administration is calling on Iran's government to stop blocking Instagram and other popular social media sites as Iranians demonstrate in the streets. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

The biggest question about the recent protests in Iran - combined with the recent lifting of religious restrictions in Saudi Arabia - is whether together they mark the beginning of the end of the hard-right puritanical turn that the Muslim world took in 1979, when, as Middle East expert Mamoun Fandy once observed, "Islam lost its brakes" and the whole world felt it.

The events of 1979 diminished the status of women, pluralism and modern education across the Arab-Muslim region, and they fueled religious extremist groups like al-Qaida, Hezbollah and the Islamic State, whose activities have brought ruin to so many innocent Muslims and non-Muslims alike - and so many metal detectors to airports across the globe.

But today Iran and Saudi Arabia have something new in common: a majority of their populations are under age 30, young people connected through social networks and smartphones. And a growing number of them are fed up with being told how to live their lives by old, corrupt or suffocating clerics.

The spontaneous demonstrations that just erupted across Iran were triggered by the release, through social networks, of the latest national budget. Unemployed Iranian youth saw just how much money was being poured into the Islamic Revolutionary Guards - and their adventures in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen - and into Islamic institutions, and even, as The New York Times' Thomas Erdbrink put it, into "someone who was upkeeping the library of his deceased ayatollah father." This at a time when the government was canceling subsidies to 30 million low-income Iranians.

Iran has an educated population and a rich cultural heritage. It's a nation capable of breakthroughs in science, medicine, computing and the arts. However, its regime has been focused not on empowering Iranian youth but on extending Tehran's influence over failing Arab states, costing billions of dollars.

On recent trips to Saudi Arabia I heard youth express their own version of this: I want the clerics out of my face. I want to live my life without interference. Youth also said: I want to be able to go to concerts, drive my car, start a business, mix with the other sex or see a movie. And I want to celebrate my national Saudi culture, cuisine and art - not just Islam.

But Saudi Arabia, for now, is not witnessing the violent uprisings seen in Iran. Unlike Iran, whose supreme leader is 78 years old, Saudi Arabia is effectively ruled by a millennial 32-year-old, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, known as MBS.

MBS has issues. He's been impulsive and autocratic in ways that have hurt his country and his credibility: bullying the prime minister of Lebanon to resign; diving into the Yemen war, and contributing to Yemen's humanitarian crisis; and buying gazillion-dollar paintings and yachts while declaring war on corruption at home.

But to his credit, MBS has been in tune with, and even ahead of, Saudi youth when it comes to social reforms, taking steps that none of his royal cousins ever dared: pulling the religious police off the streets, permitting Saudi women to drive, curbing the power of the clerics, letting women attend sporting events with men, opening cinemas, inviting Western and Arab pop stars to perform in the kingdom and vowing to restore Saudi Islam to a more "moderate," pre-1979 iteration - all part of a plan called "Vision 2030."

One of the most interesting questions today, says Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment, "is whose strategic vision is more sustainable and attainable - MBS' Vision 2030 or Ali Khamenei's vision of 1979. MBS is a modern ruler presiding over a predominantly traditional society, and Khamenei is a traditional leader presiding over a more modern society."

In Saudi Arabia there's a move, from the bottom up and from the top down, to get past 1979 and birth a different social future. In Iran, there's a move from bottom up by many youth to get past 1979, but regime hard-liners want to crush them from the top down.

We should root for both the Iranian and Saudi youth movements to bury 1979. It would be a gift for Muslims the world over - and for the world at large, which has spent trillions of dollars countering the furies fueled by that pivotal year.

The New York Times

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