Al-Jazeera Net-Tehran

In the crowd of Iranian officials' pilgrimage to the home of the Quds Force commander, Zainab’s daughter, Qasim Soleimani, is no longer obsessed with anything but to ask, "When are you going to take revenge for my father?" To respond, President Hassan Rouhani assured that revenge will soon be over.

As soon as the Revolutionary Guards confirmed the dawn of Friday, Friday, the killing of Soleimani in an American attack near Baghdad International Airport, so many Islamic Republic officials came to the deceased's house to console his relatives.

The Iranian leader, Ali Khamenei, was one of the first mourners to assassinate his colleague on the fronts of the Iraq-Iran war (1988-1980), whose presence at Soleimani’s home was the address of other officials ’pilgrimage to his home to offer condolences and make revenge threats to his death.

While the Iranian guide, Hussein, Soleimani’s son, embraced the comfort of his father’s loss, he addressed his daughter Zainab, saying that “the Iranian people are distressed by the martyrdom of your father, and he appreciates his services and his struggle for his sake.”

When the Iranian President Hassan Rouhani was present at her father’s house, Zainab asked about the timing of his revenge, to hear from the head of the Executive Authority that “God willing, close, and all the people will avenge the blood of your father.”

Rouhani consoles Qasim Soleimani's daughter (Iranian press)

Continuous threats
Rouhani from Soleimani’s house renewed his threats of revenge against America, and said that public opinion in Iran will not forget America’s crime, and that the repercussions of this crime will be pursued over the coming years.

Threats of retaliation against Soleimani and revenge against America took an upward trend in Iran, while the commander-in-chief of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Hussein Salami stressed that the killing of Soleimani would be followed by what he called a strategic revenge ending the American presence in the region. Bodies of Americans throughout the Middle East.

For his part, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif insisted that he accompany his wife to comfort Soleimani's wife and wife, stressing that Washington bears responsibility for the repercussions of the terrorist act that it had carried out.

Iraqi Sadrist leader offers condolences to Soleimani family (Iranian press)

Foreign guests
The pilgrimage to Soleimani’s house was not limited to the Iranians only, but also included a number of personalities of the resistance movements allied with Iran, including the leader of the Iraqi Sadrist movement, Muqtada al-Sadr, who recently returned from his country to the city of Qom, south of the capital Tehran.

Sheikh Naim Qassem, Deputy Secretary-General of the Lebanese Hezbollah Party, accompanied by the official of the Iraqi file in the party, Sheikh Muhammad Kawtharani, attended the Soleimani house, to offer condolences on behalf of the party and its Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah.

While Zainab apologized for making any statement to the media, her brother said in a brief statement that his father was a soldier of the guardian of the jurist and remained loyal to him until his wish was fulfilled and he was martyred in his path, stressing that his father once said that he had been searching for martyrdom and joining the convoy of his martyr companions, as he put it .

As for Sohrab, Soleimani's brother, who seemed more coherent, he said that he was not surprised by the news, as the family expected to hear on every mission during which allies visited Iran in the resistance movements, praising its role in eliminating what was known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant.

He added that the likes of Soleimani are many in the Islamic nation and the Islamic Republic, and that the banner he raised will not be thrown on the ground and his companions will raise it inside and outside Iran.

The mentor Ali Khamenei consoles the son of Qassem Soleimani (Iranian press)

Military towns
The Soleimani family resides in the town of the Revolutionary Guards commanders and cadres, located in the middle of the Louzan Forest, northeast of the Iranian capital, and it forms the third town of the Revolutionary Guards, in addition to the town of Shahid Mahalati, northeast of Tehran, and the Shahid Kalhaduz in the east.

The town of Dagaki is known to house many military and political leaders in Iran, such as the former commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Guards, the Secretary of the Expediency Council, Mohsen Rezaei, the former mayor of Tehran, General Muhammad Baqer Qalibaf, and others from the leaders of the Iran-Iraq war.

Although Tehran is surrounded by towns and military areas, the Revolutionary Guards' towns are among the most organized and modern population areas, which is an incentive to attract some politicians to it, such as a number of ministers of the government of former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and a number of parliamentarians who preferred the town of Shahid Maalati to live, According to the Iranian media.

As for the town of Shahid Kalhaduz, it is located east of Tehran near the headquarters of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, and is inhabited by many military leaders, especially Major General Yahya Safavi, the military adviser to the Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and the former commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Guards, Muhammad Ali Jaafari.

An American bombing targeted the commander of the Quds Force in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Qassem Soleimani, and Abu Mahdi Al-Muhandis, deputy head of the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Organization, at dawn on Friday near Baghdad International Airport.

Four other officers from the Quds Force were killed along with Soleimani and the engineer, and American media said that the raid was carried out by a drone, while Iranian television said that American helicopters had carried out it.