THE WASHINGTON POST: Crowd chants ‘Death to America’ as Khamenei’s casket winds through Tehran

A huge funeral procession for the assassinated supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, is underway in the Iranian capital with many vowing revenge against the US and Israel.

Susannah George
The Washington Post
Mourners gather to pay final respects to Iran's slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during the third day of his funeral ceremonies on July 6, 2026 in Tehran, Iran.
Mourners gather to pay final respects to Iran's slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during the third day of his funeral ceremonies on July 6, 2026 in Tehran, Iran. Credit: Majid Saeedi/Getty Images

A huge funeral procession for Iran’s slain supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, was held in Tehran on Monday with a teeming crowd clogging the streets to bid farewell to the ayatollah who ruled the country for 37 years before being killed in an airstrike at age 86.

At an early stage on the procession route, people chanted “Death to America!” and “Death to Israel!” And some of the mourners demanded retribution.

Ezat Vezvaei, 67, whose son, a member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, was killed in the US-Israeli war, rapped her fingers on a Trump poster that read “wanted dead or alive.”

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“Just be sure we will take our revenge from this Trump!” Ms Vezvaei said.

At the various funeral events, which began on Saturday, several senior Iranian officials have made their first public appearances since the start of the war. But there has been one conspicuous absence: Iran’s new supreme leader, Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba.

Mojataba Khamenei was reportedly injured in the strike that killed his father and has not been seen in public since before the start of the war. Traditionally, he would have been the one to pray over his father’s casket on Sunday.

Three of the elder Khamenei’s other sons were in attendance at service at the Grand Mosalla religious complex, but Ayatollah Jafar Sobhani, a prominent theologian and member of the Council of Experts that chose Mojtaba as successor, led the prayer of the dead.

During Monday’s outdoor procession, some mourners described Mojtaba Khaemenei’s absence as expected, given concerns about his personal safety, but nonetheless a disappointment.

Khamenei’s body was slowly transported across the capital city atop a truck, in a casket within a glass enclosure together with the coffins of other family members killed with him. By midday, the truck had arrived at the procession’s destination: Azadi Square.

Thumping Shiite religious music blared from an elaborate soundstage at the square’s base and people in the crowd began thumping their chests. As Khamenei’s casket entered the roundabout, the crowd surged toward it and the music slowed.

People climbed atop the water trucks and ambulances parked along the route for a better view. Khamenei’s casket sat alongside those of his family members who were killed along with him, on Feb. 28, the first day of the US-Israeli war.

The massive crowds gathered in central Tehran quickly complicated the procession, which wound its way by road from east to west across the city of some 9 million.

Many of the mourners who gathered in Tehran hoped to touch the casket’s glass enclosure, so as the vehicle carrying Khamenei’s body moved along the route, crowds surged toward it.

At least twice, this morning the vehicle became stuck.

The coffins of Iran's slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his family members who were killed alongside him are transported during their funeral procession on July 6, 2026 in Tehran, Iran.
The coffins of Iran's slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his family members who were killed alongside him are transported during their funeral procession on July 6, 2026 in Tehran, Iran. Credit: Majid Saeedi/Getty Images
Mourners gather with flags to pay final respects to Iran's slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during the third day of his funeral ceremonies.
Mourners gather with flags to pay final respects to Iran's slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during the third day of his funeral ceremonies. Credit: Majid Saeedi/Getty Images

In at least one instance, the procession route was altered and rumours swirled that if the roads became impassable, the casket would be lifted the remainder of the distance by helicopter.

By late morning, a human chain had formed around the coffin to allow the vehicle to move forward, according to the Fars state television channel.

“This will be the last time he will be in Tehran forever,” said Amir Ebadi, 43, an aviation engineer who was waiting in the shade of a tree on the edge of Azadi Square with his two young children.

After tens of thousands of people gathered in Tehran’s Grand Mosalla religious complex where Khamenei’s body lay in state Saturday and Sunday, the procession through the city-centre drew even greater crowds.

The last time Iran buried a supreme leader, it was at this stage of the funeral that people were killed in a stampede. At that funeral in 1989 security forces violently beat people back from the casket.

“We have to tell America that we are a strong nation,” said Mohammad Ghasemi, 27, a dentist who studied abroad in Hungary and Russia and spoke smooth English.

“We have five or six times the history of the US and Trump says he will send us back to the stone ages,” Dr Ghasemi added, his voice incredulous as he nodded to the 250th anniversary of the US that was celebrated this weekend as Iran mourned.

“It’s really rude, really rude,” he said.

By midday on Monday no serious incidents were reported. Security forces from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Basij paramilitary, the police and the regular army were seen securing different parts of the route Monday morning.

An invitation from the Iranian government to attend the proceedings - albeit under restricted conditions, including accompaniment by a government-provided guide and interpreter - has allowed The Washington Post its first opportunity to report from Iran since the war began. The views of people interviewed at the funeral events are unlikely to represent all of Iranian society, given the risks posed to those who have opposed or been critical of the government.

Weeks of war with Israel and the United States badly damaged Iran’s security forces, devastating senior leadership ranks. But the Iranian system remains intact.

Parts of Tehran not in the funeral’s immediate vicinity appeared deserted Monday morning. Many roads were shut and businesses closed in observance of a week of national mourning that will conclude on Thursday when Khamenei is buried in Mashhad, the town in eastern Iran where he was born.

© 2026 , The Washington Post

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