Satanic Verses controversy explained

The Satanic Verses controversy, also known as the Rushdie Affair, was a controversy sparked by the 1988 publication of Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses. It centered on the novel's references to the Satanic Verses (apocryphal verses of the Quran), and came to include a larger debate about censorship and religious violence. It included numerous killings, attempted killings (including against Rushdie himself), and bombings by perpetrators who supported Islam.[1]

The affair had a notable impact on geopolitics when, in 1989, Ruhollah Khomeini, Supreme Leader of Iran, issued a fatwa ordering Muslims to kill Rushdie. The Iranian government has changed its support for the fatwa several times, including in 1998 when Mohammad Khatami said the regime no longer supported it.[2] However, a fatwa cannot be revoked in Shia Islamic tradition. In 2017, a statement was published on the official website of the current supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei, stating that "the decree is as Imam Khomeini (ra) issued"[3] and in February 2019, the Khamenei.ir Twitter account stated that Khomeini's verdict was "solid and irrevocable".[4]

The issue was said to have divided "Muslims from Westerners along the fault line of culture,"[5] [6] and to have pitted a core Western value of freedom of expressionthat no one "should be killed, or face a serious threat of being killed, for what they say or write"[7] against the view of some Muslims that non-Muslims should not be free to disparage the "honour of the Prophet" or indirectly criticise Islam through satireand that religious violence is appropriate in contemporary history in order to defend Islam and Muhammad.[8] English writer Hanif Kureishi called the fatwa "one of the most significant events in postwar literary history".[9]

Background

Even before the publication of The Satanic Verses, the books of Salman Rushdie had stoked controversy. Rushdie saw his role as a writer "as including the function of antagonist to the state".[10] His second book Midnight's Children angered Indira Gandhi because it seemed to suggest "that Mrs. Gandhi was responsible for the death of her husband through neglect".[11] His 1983 roman à clef Shame "took an aim on Pakistan, its political characters, its culture and its religion... [It covered] a central episode in Pakistan's internal life, which portrays as a family squabble between Iskander Harappa (Zulfikar Ali Bhutto) and his successor and executioner Raza Hyder (Zia ul-Haq)... 'The Virgin Ironpants'... has been identified as Benazir Bhutto, a Prime Minister of Pakistan".[11]

Positions Rushdie took as a committed leftist prior to the publication of his book were the source of some controversy. He defended many of those who would later attack him during the controversy. Rushdie forcefully denounced the Shah's government and supported the Islamic Revolution of Iran, at least in its early stages. He condemned the US bombing raid on Tripoli in 1986 but found himself threatened by Libya's leader Muammar al-Gaddafi three years later.[12] He wrote a book bitterly critical of US foreign policy in general and its war in Nicaragua in particular, for example calling the United States government, "the bandit posing as sheriff".[13] After the Ayatollah's fatwa however, he was accused by the Iranian government of being "an inferior CIA agent".[14] A few years earlier, an official jury appointed by a ministry of the Iranian Islamic government had bestowed an award on the Persian translation of Rushdie's book Shame, which up until then was the only time a government had awarded Rushdie's work a prize.

Controversial elements of The Satanic Verses

The title The Satanic Verses immediately sparked vehement protest against Rushdie's book. The title refers to a legend of Muhammad; a few verses were supposedly spoken by him as part of the Qur'an which praised the pagan goddesses of Al-Lat, Al-Uzza, and Manat. The verses were then withdrawn on the grounds that the devil had sent them to deceive Muhammad into thinking they came from God. These "Satanic Verses" are said to have been revealed between verses 20 and 21 in Surah An-Najm of the Qur'an,[15] and feature in accounts by Al-Tabari and Ibn Ishaq. The verses also appear in other accounts of the prophet's life. Verse 23 in Surah An-Najm implies that the Satanic Verses were fabricated by the forefathers of idolaters.

The utterance and withdrawal of the so-called Satanic Verses forms an important sub-plot in the novel, which recounts several episodes in the life of Muhammad. The phrase Arab historians and later Muslims used to describe the incident of the withdrawn verses was not "Satanic verses", but the gharaniq verses; the phrase "Satanic verses" was unknown to Muslims, and was coined by Orientalist Western academics specialising in the study of cultures considered eastern. The story itself is not found in the six Sahih of the Sunni or the Shiite sources, so much so that Muraghi, in his commentary, says: "These traditions are undoubtedly a fabrication of the heretics and foreign hands, and have not been found in any of the authentic books".[16] [17] According to Daniel Pipes,[18] when attention was drawn to a book with this title, "Muslims found [it] incredibly sacrilegious", and took it to imply that the book's author claimed that verses of the Qur'an were "the work of the Devil".[19]

According to McRoy (2007), other controversial elements included the use of the name Mahound, said to be a derogatory term for Muhammad used by the English during the Crusades; the use of the term Jahilia, denoting the "time of ignorance" before Islam, for the holy city of Mecca; the use of the name of the Angel Gibreel (Gabriel) for a film star, of the name of Saladin, the well known Muslim military leader during the Crusades, for a devil, and the name of Ayesha, the wife of Muhammad, for a fanatical Indian girl who leads her village on a fatal pilgrimage. Moreover, the brothel of the city of Jahiliyyah was staffed by prostitutes with the same names as Muhammad's wives,[20] who are viewed by Muslims as "the Mothers of all Believers".[21]

Other issues many Muslims have found offensive include Abraham being called a "bastard" for casting Hagar and Ishmael in the desert;[22] and a character named Salman the Persian who serves as one of the Prophet's scribes, an apparent reference to the story, controversial among Muslims, of a Meccan convert by the name of Abd Allah ibn Sa'd, who left Islam after the Prophet failed to notice small changes he had made in the dictation of the Qur'an.

