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- <text id=89TT0564>
- <link 91TT0007>
- <link 90TT0495>
- <link 89TT0626>
- <title>
- Feb. 27, 1989: Hunted By An Angry Faith
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Cover Stories
- Feb. 27, 1989 The Ayatullah Orders A Hit
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- COVER STORY: Hunted by An Angry Faith
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Salman Rushdie's novel cracks open a fault line between East
- and West
- </p>
- <p>By William E. Smith
- </p>
- <p> It was an absurdist nightmare, a story that all but defied
- the Western imagination. A middle-aged author, born in Bombay
- but for many years resident in London, writes a long, sardonic
- novel, by turns philosophical and comic and fantastic. In the
- book's opening scene, two middle-aged Indian actors fall 29,002
- feet from a jetliner that has just been exploded by terrorists
- over the English Channel. They have an animated conversation as
- they hurtle toward earth; they land safely, but then their
- troubles begin anew. Along the way, the author writes about his
- schooling and young adulthood in Britain, about his love for
- Bombay and about the death of his father. He explores the roots
- of his Muslim faith and retells some legends of the Prophet
- Muhammad in a whimsical and sometimes outrageous way, though
- taking care to offer up these sequences as dreams, or even
- dreams within dreams, by characters who may or may not be mad.
- The book is praised by critics and wins a literary prize, but
- Muslims find some of the passages offensive. Soon there are
- threats, protests, demonstrations, riots in scattered places--India, South Africa, the Asian quarters of British cities. India
- bans the book to avoid sectarian violence, and is soon followed
- by Pakistan, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Egypt. Then a mass
- protest is staged outside the American cultural center in
- Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan; six people are killed, a
- hundred injured. Another dies during protests in
- Indian-controlled Kashmir.
- </p>
- <p> Then, most astonishing of all, Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini,
- 88, spiritual ruler of fundamentalist, revolutionary Iran,
- announces that the author must be killed for the sin of
- insulting Islam, the Prophet and the holy Koran, and for good
- measure exonerates any Muslim who manages to perpetrate this
- deed and promises him the rewards of martyrdom. And not only
- the author, but anyone else involved in the publication of the
- book. A day later, another Iranian cleric announces that a
- bounty has been placed on the author's head: $2.6 million if the
- avenger is an Iranian, $1 million if he is not. The following
- day, thanks to the generosity of still another Iranian
- philanthropist, the reward is doubled. Governments are angered,
- publishers intimidated, airlines subjected to bomb threats. The
- author and his family scurry into hiding, protected by Scotland
- Yard.
- </p>
- <p> This was the extraordinary plight of Salman Rushdie, 41,
- whose fourth novel, The Satanic Verses, has precipitated what
- some Islamic experts regard as the most incendiary literary
- fight in the 14 centuries of Islamic history. Last week the
- controversy spread from the dusty streets of Pakistan to the
- offices of European publishers and to the shopping malls of
- America, where the nation's largest booksellers ordered all
- copies of The Satanic Verses removed from the shelves. Suddenly
- the name Salman Rushdie was on the lips of millions, many
- reviling him but others expressing sympathy and genuinely
- wondering how a novel could elicit such deadly passion. The
- dispute reminded Westerners once again of the zealous rage that
- Khomeini is capable of; it also raised questions about how free
- societies can best protect themselves and their citizens
- against so furious and mercurial a form of intimidation.
- </p>
- <p> The conflict cut to the heart of Muslim and Judeo-Christian
- values, with centuries of cultural misunderstanding and mistrust
- finding a flash point in Rushdie's novel. After Khomeini's call
- to murder, many Muslim leaders worldwide disagreed with the
- ferocity of his action, but none had a friendly word for
- Rushdie, his literary intentions or his right to free speech.
- To be sure, few of his prosecutors had read the book, as the
- author pointed out repeatedly; most seemed to feel they had
- learned enough from printed excerpts or merely word of mouth to
- convict the author of blasphemy compounded by apostasy, the
- crime of renouncing one's religious faith. In the Muslim faith,
- the traditional punishment for an apostate is death.
- </p>
- <p> Asked if he took Khomeini's threat seriously, Rushdie,
- clearly shaken, replied, "I think I have to take it very
- seriously indeed." He canceled a planned book tour in the U.S.,
- moved out of his four-story house in North London and, under
- protection of Scotland Yard's antiterrorist squad, quietly
- disappeared. Then, in a formal statement released on Saturday,
- he declared, "I profoundly regret the distress that publication
- has occasioned to sincere followers of Islam."
