RT Article T1 Between the Local and the Global: The Iranian Revolution and Sunni-Shia Relations in South Africa JF Islamic Africa VO 13 IS 1 SP 87 OP 114 A1 Vahed, Goolam 1961- LA English PB Brill YR 2022 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1808827899 AB This article charts the contours of Sunni-Shia relations in South Africa, with a particular focus on the period since the Iranian Revolution of 1979, which was received positively by many Muslims in a context of American hegemony globally and heightened anti-apartheid political activism locally. The growth of Saudi Arabian funded religious organisations within the Sunni majority community, and similar investment by Iran in emerging and existing Shia communities have fuelled relations between Sunni and Shia globally. This article considers the increasing tensions between Shias and mainstream Sunni Ulema in South Africa. The period has been witness to growing anti-Shia discourse, a physical attack against worshippers in a Shia mosque and a failed attempt at a truce. The growth in broadcast and social media and religious transnationalism have exacerbated historic fissures and antagonism, and these tensions seem destined to deepen and spread in the period ahead. K1 Aga Khan K1 Majlis K1 Shaykh Fadhlalla Haeri K1 Mufti A.K. Hoosen K1 Taha Karaan K1 Imam Hussein Mosque K1 Sunni K1 Shia K1 Iranian Revolution DO 10.1163/21540993-01301001