Daniel Pipes identified other more general issues in the book likely to have angered pious Muslims: A complaint in the book by one of the character's companions: "rules about every damn thing, if a man farts, let him turn his face to the wind, a rule about which hand to use for the purpose of cleaning one's behind ...", which was said to mix up "Islamic law with its opposite and with the author's whimsy";[20] the prophet of Rushdie's novel, as he lies dying, being visited in a dream by the Goddess Al-Lat, on the grounds that this suggested either that she exists or that the prophet thought she did; the angel Gibreel's vision of the Supreme Being in another dream as "not abstract in the least. He saw, sitting on the bed, a man of about the same age as himself", balding, wearing glasses and "seeming to suffer from dandruff".[23] A complaint by one of the characters about communal violence in India: "Fact is, religious faith, which encodes the highest aspirations of human race, is now, in our country, the servant of lowest instincts, and God is the creature of evil".[23]

The Guardian newspaper published on 14 September 2012 a series of recollections of various British people involved in the controversy. Lisa Appignanesi, ex-president of English PEN, observed "Intransigence is never so great as when it feels it has a god on its side." One of the lawyers involved, Geoffrey Robertson QC, rehearsed the arguments and replies made when 13 Muslim barristers had lodged a formal indictment against Rushdie for the crime of blasphemous libel: it was said that God was described in the book as "the Destroyer of Man", yet he is described as such in the Old Testament and the Book of Revelation, especially of men who are unbelievers or enemies of the Jews; that the book contained criticisms of the prophet Abraham, yet the Islamic, Christian and Jewish traditions themselves see Abraham as not without fault and deserving of criticism; that Rushdie referred to Mohammed as "Mahound", a conjurer, a magician and a false prophet, yet these remarks are made by a drunken apostate, a character with whom neither reader nor author has any sympathy; that the book insults the wives of the Prophet by having whores use their names, yet the wives are explicitly said to be chaste and the adoption of their names by whores is to symbolise the corruption of the city then being described (perhaps symbolising Mecca in its pre-Islamic state); that the book vilified the companions of the Prophet, calling them "bums from Persia" and "clowns", yet the character saying this is a hack poet hired to write propaganda against the Prophet and does not reflect the author's beliefs; that the book criticised Islam for having too many rules and seeking to control every aspect of life, yet while characters in the book do make such remarks these cannot constitute blasphemy since they do not vilify God or the Prophet.[24]

Early reaction

Before the publication of The Satanic Verses, the publisher received "warnings from the publisher's editorial consultant" that the book might be controversial.[11] Later, Rushdie would reflect upon the time that the book was about to be published. Speaking to an interviewer, he said, "I expected a few mullahs would be offended, call me names, and then I could defend myself in public... I honestly never expected anything like this".[11]

The Satanic Verses was published by Viking Penguin on 26 September 1988 in the UK, and on 22 February 1989 in the US.[11] Upon its publication the book garnered considerable critical acclaim in the United Kingdom. On 8 November 1988, the work received the Whitbread Award for novel of the year,[11] worth £20,000.[25] According to one observer, "almost all the British book reviewers" were unaware of the book's connection to Islam because Rushdie has used the name Mahound instead of Muhammad for his chapter on Islam.[20]

Muslim response and book bannings

After the book was first published in the United Kingdom (in September 1988), there were protests by Muslims that predominantly took place in India and the UK. When the book was published in February 1989 in the United States, it received renewed attention, and worldwide protests began to take a more violent form.

In Islamic communities, the novel became instantly controversial, because of what some Muslims considered blasphemous references. Rushdie was accused of misusing freedom of speech.[26] By October 1988, letters and phone calls arrived at Viking Penguin from Muslims, angry with the book and demanding that it be withdrawn.[11] Before the end of the month, the import of the book was banned in India, although possession of the book is not a criminal offence.[11] [27]

In November 1988, it was also banned in Bangladesh, Sudan, and South Africa. By December 1988, it was also banned in Sri Lanka.[11] In March 1989, it was banned in Malaysia, followed by Brunei in the same year.[28]

In Britain, on 2 December 1988, 7,000 Muslims in the town of Bolton staged the first ever demonstration against The Satanic Verses. After the Friday prayers, a certain section of the congregation marched from the Deobandi run Zakariyya Jame Masjid to the town centre and then burned the book. The organisers claimed "It was a peaceful protest, and we burned the book to try and attract public attention".[29]

The City of Bradford gained international attention in January 1989 when some of its members organized a public book-burning of The Satanic Verses, evoking as the journalist Robert Winder recalled "images of medieval (not to mention Nazi) intolerance".[30]

In February, when the US edition was published, a new round of reviews and criticism began. March 1989 saw it banned in Kenya, Thailand, Tanzania, Indonesia, and Singapore.[11] The last nation to ban the book was Venezuela, in June 1989.[11]

On 12 February 1989, a 10,000-strong protest against Rushdie and the book took place in Islamabad, Pakistan. Six protesters were killed in an attack on the American Cultural Center, and an American Express office was ransacked.[31]

Attacks

In the United States, the FBI was notified of 78 threats to bookstores in early March 1989, thought to be a small proportion of the total number of threats. The bookstore chain B. Dalton, for instance, received 30 threats in less than three hours. Bombings of book stores included two in Berkeley, California. In New York, the office of a community newspaper, The Riverdale Press, was all but destroyed by firebombs following the publication of an editorial defending the right to read the novel and criticising the bookstores that pulled it from their shelves.[32] But the United Kingdom was the country where violence against bookstores occurred most often and persisted the longest. Two large bookstores in Charing Cross Road, London, (Collets and Dillons) were bombed on 9 April. In May, explosions went off in the town of High Wycombe and again in London, on Kings Road. Other bombings included one at a large London department store (Liberty's), in connection with the Penguin Bookshop inside the store, and at the Penguin store in York. Unexploded devices were found at Penguin stores in Guildford, Nottingham, and Peterborough.[33]

In the United States, it was unavailable in about one-third of bookstores. In many others that carried the book, it was kept under the counter.[34]

Fatwa by Ayatollah Khomeini

On 14 February 1989, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the Supreme Leader of Iran and one of the most prominent Shi'a Muslim leaders, issued a fatwa calling for the death of Rushdie and his publishers. This created a major international incident that persisted for many years.

Broadcast on Iranian radio, the judgement read:

Khomeini did not give a legal reasoning for his judgement. It is thought to be based on the ninth chapter of the Qur'an, called At-Tawba, verse 61: "Some of them hurt the prophet by saying, 'He is all ears!' Say, 'It is better for you that he listens to you. He believes in God, and trusts the believers. He is a mercy for those among you who believe.' Those who hurt God's messenger have incurred a painful retribution".[35] However it was not explained how that chapter could support such a judgement.

