Iran inters its late president at holiest Shiite site in nation after fatal helicopter crash
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran interred late President Ebrahim Raisi at the holiest Shiite shrine in the nation on Thursday, days after a fatal helicopter crash killed him along with the country’s foreign minister and six others.
Mourners lowered Raisi into a tomb at the Imam Reza Shrine in Mashhad, where Shiite Islam’s eighth imam is buried and millions of pilgrims visit each year. Hundreds of thousands of people dressed in black crowded around the shrine under its iconic golden dome, wailing and beating their chests in sorrow in a sign of mourning common in Shiite ceremonies.
A hadith, or saying, attributed to Islam’s Prophet Mohammad states that anyone with sorrow or sin will be relieved through visiting there. But for Iran, crippled by international sanctions, struggling with internal unrest and facing challenges abroad, Thursday’s mass processional may not be a permanent salve.
The days of services have not drawn the same crowds in this nation of over 80 million people as those that gathered for services for Revolutionary Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani in 2020, slain by a U.S. drone strike in Baghdad.