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Washington Post

Jul 4, 2026

Iran’s leader was killed in February. The country will finally bury him.

With a tentative truce in the war and the U.S. focused on July Fourth, it seems safe to hold funeral rites for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Millions are expected to attend.


By Susannah George


TEHRAN — For four months, Iran feared it was too dangerous to lay to rest Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s supreme leader who was killed in an airstrike on the first day of the joint U.S.-Israeli war.


Now, shielded by a tentative truce — and perhaps by an America distracted by its 250th July Fourth celebration — millions of Iranians are expected to mourn over several days of funeral rites that will stretch across five cities and into neighboring Iraq.


For the surviving Iranian regime, the funeral offers an opportunity to project power after withstanding months of war with Israel and the United States, but it will also be a high-profile test of the government’s postwar competence.


On Saturday, thousands of people gathered in Tehran to mourn the slain leader. A funeral procession is expected to take place in the capital on Monday, Iranian state media reported.


Mourners gather at the Grand Mosalla to pay their final respects to Iran's slain supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, during funeral ceremonies in Tehran on Saturday. (-/AFP/Getty Images)
Mourners gather at the Grand Mosalla to pay their final respects to Iran's slain supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, during funeral ceremonies in Tehran on Saturday. (-/AFP/Getty Images)

Earlier this week, Khamenei’s body was moved to Tehran, the capital, on Thursday for a private ceremony at the place where he was killed — the small compound that served as his office and residence.


On Friday, his coffin was moved to Grand Mosalla religious complex where it now sits beside the coffins of other family members killed in the same strike, including his daughter and her husband. The smallest coffin is that of Khamenei’s granddaughter, who was 14 months old.


Coffins of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and members of his family at the Grand Mosalla religious complex in Tehran on Friday. (Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)
Coffins of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and members of his family at the Grand Mosalla religious complex in Tehran on Friday. (Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)

Images distributed by state media showed foreign dignitaries filing past the coffins to pay respects.


Officials from key Iranian allies Russia and China arrived Friday along with leaders from Pakistan, Iraq, Qatar, Oman and Tajikistan. The armed groups Khamenei helped build were also in attendance, with representatives from the powerful Iraqi group Kataib Hezbollah and Palestinian Islamic Jihad as well as family members of assassinated Hezbollah commander Hasan Nasrallah.


Several Afghan figures also arrived Friday in Tehran, including officials from the Taliban government now controlling the country and the son of anti-Taliban Afghan commander Ahmed Shah Massoud.


The funeral organizer said no officials were invited from Europe or the United States. Official banners prepared for the event declared “We must rise” and carried the image of a red fist.


In and around Tehran, new massive billboards displayed images of the late supreme leader. In some of the photos, the elder Khamenei is pictured praying, in others he is in a garden beside his son Mojtaba. “We miss those poetic times,” proclaimed one stretching across a three-lane highway.


All of the banners carried the official symbol of the funeral: a red fist and the slogan “we must rise.”


Security began to tighten in the capital ahead of Saturday’s event. Additional checkpoints dotted the main roads, and some streets in the city’s downtown area were already going into lockdown. Many of the millions of mourners expected to descend on the city will need to walk for miles.


Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who has been a key figure in peace talks with the U.S., issued a statement on Thursday calling on the Iranian people to “rise up and convey the nation’s call for bloodshed.”


“Iran stands on the threshold of creating one of the greatest scenes in its history, a day when a nation, with hearts full of love, loyalty and the pain of separation, comes to bid farewell to a great man,” Ghalibaf said.


The cavernous prayer hall where Khamenei’s coffin was put on display Friday to lie in state was built on the orders of his predecessor, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who led the country’s Islamic revolution, took power in 1979 and died a decade later.


Khamenei led the Islamic Republic for 37 years, through wars and uprisings, and years of enmity and tangled negotiations with Washington over Iran’s nuclear program. Under his leadership, Iran repressed freedoms domestically and expanded its role as the patron of violent proxy militant groups, including Hezbollah and Hamas, which it used to confront the U.S. and Israel.


Khamenei was killed in the opening hours of a war that has transformed Iran yet again, devastating the country’s infrastructure and leadership ranks, but ultimately seeming to strengthen its position regionally and in ceasefire talks with the U.S.


The war also gave Tehran a point of leverage it had never exercised before: control over the Strait of Hormuz, a vital passageway for the global commerce, including energy supplies.


As Iranians mourn their assassinated leader, they and observers around the world will be watching the funeral for signals about the surviving regime, which seems emboldened and even more hard-line. Among the top questions is whether Khamenei’s son and successor, Mojtaba, will appear in public for the first time since his father’s death.

Mojtaba is believed to have been seriously injured in that strike, including serious damage to his face. His wife, Zahra Haddad Adel, was also killed.


Mojtaba Khamenei has been living under intense security measures given the expectation that he, too, will be a target for assassination.


Even in peace time, he kept a low profile. He has only been photographed in public a few times and, before his designation as the new leader, most Iranians had never heard him speak publicly.


Up until now, Iranians who support their government say they understand why their supreme leader has been unable to appear in public. But the further the country moves away from active war, the more people may demand an appearance.


If Khamenei does appear — in person or by video — experts will be scouring images for clues about his injuries, officials said, while also searching for broader signs of the regime’s cohesion and capabilities.

Observers will also be tracking the scale of the event, the government’s ability to control the crowds, and how much security is mobilized.


And as the country shifts away from a war footing, its economic challenges will become more pronounced. Inflation has skyrocketed, energy exports fell to near zero for weeks under the U.S. blockade and rebuilding the country’s industrial sector after U.S. and Israeli strikes could take years.


Over Ali Khamenei’s decades as supreme leader, public dissatisfaction with the Iranian system grew, triggering repeated waves of protests. And in the past five years, demonstrations seemed to threaten the Islamic Republican at least twice.


In each instance, Khamenei ordered violent crackdowns with escalating cruelty to clear city streets. The most recent crackdown in January is estimated to have killed thousands of people over just three days, a remarkable scale of brutality.


After the mourning ceremonies in Tehran, Khamenei’s body will be taken to the holy Iranian city of Qom, then on to neighboring Iraq where crowds will gather in the holy Shiite cities of Najaf and Karbala, before he is finally laid to rest in his hometown, the eastern Iranian city of Mashhad.

The ceremonies will present a serious logistical challenge for the Iranian regime. Local officials in Tehran say they are expecting crowds of up to 20 million.


Authorities are keen to avoid the kind of chaotic scenes that marked previous burials. Eight people were trampled to death when Khomeini was buried in 1989. And dozens were killed in 2020 during crowd crushes at the funeral for Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, then Iran’s most powerful military commander who was killed in a U.S. drone strike ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump.




Susannah George covers global affairs and national security for The Washington Post based in Washington D.C. She was previously the Gulf bureau chief based in Dubai, where she led coverage of the Persian Gulf monarchies and Iran. Before that she was The Post's Afghanistan-Pakistan bureau chief. follow on X@sgreports





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