Over the next few days, Iranian officials offered a bounty of $6 million for killing Rushdie, who was thus forced to live under police protection for the next nine years. On 7 March 1989, the United Kingdom and Iran broke diplomatic relations over the Rushdie controversy.[36] [37]

Rushdie's apology and reaction

Rushdie's apology

On 18 February, Iran's President Ali Khamenei (who would later that year succeed Khomeini as Supreme Leader) suggested that if Rushdie "apologises and disowns the book, people may forgive him".[38] Following this, Rushdie issued "a carefully worded statement",[38] saying:

I recognize that Muslims in many parts of the world are genuinely distressed by the publication of my novel. I profoundly regret the distress the publication has occasioned to the sincere followers of Islam. Living as we do in a world of many faiths, this experience has served to remind us that we must all be conscious of the sensibilities of others.[38]

This was relayed to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Tehran "via official channels" before being released to the press.[38]

Rejection of Rushdie's apology

On 19 February 1990, Ayatollah Khomeini's office replied:

Khomeini added:

If a non-Muslim becomes aware of Rushdie's whereabouts and has the ability to execute him quicker than Muslims, it is incumbent on Muslims to pay a reward or a fee in return for this action.[39]

In a 2007 article, journalist Anthony McRoy theorized that Khomeini refused the apology on the basis of an interpretation of the Islamic law posited by Al-Shafi'i, a 9th century jurist, who, in his Risala (Maliki Manual 37.19 Crimes Against Islam), ruled that an "apostate is also killed unless he repents... Whoever abuses the Messenger of God ... is to be executed, and his repentance is not accepted".[21]

Support for Khomeini's fatwa

In Britain, the Union of Islamic Students' Associations in Europe, which is the largest collective of Islamic Students in Europe, issued a statement offering to commit murder for Khomeini. Despite incitement to murder being illegal in the United Kingdom,[40] one London property developer told reporters, "If I see him, I will kill him straight away. Take my name and address. One day I will kill him".[41]

Despite supporting the fatwa, some other leaders claimed that British Muslims were not allowed to carry out the fatwa themselves in order to avoid violating the law of a land in which they are a minority, and that only outside Muslims had an obligation to carry out the fatwa. Proponents of this view included the Muslim Parliament and its leader Kalim Siddiqui[42] [43] [44] (who later said he believed he may have been "partially responsible" for getting Khomeini to issue the fatwa[45]). After Siddiqui's death in 1996, however, his successor Ghayasuddin Siddiqui renewed support for the fatwa.[46] His support for the fatwa continued, even after the President of Iran said his government would not pursue -- though also not withdraw -- the fatwa.[47] and reiterated his support in 2000.[48]

Meanwhile, in America, the director of the Near East Studies Center at UCLA, George Sabbagh, told an interviewer that Khomeini was "completely within his rights" to call for Rushdie's death.[49] [50]

In May 1989 in Beirut, Lebanon, British citizen Jackie Mann was abducted "in response to Iran's fatwa against Salman Rushdie for the publication of The Satanic Verses and more specifically, for his refuge and protection in the United Kingdom".[51] He joined several Westerners held hostage there. Two months earlier a photograph of three teachers held hostage was released by Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine with the message that it "would take revenge against" all institutions and organisations that insulted in one way or another "members of the Prophet Mohammed's family".[52]

Criticism of Khomeini's fatwa

Khomeini's fatwa was condemned across the Western world by governments on the grounds that it violated the universal human rights of free speech, freedom of religion, and that Khomeini had no right to condemn to death a citizen of another country living in that country. The twelve members of the European Economic Community removed their ambassadors from Tehran for three weeks.[37]

On Islamic grounds

In addition to criticism of the death sentence on the basis of human rights, the sentence was also criticised on Islamic grounds. According to Bernard Lewis, a death warrant without trial, defence and other legal aspects of sharia violates Islamic jurisprudence. In Islamic fiqh, apostasy by a mentally sound adult male is a capital crime. For Lewis, fiqh also "lays down procedures according to which a person accused of an offense is to be brought to trial, confronted with his accuser, and given the opportunity to defend himself." Lewis added that "[a] judge will then give a verdict and if he finds the accused guilty, pronounce sentence", and that "[e]ven the most rigorous and extreme of the classical jurists only require a Muslim to kill anyone who insults the Prophet in his hearing and in his presence. They say nothing about a hired killing for a reported insult in a distant country."[53]

Other Islamic scholars outside Iran took issue with the fact that the sentence was not passed by an Islamic court,[41] or that it did not limit its "jurisdiction only [to] countries under Islamic law".[35] Muhammad Hussam al Din, a theologian at Al-Azhar University, argued "Blood must not be shed except after a trial [when the accused has been] given a chance to defend himself and repent".[41] Abdallah al-Mushidd, head of Azhar's Fatwā Council stated "We must try the author in a legal fashion as Islam does not accept killing as a legal instrument".[54]

The Islamic Jurisprudence Academy in Mecca urged that Rushdie be tried, and if found guilty, be given a chance to repent (p. 93), and Ayatollah Mehdi Rohani, head of the Shi'i community in Europe and a cousin of Khomeini, criticised Khomeini for 'respect[ing] neither international law nor that of Islam.'[55] There was also criticism of the fatwa issued against Rushdie's publishers. According to Daniel Pipes, the Sharia "clearly establishes that disseminating false information is not the same as expressing it. 'Transmitting blasphemy is not blasphemy' (naql al-kufr laysa kufr)." In addition, the publishers were not Muslim and so could not be "sentenced under the Islamic laws of apostasy". If there was another legal justification for sentencing them to death, "Khomeini failed to provide" it.[56]

Iran's response to calls for a trial was to denounce its Islamic proponents as "deceitful". President Khomeini accused them of attempting to use religious law as "a flag under which they can crush revolutionary Islam".[57]

Questions of political motivation

Some speculate that the fatwa (or at least the reaffirmation of the death threat four days later) was issued with motives other than a sense of duty to protect Islam by punishing blasphemy/apostasy. Namely:

Questions of personal motivation

Despite claims by Iranian officials that "Rushdie's book did not insult Iran or Iranian leaders" and so they had no selfish personal motivation to attack the book, the book does include an eleven-page sketch of Khomeini's stay in Paris that could well be considered an insult to him. It describes him as having "grown monstrous, lying in the palace forecourt with his mouth yawning open at the gates; as the people march through the gates he swallows them whole". In the words of one observer, "If this is not an insult, Khomeini was far more tolerant than one might suppose".[65] John Crowley has noted that the section of the book depicting the Khomeini-like character was selected to be read publicly by Rushdie in the promotional events leading up to and following the book's release.[66] In Crowley's opinion, the fatwa was most likely declared because of this section of the novel and its public exposure, rather than the overall parodic treatment of Islam.[66]

Attempts to revoke the fatwa

On 24 September 1998, as a precondition to the restoration of diplomatic relations with Britain, the Iranian government, then headed by reformist Muhammad Khatami, gave a public commitment that it would "neither support nor hinder assassination operations on Rushdie".[67] [68] In early 2005, Khomeini's fatwa was reaffirmed by Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a message to Muslim pilgrims making the annual pilgrimage to Mecca.[69] Additionally, the Revolutionary Guards have declared that the death sentence on him is still valid.[70] Iran has rejected requests to withdraw the fatwa on the basis that only the person who issued it may withdraw it,[69] with Ruhollah Khomeini having died in 1989.

