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- <text id=89TT0563>
- <link 89TT0708>
- <title>
- Feb. 27, 1989: Why Believers Are Outraged
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Feb. 27, 1989 The Ayatullah Orders A Hit
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 30
- Why Believers Are Outraged
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Richard N. Ostling
- </p>
- <p> There is a character in The Satanic Verses, a scribe named
- Salman, who commits an unthinkable sin. His job is to write down
- the revelations of God as recited by Mahound, Rushdie's
- fictional prophet. But the mischievous scribe repeatedly
- changes Mahound's words. When the prophet finally realizes that
- Salman has corrupted the text of his holy book, he explodes,
- "Your blasphemy can't be forgiven." The proper punishment for
- Salman's crime is death, but Mahound is merciful and spares his
- life.
- </p>
- <p> Rushdie, whose first name is also Salman, seems to share the
- character's skepticism about the authenticity of God's revealed
- word. But the real-life author will be lucky if he enjoys the
- same clemency as his fictional counterpart. His literary
- twisting of the Koran is the central transgression for which the
- Ayatullah Khomeini has condemned him to death. Explains
- Indian-born writer Mihir Bose: "Every Muslim, whether
- fundamentalist or liberal, believes the Koran is literally the
- very word of God, preserved in heaven and transmitted by the
- angel Gabriel through Muhammad." The Prophet himself, although
- not considered divine, is revered by Muslims as the model of
- sinless human perfection.
- </p>
- <p> Though Rushdie denies that his convoluted novel is meant to
- be antireligious, its profane and satirical treatment of Islam's
- origins is guaranteed to offend any true Muslim. Rushdie points
- out that his work is fictional and the two most offensive
- chapters merely recount the demented dreams of one of its
- characters. But in the eyes of believers, both historical and
- religious truth have come under an unprecedented assault. Their
- reaction is especially harsh because Rushdie was raised a
- Muslim. Says Professor Georges Sabagh, director of the center
- for Near Eastern studies at UCLA: "He's engaged in the worst
- kind of blasphemy. He's a renegade, an apostate."
- </p>
- <p> One of Rushdie's most bitterly disputed passages deals with
- the famous Satanic verses from which the novel takes its title.
- Here Mahound is tempted by Gibreel (obviously a reference to the
- angel Gabriel) to cut a deal with the enemies of his embryonic
- faith and tolerate worship of three of their goddesses alongside
- the one God. Gibreel later tells Mahound that the idea came from
- Satan, and the prophet orders acceptance of the rival deities
- to be stricken from his holy text.
- </p>
- <p> Actually, this passage did not spring from Rushdie's
- imagination: similar accounts of Muhammad's temptation were
- recorded a millennium ago by Ibn Sa`d, al-Tabari and other
- authoritative Muslim historians. Today's Islamic scholars,
- however, do not consider the story authentic. Like the section
- dealing with the scribe Salman, this episode is seen by
- Rushdie's critics as a blatant attempt to undermine the Koran as
- the word of God.
- </p>
- <p> What makes the story of the goddesses particularly offensive
- to Muslims is the fact that it was a standard argument hurled
- against Islam by 19th century Christian missionaries. Similarly,
- the name that Rushdie gives his prophet, Mahound, is one that
- Christians mockingly used in their medieval religious plays for
- a satanic version of Muhammad. (Rushdie's character explains
- that he has purposely adopted the name "to turn insults into
- strengths.") Some Muslims were similarly upset that Rushdie gave
- the holy city of Mecca the name Jahilia, meaning darkness, but
- the author seems to use the word to signify the spiritual
- ignorance that reigned there before the Koran was revealed to
- Muhammad. Believers are also angry because Rushdie ridicules
- various rules of daily life that the faith in fact never taught.
- </p>
- <p> The most sensational episode of Satanic Verses takes place
- in a brothel and bestows on prostitutes the names of Muhammad's
- wives. This is outrageous to Muslims, since they revere the
- Prophet's spouses as the "mothers of all believers." Contrary to
- many press reports on the book, Rushdie does not present
- Mahound's wives as fallen women. Rather, the prostitutes borrow
- the names and then gradually take on the identities of the
- wives to mock Mahound. Nonetheless, Hasan Abdul-Hakim, a
- British Muslim convert, likens this episode to "presenting the
- Virgin Mary as a whore." Nor did Rushdie endear himself to
- Islamic readers by naming his brothel Hijab, the Arab term
- referring to the modest veiling of Muslim women.
- </p>
- <p> Defenders of the book point out that, as in the brothel
- scene, scurrilous material is often not Rushdie's own
- characterization of Muhammad and his followers. Instead, it is
- the calumny of the idolaters whom the prophet was seeking to
- overthrow. The pagans, for example, call the prophet's
- companions "scum" and Ibrahim (Abraham) a "bastard."
- </p>
- <p> Even if Muhammad had been portrayed with more respect,
- explains Amir Taheri, a Paris-based Iranian journalist, the
- mere fact of making him a fictional character would strike
- Muslims as a transgression against hodud -- the limits of
- propriety. "Islam does not recognize unlimited freedom of
- expression," says Taheri. "Most Muslims are prepared to be
- broad-minded about most things but never about anything that
- even remotely touches on their faith." In ignoring that fact,
- Rushdie has made himself the bane of Islamic society -- and the
- target of Khomeini's death squads.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-