Kourosh ZiabariAsia Times: In the midst of a full-blown national economic crisis, the latest polemics of a powerful hardline preacher have served as a distraction for Iranians, with many caught by surprise and others taking to social media to poke fun at the fundamentalist cleric’s rabble-rousing.

Ahmad Alamolhoda, the Friday prayer leader of the holy city of Mashhad and the representative of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Razavi Khorasan province, unveiled his novel prescription for social and family life when he said in recent remarks, “unfortunately, as a result of the impact of the Western culture, the spouses [in Iran] call each other by first names at home.”

He went on to theorize that “in the first layer of life governed by the affability between the wife and husband, it is fine if they call each other by first name, but in the second layer, which is the external layer of life, respect between the wife and husband must be preserved.” He didn’t elaborate on what he meant by the first and second layers.

It is not the first time Alamolhoda, widely viewed as one of the most radical clerics in Iran, finds himself in the crosshairs of public scrutiny by making controversial statements and issuing decrees that often spark contention, disgruntlement and outrage among Iranians.

Iran’s religious authorities have in recent years proselytized for what they call an “Islamic-Iranian lifestyle,” which they want the general public to cling to in order for the nation to become a paragon of Muslim civilization.

This lifestyle includes a wide range of canons on how people should dress, socialize, communicate, eat, pray and even the number of children they should have. To promote government-sanctioned customs, clerics like Alamolhoda have given themselves carte blanche to encroach on every dimension of citizens’ public and private lives.

But despite his tendency to comment on a range of social, cultural, political, economic and even at times diplomatic issues, Alamolhoda is not a “marja,” or a source of emulation, a religious authority in Shiite Islam qualified to make decisions on Islamic jurisprudence and interpret the religion for the adherents.

Yet, by virtue of being the religious hierarch of the country’s most important pilgrimage city, he wields enormous, and often unconstitutional, power.

As a member of the Assembly of Experts, Alamolhoda, 76, is tasked with supervising the Supreme Leader and choosing his successor. He is one of the co-founders of the gender-segregated Imam Sadiq University. His son-in-law, Ebrahim Raisi, is the Chief Justice of the Islamic Republic.

The influential cleric is notorious for outlawing public music performances throughout the entire Razavi Khorasan province, a region of Iran with a population of 6.5 million. He has branded concerts venues for “vulgarity,” which he maintains shouldn’t be permitted in a province where the shrine of the 8th Shia Imam Reza is located.

The decision to issue permits for music gigs lies with the administration and the Ministry of Culture, but the formidable Friday prayer leader has been able to pull the strings and has blocked repeated efforts by the artists and the government to bring concerts to Mashhad.

Performances in Mashhad, Iran’s second-largest city, have been had proscribed for more than a decade due to the feared cleric’s intransigence.

In 2016, nearly 3,000 Iranian musicians signed an open letter to President Hassan Rouhani that called the Ministry of Culture’s denials of concert permits under pressure from Alamolhoda “a catastrophe.”

Artists and critics have accused the idiosyncratic Shiite cleric of installing a self-governing federal regime in the province, since concerts are quotidian in the capital Tehran and almost every major city across the country. Residents of Mashad appear no less enthusiastic for the arts.

The source of Alamolhoda’s antagonism toward music is not clear, since virtually no Muslim country cracks down on the artistic endeavor as harshly as he does in his province. The firebrand cleric had once said those who purchase tickets for music gigs are a “debauched, corrupt minority” and authorities should block their path to “overindulgence.”