In this article I address the transnational dimensions of memory production. In particular, I analyze
how interpretations of past events define Shiءi relations across borders in the Middle East. Focusing
on how the Lebanese Shiءi political party of Amal and the current Iranian government remember
the figure of Mustafa Chamran—an Iranian Shiءi anti-Shah activist based in Lebanon from 1970
to 1979—I discuss the debates that inform the creation of such contested memories and reasons
for and consequences of their divergence. Participants' ideas about the history and characteristics
of this transnational network cannot be understood separately from their claims to political and
religious authority in the Shiءi world. Thus, transnational Shiءi networks do not self-evidently
reproduce themselves based on a shared sense of religious identity and history. It takes ideological
work both to construct differences and to create solidarities across borders among Shiءa. This
ideological work must be situated within larger political, religious, and socioeconomic contexts.