Saturday, October 08, 2005


Listening To Salman Rushdie


No longer hiding undercover (huh! he never was hiding and why he or the likes of him should hide!!!....while the whole corporate world is there to hire them...agrees and supports what they say) from a fatwa, Rushdie can now joke about it. But as someone who had a close encounter with religious fundamentalism long before "jihad" became part of the daily vocabulary of the West, he takes the issue with deadly seriousness. His latest novel, Shalimar the Clown, is set against the backdrop of a world of fundamentalist terror, and in a recent op-ed in the Washington Post he called for reformation in Islam.

Pacific News Service editor Sandip Roy recently interviewed Rushdie on the radio.

Sandip Roy: After the bombings in London, some people said the British concept of multiculturalism had allowed London to become 'Londonistan,' offering shelter to violent extremists.

SALMAN RUSHDIE: That's not the fault of multiculturalism. The mistake was a deliberate government policy to allow radical Islamic groups to come in and set up shop in London, to set up bank accounts and come and go as they pleased. The justification was twofold -- one was if you did that you would be able to monitor them, and the other was if you gave them safe haven they would not attack their own safe haven. On July 7 both those arguments went out the window.

But when Tony Blair says you can deport people for inciting hatred are you not punishing people for what they are saying, not doing? You yourself said, "What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist."

The decline of Blairite politics into the kind of arrogance and opportunism that now characterizes his government is one of the great disappointments I can remember. I don't trust Blair and his new laws further than I can throw them.

But I have to say the expulsion of some of those Londonistan figures I would not grieve about at all. Taking off my liberal hat for a moment, to throw out some of these firebrand mullahs who have been working up kids like these kids who blew themselves up, frankly I wouldn't give a damn. But there is a problem when you define offense so broadly that you can kick out anyone whose face you don't like. And given the authoritarian nature of the government one has to be very, very worried.

Sandip Roy: You are calling for a reformation in Islam. What do you mean?

SALMAN RUSHDIE: In a way maybe the use of the word "reformation" was wrong. That makes people think about Martin Luther. And the Christian reformation was a Puritan movement and that would be a movement in the wrong direction.

But I was talking about a reform movement. The purpose of that would be to reclaim Islam from the radicals. Islamic radicalism is relatively new. It had much less power 30 years ago. I think back to my grandfather, who was an extremely devout Muslim and went on the Haj to Mecca, but nevertheless an extremely open-minded and tolerant man. That's why I dedicate this book to him. Even though he was devout and I am not religious, he was a kind of model for me.

Sandip Roy: But does a call for reform, coming from a writer who many thousands of Muslims regard as blasphemous, have any legitimacy?

SALMAN RUSHDIE: You are right. There are many who will never listen to anything I say because it's me saying it. That's fair enough. I am not asking to lead anything. I am not asking to even be a part of anything. What I am saying is if something like this does not happen, the danger is that all Muslims will begin to seem as if they are complying with the activities of the radicals. If there isn't a strong rejectionist voice, many people, particularly in the diaspora where Muslims are in the minority, will readily come to think that if you are not rejecting the stuff, that's what you secretly think. That would be catastrophic.

Sandip Roy: But standing up to extremism is hard. In 1990 you yourself published a statement of remorse.

SALMAN RUSHDIE: There were enormous pressures on me, including government pressure to make some kind of gesture. But I regretted doing it. I felt the thing that gives me credibility is I say exactly what I think. And if I compromise that I lose myself and that's what I felt briefly at that moment. So I tried rapidly to un-say it.

But I think there are voices out there beginning to speak up. In response to the piece I wrote (for the Washington Post), a lot of people wrote and said they agreed.

Sandip Roy: What is the best thing the United States and the West can do to facilitate this reform? Just stay out of it?

SALMAN RUSHDIE:The danger is to do deals with the bad guys. I think the problem is the West, for its own economic purposes, makes agreements and thus shores up regimes that would more easily fall. We support regimes that in another part of the forest we condemn.

In the end I don't want this to be a story of what the West is doing to the East. Because I found all my life as a writer it was too easy to make that statement. The more interesting thing to say is suppose this is our own fault, supposing we are doing this to ourselves. The reason why I try to stress the need for changes inside the Muslim world is not that I don't believe there is racism, of course there is racism, it's not that I don't believe there is oppression, of course there is oppression. What I am saying is that to take responsibility for your life is a better way to live than to assume you are an endless victim.

My reamarks to this Interview...and a question: By saying Islam and Muslims are fundamentalist and having thought of the reformation of Islam...the enemy of Islam planing right away and the west itself is supporting it in everyway they can to suppress Islam. They would do anything, even if it hurts the feelings of the world's one of the huge population (Muslims) who want to live their lives abiding by Islam and want to Invite the rest of the mankind to life's tranquility. But here these culprits the so called mouth of the elites want to defame Islam and depriving the whole of mankind from a healthy and progressive life...and at last the question, why do they call others fundamentalists...while they themselves are holding a fundamental opinion that is to object Islam and to want amendments in the system of Islam??? Its really a funny matter to ponder upon...Muslims are now realising their infamous plots and plans against muslims and Islam...InshaAllah while the Khilafah state is in re-establishment they are being afraid that their rhetoric expressions of so called "doing good to this world of humanity" be revealed to the mass people. Let for once the system of Khilafah be revived on this earth...will they realize how wrong they thought of.

1 Comments:

Blogger MHRQ said...

I guess AT LEAST the Jamia Hafsa...as claimed should (or rather completely not) decide to tell the truth. LAL MASJID.......red mosque is an actual conception of QADIAN followers. Their true intention is distortion of Islam.....of course you don't believe me...but this message is not for the non reader.....but for those...well. I am now assuredly adding THE LETTER "FIRST CONTACT" known to so many REDS if not all. Yes the one with the numbers and drawings at its back is connected to a STOLEN item. If not ITSELF (First contact...letter) BEING STOLEN. Yes, yes,,,,,,they told you the PHENOMENON of crop formation (designs in crop fields) belong to red...i think it might JUST BE THE OPPOSITE.....Yes yes Nabi and Rasul Muhammad (PBUH)(medina saudi Arabia) is the TRUE SOURCE OF First Contact (as you name) Information. Ask yourself........much to say
9:49 AM
MHRQ said...

AND THIS IS NOT ALL
9:50 AM
MHRQ said...

Ohh yes......I am in G-10/1....and ohh yes the myblog.....mhrq-universe or something like it...anything else uuummm what can i say
10:06 AM

10:12 AM  

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