Wilayah Day: Houthis dye Yemen’s streets with Iranian facets
Since the Houthi coup took control of Sanaa on September 21,
2014, there has been an increase in the presence of Shiite events in accordance
with the Twelver doctrine, serving the ideas of the militia in Yemen by talking
about the state in order to dictate their sectarian rule.
Eid al-Ghadeer, or Wilayah Day, has become the most
prominent event that has dominated the Yemeni scene in recent years, and the
militia recruits all state institutions under their control to mobilize the
Yemeni public to ensure spiritual control over Yemenis.
Iranian appearance
The Yemeni capital Sanaa appeared to be Iranian, and its
streets were packed with thousands of banners and slogans to celebrate Ghadeer
Day, which was publicly banned before the Houthi coup.
Three mass rallies were held in Sanaa on Monday, August 19
to commemorate the day of Ali bin Abi Talib's mandate.
According to Shiite accounts, the Prophet Muhammad (peace
and blessings be upon him), when returning from the farewell Hajj in 11 AH, famously
said in the area of Ghadeer Khom, “For whomever I was his master, then Ali is
his master,” and ordered Muslims to follow Ali bin Abu Talib after him as the caliph
of the Muslims. Shiites infer that this sermon bestowed to Ali the right of the
caliphate and imamate after the death of the Prophet Muhammad.
Hundreds of thousands of people celebrated the occasion,
carrying flags of freedom, slogans and banners condemning US policy in the
region.
Mandate of terrorists
The Houhis have recently intensified the organizational,
intellectual and religious courses of its elements and fighters under the
slogan “wilayah.” In a previous speech, their leader promised rule by “divine
right” similar to “vilayat-e faqih” in Iran.
Banners, billboards and slogans raised in the streets for Wilayah
Day and Eid al-Ghadeer have been absurd and lavish at a time when the Houthis
have been looting state employees' salaries for a year.
The change of education curriculum in areas controlled by
the militia means control of nearly five million students in the primary and
secondary stages only, according to statistics in 2010.
Change of identity
In order to achieve its project, the militia replaced
teachers in the Yemeni schools under its control with teachers loyal to them. The
Office of Education in the capital, which is run by the Houthis, issued
administrative decision No. 417 for 2018 on the rotation of 24 people from the
principals of 70 schools, mostly with others who are loyal to the Houthis.
The militia also shut down dozens of book shops and
publishing houses in the capital and other provinces. They also confiscated
thousands of books and seized print and publishing equipment. They did not even
tolerate Zaidi Shiite books that did not attack Sunnis, and they also
confiscated the books of Judge Muhammad ibn Ismail al-'Umrani, Yemen’s mufti.
One of the Houthis’ means of bulldozing Yemeni identity is
the daily repetition in local radio and media about the concepts related to
religious behaviors and convictions, as well as reviving old disputes. This is
despite the fact that Yemeni society was and still is varied in terms of
sectarianism, with the Zaidi and Shafi'i doctrines having coexisted for a long
time until the Houthis came.
Another means is through targeting the doctrine of young
people by changing the curriculum and cultivating the group’s ideas within the
curricula at different stages of study, which has been widely rejected and
denounced among Yemenis. In addition, the schools have become platforms for
incitement and polarization, as well as the implementation of periodic
educational and sectarian courses, and even forcing employees in various
institutions to listen to lectures by the group’s leader.
Religious terrorism
For his part, Yemeni politician Kamel al-Khoudani, leader of
the General People’s Congress, believes that the revival of Wilayah Day is
aimed at giving the religious character of the Houthis’ rule and changing the
identity of the Yemeni people to the narrow sectarian identity of Zaidi
doctrine as envisioned by the Houthis, and using it as a tool to stay in power.
The Houthis are taking the Iranian approach to governance, Khoudani
pointed out, adding that Iran's influence on the Houthi group is enormous,
especially culturally and intellectually, in addition to the use of political
slogans. The movement and its leader are imitating the Iranian methodology in
everything. Even during his speeches, the group’s leader Abdul-Malek al-Houthi
strives to imitate Hezbollah's Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah.
Khoudani added that Iran’s influence can be seen at first
glance from the Houthis’ slogans, which have been literally reproduced from the
slogans of the Khomeini revolution.
In order to scrap the social and cultural conscience of the
Yemeni people, the Houthis brought forth many extinct terms that divide the
population on a class basis, entrenching their classification from high to low,
including “masters, judges, tribes, slaves and servants,” with those close to
the Houthi leader claiming the top of the classification.
Khoudani warned of the success of the Houthi plan in case it
holds on to its authority in Sanaa and support is given to the militia to serve
their project in Yemen and change the identity of the Arab-Yemeni state into a
hostile sectarian state.