- </p>
- <p> The Iranian news agency initially observed that the "Muslim
- heretic" had not repented. Later it said the apology might be
- accepted, and still later it dismissed the previous comment as
- the personal opinion of one of its employees. At the same time,
- the news agency reported that a local newspaper had denounced
- the offer of money to anyone who would kill Rushdie, observing
- that "to pay one man to kill another man is murder at a premium
- and not a religiously inspired act." This remarkable display of
- vacillation, played out in the dispatches from Tehran,
- suggested that pragmatists in Iran had begun a campaign to
- control the damage caused by the Ayatullah's earlier
- pronouncement.
- </p>
- <p> In the West, political leaders and the general public alike
- reacted with anger and disbelief to the outrage of a foreign
- despot declaring a death sentence on another country's citizen
- whose only crime, at least in Western eyes, was to probe the
- meaning of his Islamic heritage. In Washington, the State
- Department said it was "appalled" by Khomeini's statement as
- well as by the reward for Rushdie's murder. The Dutch Foreign
- Minister canceled a trip to Tehran. The British government
- found itself at the center of the controversy--because Rushdie
- is a British citizen and because its Tehran embassy, reopened
- less than three months ago after being closed for eight years,
- had been attacked by an angry mob earlier last week. The
- Foreign Office summoned Iran's lone diplomat in Britain and told
- him that Khomeini's threat was "totally unacceptable," demanded
- special protection for its embassy, and disclosed that London
- was "freezing" its plan to strengthen diplomatic ties with the
- Islamic state.
- </p>
- <p> British airlines received bomb threats, causing security
- delays at London's Heathrow Airport. Viking Penguin, Rushdie's
- publisher, was also the target of such threats at its London
- and New York City offices. Thanks to the Muslim broadside,
- sales of The Satanic Verses boomed--more than 100,000 copies
- were in print around the world--and a second U.S. printing was
- on the way, but distribution was a growing problem.
- Waldenbooks ordered copies of The Satanic Verses removed from
- its more than 1,300 stores after getting several threats. Next
- day B. Dalton and Barnes & Noble followed suit. "We have never
- before pulled a book off our shelves," said Leonard Riggio, B.
- Dalton's chief executive officer. "It is regrettable that a
- foreign government has been able to hold hostage our most sacred
- First Amendment principle. Nevertheless, the safety of our
- employees and patrons must take precedence." Though American
- writers' groups were at first slow to react to the controversy,
- the 2,200-member PEN American Center later issued a statement
- in support of Rushdie.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to the problem of distributing the book in the
- U.S., Viking Penguin faced a threat by 44 Islamic countries to
- ban the sale of its other books within their borders. In a
- statement, the company insisted that it had not intended to
- offend anyone and did not plan to withdraw the book from
- circulation. Andrew Wylie, Rushdie's New York City-based agent,
- said the book was still scheduled to be translated into 20
- languages, but publishers in France and West Germany were
- reconsidering plans to issue editions of their own. The
- Canadian government halted imports of the book while it decided
- whether, as alleged by Muslims, the novel violates the country's
- laws against hate literature.
- </p>
- <p> The actual risk faced by Rushdie and his publishers if
- Khomeini sought to follow through on his threat was difficult to
- gauge. Of the roughly 25,000 Iranians in Britain, it is believed
- there may be as many as 1,000 radical extremists, including
- students on short-term visas. Tehran-backed groups have a
- history of violent mischief in London, mostly bombings aimed at
- Iranian dissidents. Says Ian Geldard, head of research at
- London's Institute for the Study of Terrorism: "In the Islamic
- world, a call from the Imam is a full command...The worst
- of it is that this threat could remain in effect for months."
- Or even years. In a BBC radio interview, an exiled Iranian film
- director, Reza Fazeli, who himself has been the target of a
- Khomeini death threat and whose son was killed in a 1986
- terrorist attack in London, said Rushdie faced a "living hell."
- He continued, "I had to learn to look over my shoulder. If they
- kill you, it's over--it's finished. But (this way) they are
- killing you a hundred times a day."
- </p>
- <p> What exactly did Rushdie do to merit such a threat? By
- Western standards, nothing--at least nothing that could not be
- punished with a bad review. But among Muslims, and not just
- fundamentalists and extremists, there was an almost universal
- judgment that he had dishonored the faith. Every Muslim critic
- seemed to have a favorite offending passage from his book. But,
- in sum, they felt he had insulted the faith, ridiculed the
- Prophet, trivialized the sacred--and that the sin was
- compounded because it was committed by a born, though not a
- practicing, Muslim.