On 14 February 2006, the Iranian state news agency reported that the fatwa will remain in place permanently.[71]

In 2007, Salman Rushdie reported that he still receives a "sort of Valentine's card" from Iran each year on 14 February letting him know the country has not forgotten the vow to kill him. He was also quoted saying, "It's reached the point where it's a piece of rhetoric rather than a real threat".[72]

2022 assassination attempt

See main article: Stabbing of Salman Rushdie. On August 12, 2022 at around 10:47 a.m. EDT,[73] a man stabbed Salman Rushdie as he was about to give a public lecture on the United States as safe haven for exiled writers at the Chautauqua Institution in Chautauqua, New York, United States.[73] [74] [75] [76] The assailant stabbed him ten times, straining to continue the attack even as several people held him back.[73] One of these people was the co-founder of City of Asylum, Henry Reese, onstage at the time, about to begin interviewing Rushdie. During the assault, Reese sustained a shallow knife wound and deep bruising in the vicinity of his right eye.[77] [78] A doctor, who was present for the lecture, immediately tended to Rushdie.[79] Rushdie suffered four wounds to the stomach area of his abdomen, three wounds to the right side of the front part of his neck, one wound to his right eye, one wound to his chest and one wound to his right thigh.[80] A 24-year-old suspect, Hadi Matar, was arrested at the scene, and was charged the following day with assault and attempted murder. Rushdie was gravely wounded and hospitalized.

The government of Iran denied having foreknowledge of the stabbing, although Iranian state-controlled media celebrated it.

Social and political fallout

One of the immediate consequences of the fatwa was a worsening of Islamic-Western relations.

Heightened tension

Rushdie lamented that the controversy fed the Western stereotype of "the backward, cruel, rigid Muslim, burning books and threatening to kill the blasphemer",[81] while another British writer compared the Ayatollah Khomeini "with a familiar ghost from the past – one of those villainous Muslim clerics, a Faqir of Ipi or a mad Mullah, who used to be portrayed, larger than life, in popular histories of the British Empire".[82] Media expressions of this included a banner headline in the popular British newspaper the Daily Mirror referring to Khomeini as "that Mad Mullah".[83]

The Independent newspaper worried that Muslim book burning demonstrations were "following the example of the Inquisition and Hitler's National Socialists",[84] and that if Rushdie was killed, "it would be the first burning of a heretic in Europe in two centuries".[85] Peregrine Worsthorne of The Sunday Telegraph feared that with Europe's growing Muslim population, "Islamic fundamentalism is rapidly growing into a much bigger threat of violence and intolerance than anything emanating from, say, the fascist National Front; and a threat, moreover, infinitely more difficult to contain since it is virtually impossible to monitor, let alone stamp out ...".[86]

On the Muslim side, the Iranian government saw the book as part of a British conspiracy against Islam. It broke diplomatic relations with UK on 7 March 1989 giving the explanation that "in the past two centuries Britain has been in the frontline of plots and treachery against Islam and Muslims". It accused the British of sponsoring Rushdie's book to use it as a political and cultural tactic on earlier military plots that no longer worked.[87] It also saw itself as the victor of the controversy, with the European Community countries capitulating under Iranian pressure. "When Europeans saw that their economic interests in Muslim countries could be damaged, they began to correct their position on the issue of the insulting book. Every official started to condemn the book in one way or another. When they realised that Iran's reaction, its breaking of diplomatic relations with London, could also include them, they quickly sent back their ambassadors to Tehran to prevent further Iranian reaction".[88]

Book sales

Although British bookseller W.H. Smith sold "a mere hundred copies" within a week of the book's release in mid-January 1989, it "flew off the shelves" following the fatwa. In America, it sold an "unprecedented" five times more copies than the number two book, Star by Danielle Steel, selling more than 750,000 copies of the book by May 1989. B. Dalton, a bookstore chain that decided not to stock the book for security reasons, changed its mind when it found the book "was selling so fast that even as we tried to stop it, it was flying off the shelves".[89] [90] Rushdie earned about $2 million within the first year of the book's publication,[91] and the book is Viking's all-time best seller.[92]

Rushdie

The author of the book himself was not immediately killed or injured as many militants wished, but visibly frustrated by a life locked in 24-hour armed guard – alternately defiant against his would-be killers and attempting overtures of reconciliation against the death threat. A week after the death threat, and after his unsuccessful apology to the Iranian government, Rushdie described succumbing to "a curious lethargy, the soporific torpor that overcomes ... while under attack";[93] then, a couple of weeks after that, wrote a poem vowing "not to shut up" but "to sing on, in spite of attacks".[94]

His wife, Marianne Wiggins, reported that in the first few months following the fatwa the couple moved 56 times, once every three days. In late July, Rushdie separated from Wiggins, "the tension of being at the centre of an international controversy, and the irritations of spending all hours of the day together in seclusion", being too much for their "shaky" relationship.[95]

Late the next year, Rushdie declared, "I want to reclaim my life", and in December signed a declaration "affirming his Islamic faith and calling for Viking-Penguin, the publisher of The Satanic Verses, neither to issue the book in paperback nor to allow it to be translated".[96] This also failed to move supporters of the fatwa and by mid-2005 Rushdie was condemning Islamic fundamentalism as a

... project of tyranny and unreason which wishes to freeze a certain view of Islamic culture in time and silence the progressive voices in the Muslim world calling for a free and prosperous future. ... along comes 9/11, and now many people say that, in hindsight, the fatwa was the prologue and this is the main event.[97]

A memoir of his years of hiding, titled Joseph Anton, was published on 18 September 2012. Joseph Anton was Rushdie's secret alias.[98]

