Background
His father, Ayatollah Hajj Seyyed Mostafavi Kashani (Persian: آیتالله حاج سید مصطفوی کاشانی), was a noted clergyman of Shiism in his time.
politician theologian Akhoond grand ayatollah
His father, Ayatollah Hajj Seyyed Mostafavi Kashani (Persian: آیتالله حاج سید مصطفوی کاشانی), was a noted clergyman of Shiism in his time.
At 16, Abol-Ghasem went to an Islamic seminary to study literature, Arabic language, logic, semantics and speech, as well as the principles of Islamic jurisprudence, or Fiqh. He continued his education at the seminary in an-Najaf in the Qur"an and Hadiths as interpreted in Shia law, receiving his jurisprudence degree when he was 25. Personal life
One of Kashani"s children, Mahmoud Kashani, went on to become head of the Iranian delegation to the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, in Iran"s case with the United States and a presidential candidate in the Iranian presidential elections of 1988 and 2005.
Kashani is also the great grandfather of Iranian-American filmmaker Sam Ali Kashani.
Political life
Abol-Ghasem expressed Anti-capitalist leanings from early on in his career and opposed what he saw as "oppression, despotism and colonization." Because of these beliefs, he was especially popular with the poor in Tehran. He also advocated the return of Islamic government to Iran, though this was most likely for political reasons.
Due to nationalist positions, Ayatollah Kashani was arrested and exiled by the British and Soviets. He continued to oppose foreign, especially British, control of Iran"s oil industry while in exile.
After he returned from exile on 10 June 1950, he continued to protest.
Angered by the fact that the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company paid Iran much less than it did the British, he organized a movement against it and was the "virtually alone among the leading mujtahids in joining" nationalist Prime Minister Mohammed Mosaddeq, in his campaign to nationalize the Iranian oil industry in 1951. Kashani served as speaker of the Majles (or lower house of Parliament), during the oil nationalization, but later turned against Mosaddeq during the 1953 Iranian coup d"état. The group then engaged in public assassinations in Tehran in the early 1950s.