The novel has been accused of
blasphemy for its reference to the "
Satanic Verses".
Pakistan banned the book in November 1988. On 12 February 1989, 10,000 protesters gathered against Rushdie and the book in
Islamabad, Pakistan. Six protesters were killed in an attack on the American Cultural Center, and an
American Express office was ransacked. As the violence spread, the importing of the book was banned in India and it was
burned in demonstrations in the United Kingdom. Meanwhile, the
Commission for Racial Equality and a liberal think tank, the
Policy Studies Institute, held seminars on the Rushdie affair. They did not invite the author
Fay Weldon, who spoke out against burning books, but did invite
Shabbir Akhtar, a Cambridge philosophy graduate who called for "a negotiated compromise" that "would protect Muslim sensibilities against gratuitous provocation". The journalist and author
Andy McSmith wrote at the time "We are witnessing, I fear, the birth of a new and dangerously illiberal 'liberal' orthodoxy designed to accommodate Dr. Akhtar and his fundamentalist friends." In September 2012, Rushdie expressed doubt that
The Satanic Verses would be published today because of a climate of "fear and nervousness".
Fatwa In mid-February 1989, following the violent riot against the book in Pakistan, the
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, then
Supreme Leader of Iran and a
Shiite scholar, issued a
fatwa calling for the death of Rushdie and his publishers, and called for Muslims to point him out to those who can kill him if they cannot themselves. Although the British
Conservative government under
Margaret Thatcher gave Rushdie round-the-clock police protection, many politicians on both sides were hostile to the author. British
Labour MP
Keith Vaz led a march through
Leicester shortly after he was elected in 1989 calling for the book to be banned, while the Conservative politician
Norman Tebbit, the party's former chairman, called Rushdie an "outstanding villain" whose "public life has been a record of despicable acts of betrayal of his upbringing, religion, adopted home and nationality". Journalist
Christopher Hitchens defended Rushdie and urged critics to condemn the violence of the
fatwa instead of blaming the novel or the author. Hitchens considered the
fatwa to be the opening shot in a cultural war on freedom. In 2021, the
BBC broadcast a two-hour documentary by
Mobeen Azhar and Chloe Hadjimatheou, interviewing many of the principal denouncers and defenders of the book from 1988–1989, concluding that campaigns against the book were amplified by minority (racial and religious) politics in England and other countries. Despite a conciliatory statement by Iran in 1998, and Rushdie's declaration that he would stop living in hiding, On 14 February 2006,
Iran Focus quoted the opinion of "
Martyrs Foundation" (as broadcast on the "
Iranian state news agency") that the
fatwa will remain in place permanently. This contradicts Shiite tradition, in which a
fatwa expires when the issuing ''
marja' dies, requiring another living marja'' to reissue it.
Violence, assassinations, and attempted murders Hitoshi Igarashi, Rushdie's Japanese translator, was found by a cleaning lady, stabbed to death in his office at the
University of Tsukuba on 13 July 1991. Ten days prior to Igarashi's killing, Rushdie's Italian translator Ettore Capriolo was seriously injured by an attacker at his home in
Milan by being stabbed multiple times on 3 July 1991.
William Nygaard, the Norwegian publisher of
The Satanic Verses, was critically injured by being shot three times in the back by an assailant on 11 October 1993 in
Oslo. Nygaard survived, but spent months in the hospital recovering. The book's Turkish translator
Aziz Nesin was the intended target of a mob of arsonists who set fire to the Madimak Hotel after Friday prayers on 2 July 1993 in
Sivas,
Turkey, killing 37 people, mostly
Alevi scholars, poets and musicians. Nesin escaped death when the fundamentalist mob failed to recognize him early in the attack. Known as the
Sivas massacre, it is remembered by Alevi Turks who gather in Sivas annually and hold silent marches, commemorations and vigils for the slain. In March 2016, the bounty for the Rushdie fatwa was raised by $600,000 (£430,000). Top Iranian media contributed this sum, adding to the existing $2.8 million already offered. In response, the
Swedish Academy, which awards the
Nobel Prize in Literature, denounced the death sentence and called it "a serious violation of free speech". This was the first time it had commented on the issue since the book's publication. On 12 August 2022,
Rushdie was attacked onstage while speaking at an event of the
Chautauqua Institution. Rushdie suffered four stab 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. He was flown by helicopter to
UPMC Hamot, a
tertiary-level hospital in
Erie, Pennsylvania. The attacker, Hadi Matar, was immediately taken into custody. He was charged with attempted murder and assault, pleading not guilty, and was remanded in custody. By 14 August, Rushdie was off the ventilator and able to talk. Rushdie's agent
Andrew Wylie reported on 23 October that Rushdie had lost sight in one eye and the use of one hand, but survived the murder attempt. ==See also==