With all eyes on the Middle East, did you know Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has roots in Uttar Pradesh’s Barabanki? We explore the story of his ancestor, Syed Ahmad Mousavi Hindi, and the village of Kintoor that connects Iran to India.<img>As tensions rise in West Asia between Israel and Iran, all eyes are on Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei. But did you know he has an old and interesting Indian connection? It is claimed that his ancestors came from Kintoor, a small village in Uttar Pradesh’s Barabanki district. This story is back in the news because of the ongoing Middle East crisis.<img><p>According to local traditions and some historical records, Khamenei’s grandfather, Syed Ahmad Mousavi Hindi, was born around 1790 in Kintoor village, UP. People knew him as the ‘Hindustani Mulla’ and respected him as a Shia Islamic scholar. While historians have different opinions on this claim, the village elders still proudly remember this connection.</p><img><p>In the early 19th century, Syed Ahmad Mousavi Hindi left India for the holy city of Najaf in Iraq, a major religious centre for Shia Muslims. From there, his family moved to the city of Khamaneh in Iran. The family name ‘Khamenei’ came from this city. Over time, his descendants became influential religious and social figures.</p><img><p>The revolution’s leader was Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who declared Iran an Islamic Republic. After his death in 1989, Ali Khamenei became the country’s Supreme Leader. Today, as Iran’s Supreme Leader, he holds both religious and political power.</p><img><p>Some people in Kintoor, in UP’s Barabanki district, claim that the remains of Syed Ahmad Mousavi Hindi’s ancestral home and a mosque still exist. The village elders proudly recall this link. However, there are limited official documents to prove this. That’s why it’s seen more as a historical tradition than a fully confirmed fact.</p><img><p>Whenever a crisis deepens in the Middle East, discussions about the Iranian Supreme Leader’s background and strategy pick up. At times like these, Khamenei’s India connection comes back into focus. Is it just a historical curiosity, or a deeper link in the Iran-India relationship?</p><img><p>This story, linked to Barabanki’s Kintoor village, shows how historical roots can connect different countries. Although there are varying views on this link, one thing is certain: the Supreme Leader’s family background has added a new dimension to discussions about the India-Iran relationship.</p>