Explanation of different reactions

Muslim

The passionate international rage of Muslims towards the book surprised many Western readers because the book was written in English, not Arabic, Urdu, Persian or other languages for which the majority of mother tongue speakers are Muslims; it was never published or even sold in the countries where most Muslims lived, and was a work of fictiona demanding, densely written novel unlikely to appeal to the average reader.[99]

Some of the explanations for the unprecedented rage unleashed against the book were that:

Western mainstream

Despite the passionate intensity of Muslim feeling on the issue, no Western government banned The Satanic Verses. This is primarily because most Western governments explicitly or implicitly allow for freedom of expression, which includes forbidding censorship in the vast majority of cases. Western attitudes regarding freedom of expression differ from those in the Arab world because:

The last point also explains why one of the few groups to speak out in Muslim countries against Khomeini and for Rushdie's right to publish his book were other writers.[120] Nobel prize winners Wole Soyinka of Nigeria and Naguib Mahfouz of Egypt, both attacked Khomeini, and both received death threats as a result, with Mahfouz later getting stabbed in the neck by a Muslim fundamentalist.[121]

Some Western politicians and writers did criticise Rushdie. Former US president Jimmy Carter, while condemning the threats and fatwa against Rushdie, stated, "we have tended to promote him and his book with little acknowledgment that it is a direct insult to those millions of Moslems whose sacred beliefs have been violated and are suffering in restrained silence the added embarrassment of the Ayatollah's irresponsibility". He also held that Rushdie must have been aware of the response his book would evoke: "The author, a well-versed analyst of Moslem beliefs, must have anticipated a horrified reaction throughout the Islamic world".[122] He saw a need to be "sensitive to the concern and anger" of Muslims and thought severing diplomatic relations with Iran would be an "overreaction".[123]

Among authors, Roald Dahl was scathing and called Rushdie's book sensationalist and Rushdie "a dangerous opportunist".[124] John le Carré thought the death sentence to be outrageous, but he also criticised Rushdie's action: "I don't think it is given to any of us to be impertinent to great religions with impunity",[124] although he later expressed regret over his dispute with Rushdie.[125] Rushdie, however, was supported by major bodies in the literary world such as PEN and Association of American Publishers, and prominent figures such as Günter Grass, Martin Amis, Saul Bellow, Nadine Gordimer, and Derek Walcott.[126] Another major supporter of Rushdie, Christopher Hitchens, said that the fatwa persuaded him that Islamic fundamentalism was an urgent menace, and later wrote God Is Not Great, a polemic against religion.[127] The affair however led to greater caution and some degree of self-censorship when dealing with Islamic issues in the literary and other creative arts.[128]

Western religious figures

Many religious figures in the United States and United Kingdom shared the aversion to blasphemy of pious Muslims (if not as intensely) and did not defend Rushdie like their secular compatriots. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Runcie, demanded that the government expand the Blasphemy Act to cover other religions, including Islam.[129]

Michael Walzer wrote that the response revealed an evolution of the meaning of blasphemy; it moved away from a crime against God and toward something more temporal.

Today we are concerned for our pain and sometimes, for other people's. Blasphemy has become an offence against the faithful – in much the same way as pornography is an offence against the innocent and the virtuous. Given this meaning, blasphemy is an ecumenical crime and so it is not surprising ... that Christians and Jews should join Muslims in calling Salman Rushdie's [book] a blasphemous book.[130]

Some rabbis, such as Immanuel Jakobovits, chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, opposed the book's publication.[131]

Reception timeline

1988

1989

1990

1991

1993–1994

1997–1998

The Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran has no intention, nor is it going to take any action whatsoever, to threaten the life of the author of The Satanic Verses or anybody associated with his work, nor will it encourage or assist anybody to do so".

1999

2000–2004

2005–2007

2008–2012

2016

2022

See main article: Stabbing of Salman Rushdie.

