Sir Salman Rushdie celebrates his 60th birthday today in familiar circumstances: he is once again the subject of death threats across the Islamic world. Eighteen years after the Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa calling on Muslims to kill him, a government minister in Pakistan said yesterday that Rushdie’s recent knighthood justified suicide bombing. The question of blasphemy in The Satanic Verses, Rushdie’s 1988 tale of a prophet misled by the devil, remains a deeply sensitive issue in much of the Muslim world and the author’s inclusion in the Queen’s Birthday Honours last week has inflamed anti-British sentiment. Gerald Butt, editor of the authoritative Middle East Economic Survey, told The Times: ‘It will be interpreted as an action calculated to goad Muslims at a time when the atmosphere is already very tense and Britain’s standing in the region is very low because of its involvement in Iraq and its lack of action in tackling the Palestine issue.’ Opening quote For nine years Salman Rushdie lived as a virtual prisoner, changing addresses constantly, and protected around the clock by British security at an estimated cost of £10 millioN. Hardliners in Iran revived calls for his murder yesterday. […]
Tuesday, June 19th, 2007
Muslim World Inflamed by Rushdie Knighthood
Author: BEN HOYLE
Source: Times (U.K.)
Publication Date: June 19, 2007
Link: Muslim World Inflamed by Rushdie Knighthood
Source: Times (U.K.)
Publication Date: June 19, 2007
Link: Muslim World Inflamed by Rushdie Knighthood
Stephan: Yet more evidence of the Reformationist fervor that shakes Islam. It is o.k. to bomb mosques and schools full of another sect's children, but the English knighting of an Anglo-Indian is a justification for outrage and killing. There is no rationality here, there never is, and we need to get out of the way, and focus principally on not being attacked while Islam goes through its self-created madness. Our own history of the Christian Reformation is a useful guide, and military adventures are exactly the wrong strategy.