Mohammad Javad Bahonar

prime minister of Iran
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Also known as: Muḥammad Javād Bāhunar
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Muḥammad Javād Bāhunar
Born:
1933, Kermān, Iran
Died:
August 30, 1981, Tehrān (aged 48)
Also Known As:
Muḥammad Javād Bāhunar
Title / Office:
prime minister (1981-1981), Iran
Political Affiliation:
Islamic Republican Party

Mohammad Javad Bahonar (born 1933, Kermān, Iran—died August 30, 1981, Tehrān) was an Iranian politician who was prime minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1981. In office for less than a month, he was killed by antigovernment forces.

Bahonar studied in the Shīʿite holy city of Qom, where he was a student of noted cleric Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, and later taught religion at the University of Tehrān. Bahonar was a vocal critic of the monarchy of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, and his involvement in anti-shah activities led to his imprisonment in 1964 and 1975. During Khomeini’s lengthy exile in Iraq and France, Bahonar remained a devoted follower of the religious leader.

After the shah was overthrown in the Iranian Revolution of 1979, Bahonar helped draft a new constitution and served as a founding member of the Islamic Republican Party (IRP), which supported Khomeini and sought to advance Islamic principles and culture. In March 1981 he was appointed minister of education and carried on the work started by Mohammad Ali Rajaʾi in purging Iranian universities of Western cultural influences. In June 1981 he succeeded Ayatollah Mohammad Hosayn Beheshti—who had been killed by antigovernment forces—as leader of the IRP, and the following month was appointed prime minister by Rajaʾi, now president of Iran. Bahonar entered office on August 4, 1981, and was in the midst of trying to restore stability to the country in the face of mounting violence when he, Rajaʾi, and a number of other officials were killed in a bomb blast purportedly set by the Mojāhedīn-e Khalq (Persian: “People’s Fighters”), an antigovernment group.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.