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Jessica Jacobson. Islam in transition: religion and identity among British Pakistani youth. 1998, p. 34
  2. News: Iran Drops Rushdie Death Threat, And Britain Renews Teheran Ties . The New York Times . Barbara . Crossette . 25 September 1998 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20090224152053/http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F02E5DF1439F936A1575AC0A96E958260 . 24 February 2009 . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: . Ayatollah Khamenei's fatwa on Salman Rushdie's apostasy from Islam [sic]]. . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20170215101308/https://english.khamenei.ir/news/4634/Ayatollah-Khamenei-s-fatwa-on-Salman-Rushdie-s-apostasy-from . . Khamenei.ir.
  4. Khamenei_ir . Khamenei.ir . 1096115344073256960. Imam Khomeini's verdict regarding Salman Rushdie is based on divine verses and just like divine verses, it is solid and irrevocable. 1990-06-05 . https://archive.today/20190215221710/https://twitter.com/khamenei_ir/status/1096115344073256960 . 15 February 2019 . 14 February 2019 . dead.
  5. Pipes, 1990, p. 133
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=wYkQXO4sEoAC&q=From+fatwa+to+jihad+: From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Aftermath By Kenan Malik
  7. News: Timothy Garton Ash . No ifs and no buts . The Guardian . 27 January 2012 . London . 22 June 2007 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20071219121900/http://books.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2109613,00.html . 19 December 2007 .
  8. Web site: Pakistan blasts Rushdie honour . https://archive.today/20120726163809/http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia/2007/06/2008525123146597321.html . dead . 2012-07-26 . Al Jazeera . 27 January 2012.
  9. News: Looking back at Salman Rushdie's 'The Satanic Verses'. The Guardian. 14 September 2012. 14 September 2012. London. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20141008194257/http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/sep/14/looking-at-salman-rushdies-satanic-verses?INTCMP=SRCH. 8 October 2014.
  10. Rushdie, Salman, Jaguar Smile; New York: Viking, 1987, p. 50
  11. Book: Text and Trauma: An East-West Primer . Ian Richard Netton. 1996. Routledge Curzon. Richmond, UK. 0-7007-0325-X.
  12. Pipes, 1990, p. 236
  13. Rushdie, Jaguar Smile, Viking, 1987
  14. "The book's author is in England but the real supporter is the United States"Interior Minister Mohtashemi (IRNA 17 February 1989) "An Iranian government statement called Rushdie "an inferior CIA agent" and referred to the book as a "provocative American deed". (IRNA 14 February 1989) (Pipes, 1990, p. 129)
  15. Web site: Surah An-Najm – 18–22 . 28 February 2016 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20160306203937/http://quran.com/53/18-22 . 6 March 2016 .
  16. Book: Tafsir Muraghi, vol. 17, pg. 130, under the abovementioned verse.. Al Muraghi.
  17. Web site: What is the Myth of Gharaniq or 'The Satanic Verses'?. Ayatullah al-'Uzma al-Hajj ash-Shaykh Nasir Makarim Shirazi. The Islamic Education Board of the World Federation of Khoja Shia Ithna-Asheri Muslim Communities. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150701110337/http://www.al-islam.org/180-questions-about-islam-vol-2-various-issues-makarim-shirazi/43-what-myth-gharaniq-or-%E2%80%98-satanic. 1 July 2015. 1 September 2018.
  18. [Daniel Pipes]
  19. Book: Islam and Postcolonial Narrative. John D. Erickson. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, UK. 1998. 0-511-00769-8.
  20. Pipes, 1990, p. 65
  21. Web site: Why Muslims feel angry about the Rushdie knighthood. 1 July 2007. Anthony McRoy. Religious Intelligence . https://web.archive.org/web/20090215055220/http://www.religiousintelligence.co.uk/news/?NewsID=875 . 15 February 2009.
  22. Michael M. J. Fischer . Mehdi Abedi . Bombay Talkies, the Word and the World: Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses. Cultural Anthropology. 5. 2. 124–132. May 1990. 10.1525/can.1990.5.2.02a00010.
  23. Pipes, 1990, p. 67
  24. News: Salman Rushdie (Author), Fiction (Books genre), Publishing (Books), Books, Culture, Blake Morrison, Hari Kunzru (author), Ian McEwan (Author), Peter Carey (Author), Hanif Kureishi (Author), Fay Weldon (Author), Religion (Books genre), Religion (News), Michael Holroyd . London . The Guardian . 14 September 2012 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20170121121224/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/sep/14/looking-at-salman-rushdies-satanic-verses . 21 January 2017 . dmy-all .
  25. Pipes, 1990, p. 42
  26. [Abdolkarim Soroush]
  27. News: Reading 'Satanic Verses' legal . 25 January 2012 . 2 February 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130429125416/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-01-25/india/30662344_1_import-ban-book-satanic-verses . 29 April 2013 . . dead .
  28. Web site: 2010 . UNDESIRABLE PUBLICATIONS (CHAPTER 25) ORDERS TO PROHIBIT IMPORTATION, SALE OR CIRCULATION OF PUBLICATIONS . 2024-06-18 . www.agc.gov.bn.
  29. Robin Lustig, Martin Bailey, Simon de Bruxelles and Ian Mather The Guardian newspapers story of events around the Book Web site: 1989: The Satanic Verses . . 19 February 1989 . 7 July 2014 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20141008235518/http://www.theguardian.com/uk/1989/feb/19/race.world . 8 October 2014 .
  30. Winder, Robert. Bloody Foreigners: The Story of Immigration to Britain. Abacus, London: 2013: p. 414
  31. News: Crossette . Barbara . Muslims Storm U.S. Mission in Pakistan . The New York Times . 28 December 2020 . New York Times . 13 February 1989.
  32. News: Pitt. David E.. Office of Weekly Paper in Riverdale Is Firebombed. 9 April 2015. The New York Times. 1 March 1989. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20150525103953/http://www.nytimes.com/1989/03/01/nyregion/office-of-weekly-paper-in-riverdale-is-firebombed.html. 25 May 2015.
  33. News: Anthony . Andrew . How one book ignited a culture war . 28 December 2020 . The Guardian . 10 January 2009.
  34. Pipes, 1990, pp. 169–171
  35. Book: The Resilience of Conservative Religion: The Case of Popular, Conservative Protestant Congregations. Joseph Bernard Tamney. The Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. Cambridge, UK. 2002.
  36. Book: Appignanesi, Lisa. The Rushdie File. https://web.archive.org/web/20160120231224/https://books.google.com/books?id=9jK9LnwmaAgC&pg=PA120&lpg=PA120&dq=Iran+Rushdie+%22diplomatic+relations%22+%227+March%22&source=bl&ots=2UfqvkDitf&sig=bHgzrtp4oYQNNGMbq4q6tfON8Es&hl=en&sa=X&ei=r5DgU8P8JMyw7Ab7oIGwBg&ved=0CDYQ6AEwBA. dead. 1 February 1990. 20 January 2016. Syracuse University Press. 9780815602484 . Google Books.
  37. http://bostonreview.net/archives/BR14.4/rushdie.html The Month of Rushdies
  38. from Moin, Khomeini, (2001), p. 284, (Issued 18 February, Obtained by Baqer Moin from the Archbishop of Canterbury's aides.)
  39. Moin, Khomeini, (2001), p. 284
  40. Pipes, 1990, pp. 182–183
  41. News: Watson . Russell . Foote . Donna . Wilkinson . Ray . Whitmore . Jane . 1989-02-27 . A 'Satanic' Fury: Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini orders the murder of a novelist in Britain as the 'blasphemy' in a controversial new book convulses the Islamic world . 113 . . 9 . 2022-08-14. .
