After Salman Rushdie's withdrawing from a Jaipur literary festival due to Muslim protests, I thought I'd re-examine the man. He was reported as saying that assassins may have been on the way to Jaipur to kill him.
In protest of this, four authors read passages from Rushdie's banned novel, The Satanic Verses. Hari Kunzru, Amitava Kumar, Jeet Thayil and Ruchir Joshi have now too been asked to leave the festival so as not to endanger themselves or present a risk to other festival goers.
The title The Satanic Verses refers to the Qur'anic verses which supposedly allowed prayers to be made to three Pagan Meccan goddesses: Allat, Uzzah, and Manat. The verses were apparently included in the Qur'an by Mohammed, who was tricked into referring to the three goddesses, thus deferring from his monotheism, by Satan. Mohammed was said to take back the words, and the reference was eventually removed from the Qur'an. Scholarly views and reactions as to whether the verses actually existed or are truly damaging to the Muslim faith vary.
The novel may never have acheived such notoreity had it not touched upon these issues, which were previously merely the centre of religious debate. Khomeini claimed that the book blasphemed against Mohammed and his wives, although Rushdie himself stated that the book was about "migration, metomorphosis, divided selves, love, death, London and Bombay."
Personally I feel that most of Rushdie's works are a mixture of reflection and love letter to his origins and current expatriate status. It is rare that an author integrates religion, history and politics so successfully into what are usually highly personal and intimate narratives. This is a true expression of Rushdie's fascination with the rich past of his country, and his interest in the place of romantic mysticism in the modern world. His intellect creates the dislocated veil through which he views and engineers all of these happenings into his own dialectic, and his success lies in this ability to add a brutally comic edge to it all.
As Khomeini has since died, the fatwa can never be rescinded. Life imitates art, I suppose.