- </p>
- <p> In Britain, Rushdie had no shortage of defenders. A group of
- writers led by playwright Harold Pinter presented a petition in
- Rushdie's behalf at No. 10 Downing Street. Author Anthony
- Burgess, writing in the newspaper the Independent, stated the
- Western position precisely: "What a secular society thinks of
- the Prophet Muhammad is its own affair, and reason, apart from
- law, does not permit aggressive interference of the kind that
- has brought shame and death to Islamabad," where the rioting
- took several lives. "If Muslims want to attack the Christian or
- humanistic vision of Islam contained in our literature,"
- Burgess observed, "they will find more vicious travesties than
- Mr. Rushdie's."
- </p>
- <p> Others, looking for parallels to the Rushdie case both
- inside and outside Islam, referred to Muslim resentment of the
- medieval Christian mystery plays, with their satanic portrayals
- of the Prophet as "Mahound," the name Rushdie gives his
- crypto-Prophet. In 1977 a fanatical band of Hanafi Muslims shot
- their way into three buildings in Washington, took more than
- 100 hostages and, among other things, tried to halt the showing
- of a $17 million movie epic called Muhammad, Messenger of God
- at theaters in New York City and Los Angeles. Though the tone
- of the movie was reverential, the producers had met endless
- difficulties in making it, including expulsion of the film crew
- from Morocco. In 1980 Saudi Arabia vehemently protested a
- British-American TV "drama documentary" called Death of a
- Princess, which told the story of the 1977 executions of a
- young married Saudi princess and her lover. Some Muslims have
- even objected to Children of Gebelawi, a 30-year-old
- allegorical novel based on the development of the world's great
- religions, by Egypt's 1988 Nobel laureate, Naguib Mahfouz.
- </p>
- <p> Last year's furor over the Martin Scorsese motion picture
- The Last Temptation of Christ demonstrated that Christians,
- particularly those who believe in the literal interpretation of
- Scripture, are similarly sensitive about fictional portrayal of
- the sacred, though their protest generally takes less violent
- forms. Even secular gods are sometimes held by their followers
- to be above scrutiny; in earlier times the Kremlin was
- notoriously thin-skinned about revelations concerning the
- private lives of Lenin and other members of the Communist
- pantheon.
- </p>
- <p> Practically nobody, however, has managed to touch the
- sensitive nerve of a vast section of mankind as effectively as
- Salman Rushdie. In Bombay seven prominent writers and
- intellectuals, all non-Muslims, declared in a joint statement,
- "The pain of scurrilous intrusion into the regions of the
- sacred is not felt by the so-called fundamentalists only, but
- is the common experience of the whole, besieged (Muslim)
- minority. While there can be rational opposition to their faith,
- there should be no outraging of it by obscenity and slander."
- </p>
- <p> Many Oriental scholars have raised questions about Islam or
- the actions of the Prophet, but they have generally been
- ignored, often because they were understood to have a political
- bias. Rushdie's actions seem somehow more galling to Muslims
- because, though essentially free of political motivation, he
- appears to be tampering--and mischievously, at that--with
- the faith. Karim al Rawi, a lecturer at Cairo's American
- University, maintained that on this occasion Rushdie's
- propensity for provocation just went too far. Said Al Rawi: "In
- his other novels," in which Rushdie wrote, often scathingly, of
- post-independence India and Pakistan, "the writer acted like a
- little kid poking at a sleeping lion. In The Satanic Verses,
- the beast has awakened, and this time did not feel like
- playing." Most Muslims were simply offended by the material. "He
- attacked the wives of the Prophet," declared Ahmed Baghat, a
- writer for Cairo's Al Ahram. "He brought disgrace upon them."
- Said another Egyptian author, Sheik Muhammad Al Ghazaly: "We do
- not view this as freedom of opinion, but freedom to be
- insolent."
- </p>
- <p> Having made their case against the book, Islamic authorities
- divided sharply over how the author should be punished. Georges
- Sabagh, director of UCLA's Near East Studies Center, took an
- unyielding line, saying Khomeini was "completely within his
- rights" in sentencing Rushdie to death. Added Sabagh, taking
- full advantage of the free speech available to him in
- California: "If the man is struck by a thunderbolt, all the
- better." But should Muslims feel they have a right to kill
- Rushdie? "Why not?" he replied.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, Sheik Muhammad Hossam el Din of Cairo's
- Al Azhar Mosque argued that to execute Rushdie, as ordered by
- Khomeini, would be "virtually impossible" under the tenets of
- Islam. His solution: ban and burn the book and give the author a
- chance to repent. Issuance of a death decree, he went on, "makes
- Islam seem brutal and bloodthirsty." Many Islamic clerics were
- offended by Khomeini's pronouncement, regarding it as vengeful
- and contrary to Islamic teachings of mercy.
