Fake News: Video Does Not Show Ayatollah Going Crazy After Soleimani Drone Strike

Fact Check

  • by: Sarah Thompson
Fake News: Video Does Not Show Ayatollah Going Crazy After Soleimani Drone Strike

Does a video making the rounds on social media show Iran's Ayatollah going crazy following the killing of Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani by a U.S. drone strike? No, that's not true: This is an old video, put in a loop and portraying an animated - and now deceased - Ayatollah that dates to at least 2003. The reaction and the video have nothing to do with Soleimani's death on January 3, 2020, which set off strikes against U.S. bases by Iran.

Among other places, the claim has resurfaced in a tweet posted under the username @breslov1282 on January 6, 2020, titled "Maga on Twitter" (archived here) which, along with the video, read:

I Think TRUMP
Might have hit a Nerve.
This is Attolla Khomeini(Supreme Leader)
Going Crazy at the Funeral of
Mr "SOLEIMANI"
I think it's a show to get his ppl all Excited.
But who cares the Guy had to go. If Trump
didn't take him out it would have been the
wrong thing. https://t.co/9Rkvx4WFdh

Users on social media only saw this title, description and thumbnail:

The mis-captioned video from "Maga on Twitter" was posted with the same caption and same typos on Tuesday January 7, 2020, by the Facebook page "Real Marco Gutierrez." The page is from the California weekday radio show "Let's TACO about Politics". It is hosted by Marco Gutierrez, who is the co-founder of the #LatinosForTrump movement.

Soleimani was killed by a US drone strike in Baghdad. Soleimani's funeral took place in Tehran on Monday, January 6, 2020, but this caption is not true. The video does not show General Soleiman's funeral or Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. This is not the first time this video has been miscaptioned in at least 16 years of circulating on the internet - sometimes with a music soundtrack dubbed over the original audio.

It has been titled "Imam on Extacy" and "Muslim Rave Party". A short loop of a portion of the video has also been used to make GIFs. This video has been used as an internet trope to attach a broad variety of fictional titles. A 2008 posting of the video has a title in Hebrew, which translated as "The real reason why Arafat Died". One GIF suggests the outburst happened because President Trump is not as cooperative with Iran as Obama had been.
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A 20-minute version of the video posted by sidseesaw, complete with subtitles, goes far to explain what really took place.

The note states it was filmed in Qum, Iran, but does not give an exact date. Still, we know the video pre-dates this 2011 upload. The title identifies the late Sayyid Ayatollah Mohammad Baqir al-Hakim as the person reading from a Maqtal al-Husayn, one of several historic writings about the battle of Karbala.

He is telling the story of the battle where Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad, was killed on October 10, 680. The story contains many graphic details about the suffering he endured - as well as the killing of children, the despair of women and a white horse coming to his defense.

The point in the video most frequently copied and looped into GIFS is when the cleric re-tells the moment of the final deathblows, and when the revered leader was beheaded. At this point, the cleric expresses his profound sorrow by hitting his own head, as do the others in attendance.


They are gathered in a Hussainya, a congregation hall that gets its name from Husayn ibn Ali and is used by Shia Muslims. It is a different structure than a mosque and is especially designated for the purpose of mourning during Muharram.

The word Muharram is intertwined with both timing and meaning, as Muharram is the first month of the Muslim calendar and means mourning. The 10th day of Murarram is called Ashura, and this is the day that the Martyr Husayn ibn Ali is remembered and mourned.

This type of mourning is not practiced by all Muslims; this represents a Shia practice.

The cleric in the video, Sayyid Ayatollah Mohammad Baqir al-Hakim, was killed by a car bomb attack on August 29, 2003, in Najaf, Iraq. This bombing killed at least 84 people who were leaving Friday worship services at the Imam Ali mosque. Initial reports counted as many as 125 dead and 142 wounded. Militants with ties to Al-Quadea from several countries were arrested after the bombing.

To read one historic account of the battle of Karbala, here is a Maqtal al-Husayn translated into English:
https://web.archive.org/web/20091230032022/http://home.earthlink.net/~downloadquran/Maqtal_al-Husain.pdf

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  Sarah Thompson

Sarah Thompson lives with her family and pets on a small farm in Indiana. She founded a Facebook page and a blog called “Exploiting the Niche” in 2017 to help others learn about manipulative tactics and avoid scams on social media. Since then she has collaborated with journalists in the USA, Canada and Australia and since December 2019 she works as a Social Media Authenticity Analyst at Lead Stories.


 

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