  42. News: Nielsen . Jorgen S. . OBITUARY : Kalim Siddiqui . The Independent . 19 April 1996 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220708064027/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-kalim-siddiqui-1305799.html . 8 July 2022 . Siddiqui's notoriety rests on his prompt support for the Iranian death sentence on Salman Rushdie. . en.
  43. News: Kalim Siddiqui, 62; Led British Muslims . The New York Times . 20 April 1996 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150526165308/http://www.nytimes.com/1996/04/20/world/kalim-siddiqui-62-led-british-muslims.html . 26 May 2015 . Kalim Siddiqui, a prominent British Muslim who backed Iran's call for the assassination of the writer Salman Rushdie....
  44. News: Muslim leader Siddiqui dies . The Independent . 18 April 1996 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220706134145/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/muslim-leader-siddiqui-dies-1305608.html . 6 July 2022 . The leader of Britain's Muslim Parliament, who led a vociferous campaign against author Salman Rushdie, died yesterday of a heart attack... . en.
  45. News: Salman Rushdie: Did a 'chance' airport meeting lead to fatwa? . BBC News . 26 August 2022.
  46. News: New Muslim chief condemns Rushdie . The Independent . 6 May 1996 . en.
  47. News: BBC, 23 September 1998 . BBC News . 23 September 1998 . 27 January 2012 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20140926002414/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/177987.stm . 26 September 2014 .
  48. Web site: The Independent, 13 February 2000. .
  49. Web site: Time, 27 February 1989, p. 159. https://web.archive.org/web/20121115104320/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/0,9263,7601890227,00.html. dead. 15 November 2012.
  50. Book: Pipes . Daniel . The Rushdie Affair: The Novel, the Ayatollah and the West . 29 September 2017 . Routledge . 978-1-351-47479-5 . 159 . Most notably, Georges Sabbagh, director of the Near East Studies Center at UCLA, told an interviewer that Khomeini was "completely within his rights" to call for Rushdie's death. Asked if Muslims should feel they have a right to kill Rushdie, he answered, "Why not?".
  51. Ranstorp, Hizb'allah in Lebanon, (1997), p. 103
  52. "Iran: West to Blame Islam for Forthcoming Terrorism", Philadelphia Inquirer, 24 February 1989, p. 5A
  53. Bernard Lewis commenting on Rushdie fatwa in The Crisis of Islam : Holy War and Unholy Terror, 2003 by Bernard Lewis, pp. 141–142
  54. "Ab'ad Harb al-Kitab" Al Majalla, 1 March 1989, quoted in Pipes, 1990, p. 93
  55. Le Nouvel Observateur 23 February 1989
  56. Pipes, 1990, p. 91
  57. Radio Tehran, 16 March 1989, quoted in Pipes, 1990, p. 135
  58. Khomeini, Islam and Revolution (1980), p. 127
  59. Moin, Baqer, Khomeini, (2001), p. 267,
  60. The Gulf War : Its Origins, History and Consequences by John Bulloch and Harvey Morris, 1989, (p. xvi)
  61. People of the Century, by CBS News, p. 220.
  62. Wright, Robin In the Name of God, (1989), p. 201
  63. Pipes, 1990, 133–134
  64. Kepel, Jihad, (2001), p. 135
  65. Pipes, 1990, p. 207
  66. Web site: Crowley . John . Rushdie and Me . Livejournal . 15 October 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160120231224/http://crowleycrow.livejournal.com/213161.html . 20 January 2016 .
  67. News: 8 June 2005. Tomb of the unknown assassin reveals mission to kill Rushdie. Anthony Loyd. The Times. London. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20100601171205/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article531110.ece. 1 June 2010.
  68. News: 26 December 1990: Iranian leader upholds Rushdie fatwa . BBC News: On This Day . 10 October 2006 . 26 December 1990 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20080408091112/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/26/newsid_2542000/2542873.stm . 8 April 2008 .
  69. News: Ayatollah revives the death fatwa on Salman Rushdie . The Times . Webster . Philip . Ben . Hoyle . Ramita . Navai . 20 January 2005 . 10 October 2006 . London . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20061016192342/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFriendly/0,,1-2-1448279-2,00.html . 16 October 2006 .
  70. News: Iran adamant over Rushdie fatwa . BBC News . 12 February 2005 . 10 October 2006 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20060206020617/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4260599.stm . 6 February 2006 .
  71. News: Iran says Rushdie fatwa still stands. Iran Focus. 14 February 2006. 22 January 2007. live. https://swap.stanford.edu/20090417232632/http%3A//www.iranfocus.com/en/index.php?option%3Dcom_content%26task%3Dview%26id%3D5768. 17 April 2009.
  72. Web site: Rushdie's term . 15 February 2007 . usurped . https://web.archive.org/web/20071012000434/http://hinduonnet.com/thehindu/thscrip/print.pl?file=2007021501382200.htm&date=2007%2F02%2F15%2F&prd=th& . 12 October 2007 .
  73. News: Gelles. David . Root. Jay. Harris. Elizabeth. August 12, 2022. Live Updates: Salman Rushdie Is Stabbed During Speech in Western New York. en-US. The New York Times. August 12, 2022. 0362-4331. August 12, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220812163021/https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/08/12/nyregion/salman-rushdie-stabbed-new-york . live.
  74. News: Goodman. Joshua. August 12, 2022. Author Salman Rushdie attacked on lecture stage in New York. August 12, 2022. Associated Press. en. August 12, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220812152059/https://apnews.com/article/salman-rushdie-attacked-9eae99aea82cb0d39628851ecd42227a. live.
  75. Web site: Staniszewski. Eugene J.. August 12, 2022. State Police are investigating an attack on author Salman Rushdie. August 12, 2022. New York State Police Newsroom. en. August 12, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220812214959/https://www.nyspnews.com/state-police-are-investigating-an-attack-on-author-salman-rushdie.htm. live.
  76. Web site: Salman Rushdie & Henry Reese. August 13, 2022. Chautauqua Institution. en-US. August 12, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220812203236/https://www.chq.org/event/salman-rushdie-henry-reese/. live.
  77. News: Jones. Dustin. August 12, 2022. Author Salman Rushdie was attacked on a lecture stage in New York. en. NPR. live. August 12, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220812153513/https://www.npr.org/2022/08/12/1117164727/author-salman-rushdie-was-attacked-on-a-lecture-stage-in-new-york. August 12, 2022.
  78. Hurley, Bevan (18 August 2021). "Salman Rushdie moderator Henry Reese reveals black eye and knife wound from attack on author". Independent.
  79. News: August 12, 2022. Police identify Salman Rushdie attack suspect as 24-year-old from New Jersey. August 12, 2022. The Guardian. en. August 13, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220813012719/https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/12/salman-rushdie-attack-suspect-identified-hadi-matar. live.
  80. News: 'Truth, courage, resilience': Biden hails Salman Rushdie after attack. The Guardian. Ramon. Antonio Vargas. August 13, 2022. August 13, 2022. August 14, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220814001358/https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/13/truth-courage-resilience-biden-hails-salman-rushdie-after-attack. live.