- </p>
- <p> Like most of their countrymen, U.S. experts on Islam were
- astonished by the intensity of the anti-Rushdie campaign. One
- academic specialist marveled that he could not "recall anything
- quite as widespread as this," then quickly asked that his name
- not be used. "I can't afford a bodyguard," he said. Since
- Islamic fundamentalism has been on the rise for at least 15
- years, how can one account for so explosive a reaction at this
- time, and against a book that could just as easily have been
- ignored? The answer is as much political as theological. Now
- that Iran has settled, if not exactly lost, its brutal and
- murderous war against Iraq, the Rushdie book has become a tool
- with which Khomeini can once again mobilize his constituency,
- this time against a conveniently distant enemy whose offenses
- are vaguely related to the Ayatullah's "Great Satan," the U.S.
- Says Marvin Zonis, a political scientist at the University of
- Chicago: "It's a way to make domestic political capital out of a
- foreign adventure."
- </p>
- <p> Such controversies reflect the confusion of a country torn
- between the more pragmatic forces seeking to moderate the
- ten-year-old Islamic revolution and open Iran to Western trade,
- and ideologues determined to retain control. For some months,
- moderate elements seemed to be in the ascendant. Only a few
- days preceding Khomeini's rampage against Rushdie, the Iranian
- leader's designated successor, Ayatullah Hussein Ali Montazeri,
- made an unusually conciliatory speech in the holy city of Qum.
- Montazeri lamented the fact that "people in the world have
- gained the idea that our business in Iran is just murdering
- people" and called on his country to "set aside past mistakes
- and harsh treatment," adding that "extremism is to our
- detriment." At about the same time, Parliamentary Speaker Ali
- Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani told the Iranian news agency that
- Tehran erred in seeking a military victory over Iraq. "We took
- too big a bite," he said.
- </p>
- <p> This was extraordinarily revisionist talk, and it may have
- been too much for Khomeini to stomach. He struck back,
- reaffirming his leadership of the Iranian masses with the most
- convenient weapon at hand, The Satanic Verses. The return of
- Khomeini's fiery rhetoric may be an isolated rage or it could
- mean that the hard-liners are once again trying to assert their
- strength.
- </p>
- <p> Politics also played a role in the anti-Rushdie agitation in
- Pakistan. Last week's demonstration at the American cultural
- center in Islamabad was staged by political and religious
- groups that oppose the government of Prime Minister Benazir
- Bhutto and were formerly aligned with her predecessor and enemy,
- the late President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq. On her return from a
- trip to China, she seized on this theme in a speech, asking,
- "Was the agitation really directed against this book, which has
- not been read, sold or translated in Pakistan, or was it a
- protest by those who lost the election (and wish) to destabilize
- the process of democracy?"
- </p>
- <p> Toward the end of the week, more violent protests flared in
- Iran, India and Bangladesh. In Tehran, however, Iran's President
- Ali Khamenei remarked that the death threat against Rushdie
- might be withdrawn if he would apologize to Muslims and to
- Khomeini. A day later, when Rushdie did exactly that, Iran's
- government-run news agency began to issue its series of
- contradictory reports and commentaries--a symbol of the
- confusion within the Tehran regime.
- </p>
- <p> But what to believe? Even as he was discussing the possible
- benefits of a Rushdie apology last week, Khamenei said of the
- author, "This wretched man has no choice but to die because he
- has confronted a billion Muslims and the Imam." Rushdie of
- course intended to do no such thing; rather, he used his
- considerable literary powers to address an audience of educated
- readers who understood very well that he was offering them a
- work of the imagination. The fate of both book and author poses a
- dilemma for Western societies that is not easily resolved.
- Granted there is a need in the West for greater sensitivity to
- Islamic concerns, so also is there a need to deny trespass to
- intruding zealots--one is reminded of Khamenei's remark that
- "the Imam knows no frontiers"--determined to inflict
- intellectual and sometimes physical terrorism on the rest of
- the world.
- </p>
- <p> For much of the past two months, Salman Rushdie has been
- defending himself and his book. "The thing that is most
- disturbing is that they are talking about a book that doesn't
- exist," he said. "The book that is worth killing people for and
- burning flags for is not the book I wrote." As Rushdie saw it,
- his book "isn't actually about Islam, but about migration,
- metamorphosis, divided selves, love, death, London and Bombay."
- The sad irony, he said, is "that after working for five years to
- give voice and fictional flesh to the immigrant culture of which
- I am myself a member, I should see my book burned, largely
- unread, by the people it's about--people who might find some
- pleasure and much recognition in its pages."
- </p>
- <p> As the week ended, Rushdie was under police guard somewhere
- in England, doubtless reflecting on the magical if sinister
- power that his words had acquired and getting acquainted with
- yet another place of refuge. It was a situation that he must
- have understood very well. As he wrote in his first novel,
- Grimus, more than a decade ago, "It is the natural condition of
- the exile, putting down roots in memory."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-