Iraniërs rouwen om Khamenei tijdens eerste vrijdaggebeden sinds begin oorlog

Across Tehran and other Iranian cities, thousands of worshippers gathered for the first Friday prayers since the outbreak of the seven-day conflict involving the United States, Israel, and Iran. Defying intense bombardments during the holy month of Ramadan, faithful participants carried portraits of the assassinated Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei while waving Iranian flags and chanting anti-American and anti-Israeli slogans.

Video footage from Iranian media showed men and women dressed in black gathering at the Grand Mosque of Imam Khomeini in Tehran. Through a loudspeaker, one man described Khamenei as “the embodiment of piety and guardianship in our time,” while others wept openly on prayer mats. Following the prayers, worshippers marched through the streets in demonstration processions, expressing their condemnation of American and Israeli military actions. Similar scenes unfolded in cities including Ilam, Borujerd, and Zahedan, according to AFP reports.

The prayers occurred amid a new wave of bombardments on Tehran and other cities, following U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s announcement that attacks would “increase dramatically.” Recent strikes have targeted a military academy near significant political offices where Khamenei was killed, alongside residential buildings, parking garages, and gasoline stations.

Regional tensions continued to escalate as Israeli forces advanced their offensive in southern Lebanon and the southern suburbs of Beirut. Israeli attacks have displaced tens of thousands of Lebanese civilians, with Israel threatening forced evacuations in certain areas. Throughout the Gulf region—including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates—Iranian drones and missiles have been deployed in retaliation against American and Israeli troop presence.

In occupied East Jerusalem, the Israeli Civil Administration canceled Friday prayers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque, Islam’s third holiest site, marking the latest restriction on activities around the complex in response to Iranian retaliatory strikes. Brigadier General Hisham Ibrahim, head of the Civil Administration, stated the decision was made due to Iranian attacks on “Israel and the entire region.” Palestinian leaders accuse Israel of seizing every opportunity to limit access to Al-Aqsa, particularly during Ramadan.

These developments highlight escalating regional tensions and humanitarian suffering as Iranian faithful honor their fallen leader while facing intensified warfare and uncertainty.