If Trump dies today, will people attend his funeral," asked Fatima Zadeh, who was part of the procession.
"I want the war to restart, we want to destroy the oppressors and we are after revenge.
These people are here not to mourn and shed tears, they came here to become united and gain strength," she said.
Ali Sayadian, a cleric from Yasuj, also showed little sign of forgiveness after traveling 1,000km to Tehran.
He stated he felt indebted to Khamenei's leadership for making Iran powerful.
"We want revenge," he said.
"Someone has come here and killed our leader in his house with his family, our great man. It is our right to want to exact revenge," he added.
Sayadian claimed the massive turnout sent a message to the world and those who doubted internal support for the Islamic Republic.
"These people you see on the street?
You cannot say they are all poor, you cannot say they are all rich, you cannot say they are from one specific geographical location, they have come from all over Iran.
This is the voice of the Iranian nation," he said.
Experts noted that those traveling an average distance of 1,000 miles to attend represented a self-selecting sample.
Citizens who chose not to attend may hold different views on the choices the supreme leader required Iran to make in search of independence.
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"Do you know about the shah and the crown prince? There is still a revolution happening.