  81. Marzorati, Gerald, "Salman Rushdie: Fiction's Embattled Infidel", The New York Times Magazine, 29 January 1989
  82. Anthony Harly, "Saving Mr. Rushdie?" Encounter, June 1989, p. 74
  83. 15 February 1989
  84. The Independent, 16 March 1989
  85. League for the Spread of Unpopular Views. West German organization, Bund zur Verbreitung unerwunschter Einsichten [Hamburg], "Der Fall Rushdie und die Feigheit des Westerns," pamphlet, p. 3. quoted in Pipes 1990, p. 250
  86. Peregrine Worsthorne, "The Blooding of the Literati", The Sunday Telegraph, 19 February 1989
  87. Islamic Revolution News Agency, 7 March 1989
  88. Kayhan Havai, 18 April 1989
  89. Len Riggioi quoted in Publishers Weekly, 10 March 1989
  90. Pipes, 1990, pp. 200–201
  91. Pipes, 1990, p. 205
  92. Web site: Rushdie: Haunted by his unholy ghosts . 27 January 2012 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20120204055505/http://www.alislam.org/books/rushdie/RUSHDIE_Haunted_by_his_unholy_ghosts.pdf . 4 February 2012 .
  93. Salman Rushdie, "Beginning of a Novelist's Thralldom" The Observer, 26 February 1989
  94. 6 March 1989 published in Granta, Autumn 1989
  95. Pipes, 1990, p. 203
  96. News: Rushdie Fails to Move the Zealots . Daniel Pipes . Los Angeles Times . 28 December 1990 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20070408075454/http://www.danielpipes.org/article/201 . 8 April 2007 .
  97. Web site: Shikha Dalmia from the August/September 2005 issue . The Iconoclast . Reason . August 2005 . 27 January 2012 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20090903081731/http://reason.com/news/show/33120.html . 3 September 2009 . dmy-all .
  98. News: The Guardian . 12 April 2012 . Salman Rushdie reveals details of fatwa memoir . Alison Flood . 27 April 2012 . London . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20131226102636/http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/apr/12/salman-rushdie-reveals-fatwa-memoir . 26 December 2013 .
  99. Pipes, 1990, p. 85
  100. Syed Ali Ashraf, writing in Impact International, 28 October 1988
  101. ad by the Birmingham Central Mosque in British newspapers
  102. Dawud Assad, president of the U.S. Council of Masajid quoted in Trenton Times, 21 February 1989
  103. a young French Muslim quoted in Le Nouvel Observateur, 23 March 1989
  104. M. Rafiqul Islam, The Rushdie Affair: A Conflict of Rights unpublished manuscript, April 1989, p. 3
  105. Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, Random House, 1988, p. 393
  106. Mir Husayn Musavi, prime minister of Iran, quoted on Radio Tehran 21 February 1989
  107. (Muhammad Husayn Fadlallah, Agence France Press, 27 February 1989)
  108. (Shaykh Ahmad Kaftaru, mufti of the Syrian Arab Republic, source: Syrian Arab News Agency, 1 March 1989
  109. Religious affairs director of Turkish government, Mustafa Sait Yazicioglu, Radio Ankara 14 March 1989
  110. Sayed M. Syeed, secretary general of the Association of Muslim Social Scientists in the United States, Philadelphia Inquirer, 14 February 1989
  111. Libyan ambassador to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights
  112. editorial in The Jordan Times, 5 March 1989
  113. broadcast Radio Tehran, 7 March 1989 quoted in Pipes, 1990, pp. 124–125
  114. https://books.google.com/books?id=wYkQXO4sEoAC&q=From+fatwa+to+jihad+: From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Aftermath By Kenan Malik
  115. https://books.google.com/books?id=wYkQXO4sEoAC&q=From+fatwa+to+jihad+: From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Aftermath By Kenan Malik
  116. Pipes, 1990 p. 108
  117. Pipes, 1990 pp. 108, 118–119
  118. John Updike, The Wall Street Journal, 10 August 1989
  119. Rushdie, Salman, Jaguar Smile, p. 50
  120. "The Importance of Being Earnest About Salman Rushdie" by Sadeq al-'Azm, in M.D. Fletcher, Reading Rushdie: Perspectives on the Fiction of Salman Rushdie, Amsterdam, Rodopi B.V., 1994
  121. Pipes, 1990, pp. 148, 175
  122. "International Herald Tribune", 4 July 2007
  123. Jimmy Carter, "Rushdie's Book Is an Insult", The New York Times, 5 March 1989
  124. News: Salman Rushdie: Fighting words on a knighthood . Rachel Donadio . 4 July 2007 . The New York Times . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20170721200426/http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/04/arts/04iht-15donadio.6482640.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0 . 21 July 2017 .
  125. News: Le Carré regrets Rushdie fatwa feud . The Daily Telegraph . 12 November 2012 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20141007224222/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/booknews/9671959/Le-Carre-regrets-Rushdie-fatwa-feud.html . 7 October 2014 .
  126. News: 3d Anniversary of Edict Against Rushdie . 13 February 1992 . The New York Times . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20160305145821/http://www.nytimes.com/1992/02/13/books/3d-anniversary-of-edict-against-rushdie.html . 5 March 2016 .
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  129. News: Britain's blasphemy laws getting renewed attention . R.C. . Longworth . . Fredericksburg, Virginia . 11 March 1989 . 5 . 16 November 2009 .
  130. Michael Walzer, "The Sins of Salman", The New Republic, 10 April 1989
  131. The Times, 4 March 1989
  132. "Being God's Postman Is No Fun, Yaar": Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses. Srinivas Aravamudan.Diacritics, Vol. 19, No. 2 (Summer, 1989), pp. 3–20
  133. Postmodernist Perceptions of Islam: Observing the Observer. Akbar S. Ahmed. Asian Survey, Vol. 31, No. 3 (Mar. 1991), pp. 213–231
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  135. Book: Shourie, Arun . How should we respond? . Sita Ram . Goel . Freedom of Expression – Secular Theocracy Versus Liberal Democracy . 1998 . Voice of India . 81-85990-55-7.
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  137. Pipes, 1990, p. 22
  138. Pipes, 1990, p. 21
  139. Pipes, 1990, p. 23
  140. Malik, Kenan. From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Aftermath. Melville House (2010): p. 4
  141. Pipes, 1990, p. 25
  142. News: Freedom of Information and Expression in India. October 1990. Article 19. London. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20020820035249/http://pucl.org/from-archives/Media/freedom.htm. 20 August 2002. 27 June 2007.
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  144. Pipes, 1990, pp. 28–29
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  151. Web site: Ross. Andy. Remembering the Rushdie Affair. Ask the Agent: Night Thoughts about Books and Publishing. 19 November 2009. wordpress.com. 6 October 2012. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20120904095518/http://andyrossagency.wordpress.com/2009/11/18/remembering-the-rushdie-affair/. 4 September 2012.
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  153. Pipes, 1990, p. 181
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  156. News: Nobel Judge Steps Down in Protest . BBC News . 11 October 2005 . 13 October 2007 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20061018011803/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/arts/4329962.stm . 18 October 2006 . dmy-all .
  157. [Associated Press]
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