US religious leader stops just short of calling America ‘the Great Satan’ on Iran visit

6 Nov, 2018 02:35 / Updated 6 years ago

Controversial religious leader Louis Farrakhan told Iranians that “victory will be yours,” calling on them to persevere despite unprecedented sanctions from the country their leaders have called “the Great Satan.”

Farrakhan, who heads the Chicago-based Nation of Islam (NOI) political and religious movement with a nearly 90-year-old history, stopped just short of calling America ‘the Great Satan’ himself when he spoke at Tehran University.

“Is it not true that you have called America the Great Satan? Well, if you believe what you say, then would not Satan be actively involved in trying to destroy a nation that is set up on the belief and practice of submission to the will of God?”

He also allegedly chanted "Death to America" in Farsi to an amused audience.

In a meeting with the Secretary of Iran's Expediency Council Mohsen Rezai, Farrakhan warned the US government that sanctioning Iran was "a big mistake." They agreed that Muslims should unite in the face of "enemies' plots," and Rezai called for an international movement to counter western hegemony.

Farrakhan, no stranger to controversy, has repeatedly drawn scorn for his anti-Semitic statements and praise for his advocacy of the black community. In October, Twitter erupted in outrage after he tweeted a clip of a speech where he announced, “I’m not anti-Semite, I’m anti-termite.”

He previously called Jews “satanic.” The social media platform recently added new rules meant to curb ‘dehumanizing’ language and blocked hundreds of accounts for reposting variations of the ‘NPC’ meme which conservatives use to mock liberals, but Farrakhan’s tweets were apparently not a violation.

Earlier this week, the US reimposed all the sanctions it had suspended under the 2015 nuclear deal, which Trump quit unilaterally despite Iran's compliance.