Supreme Leader's Sacred Defense Memories
The official website of the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, www.khamanei.ir, has recently released seven memories by the Leader on the occasion of the anniversary of the Sacred Defense.
1. A woman who offered all her belongings to the Iranian forces at war
During my two or three-day stay in Hamadan, they gave me this letter in which a woman had written about her sacrifices to the war. She said she had already sent he husband and sons to the war front and felt embarrassed not to be able to go over to the battle herself. She also said she had two rings and a little sum of money which were here savings for several months and that she would readily offer them to the fighting forces instead of buying her children warm clothes for the winter.
2. MirzaJavad Tehrani's Allah-o-Akbar calls beside a mortar carrier
An elderly cleric can sometimes be of much more use than a young one. One of the esteemed clerics of Mashhad is Haj MirzaJavad Tehrani who went to the front several times despite his old age.
Once we went to see Imam (Khomeini). During the meeting, Tehrani said he was viewed by his comrades as an old fellow but had told them he could be useful sometimes. They had then taken him as a mortar operator who was most motivating for young forces when they saw him participate so actively in operations.
3. Recon Mission with Martyr Chamran
We were in a recon mission in a region called the "Dob Hordan" in western Ahwaz. Accompanying us was martyr Chamran. We were a number of comrades moving across Sousangerd road. We had mortars and were armed pretty well. We reached a point where a number of the fellows went for reconnoitering the enemy's facilities. They returned after a short while to say there war in front of us an invasion fleet of soldier carriers awaiting us. Then martyr Chamran sent a number of guys for more recon and RPG operators for handling an assault. Then, we saw mortars stationed all around us. We stayed under a tree for its shade. Unluckily, the tree turned out to be a proper target for the enemy. It was God's will that we survived. We were not good enough to martyr or, maybe, were good enough to stay alive.
4. Deus Ex Machina: How a cannon withstood two brigades
It is a well-known fact that Allah would intervene in the battlefield to help the Prophet's side by making his forces look much more formidable than they seemingly were. Motivation is a crucial factor in the theatre of war. An unmotivated soldier cannot fight well. I have experienced this by myself.
Once we were left before two and a half Iraqi brigades in Ahwaz. We were only armed with a cannon which could hardly face a battalion. The Iraqis, on the other hand, were afraid to face us. They came no further than 20km off Ahwaz. What were they afraid of? We were enlarged in their eyes. We had formed guerillas to attack them from time to time and forced them to retreat. We had become emboldened and were inspired to easily attack them whenever we deemed proper.
5. "Tell Imam I would sacrifice my son for him"
No one has heard the families of martyrs and captives be disgraceful of their fate and that of their sons. Once I was in Mazandaran where a lady insisted on seeing me. I told my companions to let her come closer and tell us what she had to say. "I had a son captured by Iraqis and have recently learned that he was killed during torture. Please, do me a favor and tell Imam I would sacrifice my other son for him so he won't feel any sad."
I was told similar stories during the course of my trip to Mazandaran and Sari. When I told Imam about the women and their sacrifices, Imam, with all his patience and tolerance, broke into tears.
6. Days of grief in Khoramshahr and Abadan
A few weeks after the seizure of Khoramshahr and siege of Abadan by Iraqi forces, Abadan island was completely under fire. I felt like someone pressed my heart when I saw the map of the cities that were now in the hands of the enemy. My office was a hub for almost all kinds of military initiatives. We had a map of Abadan in the office which pressured my soul whenever I looked at it. Some of our fellow comrades had come to believe that Khoramshahr was gone forever and were planning negotiations with the intruding enemy.
7. I read the wills as Imam had advised me so
I was inclined to reach wills of martyrs as Imam had advised me to. I have read almost all of the wills I have had access to. So strange they really are. We must learn from these wills. They show us how teachings and learning are dependent on divine blessings. There were wills written by almost illiterate youths whose sentences abounded with lessons for people like me and us.
Translated by: Abbas Hajihashemi
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Tabas Fog
Ebham-e Tabas: Ramzgoshayi az ja’beh siah-e tahajom nezami Amrika (Tabas Fog: Decoding the Black Box of the U.S. Military Invasion) is the title of a recently published book by Shadab Asgari. After the Islamic Revolution, on November 4, 1979, students seized the US embassy in Tehran and a number of US diplomats were imprisoned. The US army carried out “Tabas Operation” or “Eagle’s Claw” in Iran on April 24, 1980, ostensibly to free these diplomats, but it failed.An Excerpt from the Memoirs of General Mohammad Jafar Asadi
As Operation Fath-ol-Mobin came to an end, the commanders gathered at the “Montazeran-e Shahadat” Base, thrilled by a huge and, to some extent, astonishing victory achieved in such a short time. They were already bracing themselves for the next battle. It is no exaggeration to say that this operation solidified an unprecedented friendship between the Army and IRGC commanders.A Selection from the Memoirs of Haj Hossein Yekta
The scorching cold breeze of the midnight made its way under my wet clothes and I shivered. The artillery fire did not stop. Ali Donyadideh and Hassan Moghimi were in front. The rest were behind us. So ruthlessly that it was as if we were on our own soil. Before we had even settled in at the three-way intersection of the Faw-Basra-Umm al-Qasr road, an Iraqi jeep appeared in front of us.Boycotting within prison
Here I remember something that breaks the continuity, and I have to say it because I may forget it later. In Evin Prison, due to the special position that we and our brothers held and our belief in following the line of Marja’eiyat [sources of emulation] and the Imam, we had many differences with the Mujahedin.
