Home > General Politics, Religion > The Rushdie affair and responsibility

The Rushdie affair and responsibility

Kenan Malik has been on my mind lately. I recently read his book From Fatwa to Jihad and I have learnt that he will be speaking at Westminster Skeptics early next year.

Today I thought I’d search his name on YouTube and was thrown up a video of a Newsnight episode on which he appeared with Tariq Modood, Ekow Eshun and Germaine Greer.

The latter guest, Germaine Greer, is often thought to be one of those annoying feminist, liberal, middle class bastards!

She once stood accused of asking Salman Rushdie to apologise for writing his book The Satanic Verses and offending. Though on Newsnight, she denied having done this, before explaining what she meant when she used “apology”, “Rushdie” and “The Satanic Verses” in the same sentence.

Below is the video of that episode of Newsnight where Greer says:

I don’t care if people burn books, my books have been burnt, as long as they pay for them they can do whatever they like with them, but I do think that nobody should die for a book, and that if you think you can prevent anymore people dying for the book – we all know how the book was manipulated – and all you have to do is apologise, go on your knees to Mashhad or whoever, then do it to save your life, you shouldn’t die for your book either

(09.56 – 10.29)

If you have had your head buried under rocks you may also have upset Iran, the most important part of the Rushdie affair occurred on February 14, 1989 when Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran issued a fatwa calling on all Muslims to execute all those involved in the publication of the novel.

At the time, an Iranian religious foundation called the 15 Khordad Foundation offered a reward of $US1 million or 200 million rials for the murder of Rushdie.

Greer in the above video, recognises some necessity in Rushdie apologising to Mashhad, a very holy city in Iran, but adds an important clause: to save his life and the lives of other publishers and people involved in the publication of the book in other countries.

The question becomes harder I feel at this point: should Rushdie have apologised to people who feel it justified to kill people on the grounds that they have offended them, or, since he knows these people will stop at nothing, should he have apologised to save the lives others?

Even more tricky: because to apologise, or not to, is a choice that Rushdie had to make, at what point would he have been responsible in the event of a death (Greer notes later in the programme that “the thing was Salman was the safest person around. It was everybody else who was at risk, and nothing was done about them”).

For me the answer is simple: Rushdie should not have apologised because to do so would be to give credibility to the idea that when someone is offended by something, the obvious reaction should be to kill that person – that is all it comes down to.

But not everyone agreed at the time. Tory tabloids pictured Rushdie as someone who purposely put national security in jeopardy; mainstream politicians talked about at what stage something should no longer be protected under the banner free speech.

I think when people believe Rushdie should have apologised because other people were in danger, they themselves are in danger of not recognising that those who call for the murder, or those whose desire it is to carry out the murder, are not making a choice, and that they are acting on some uninterruptible compulsion over which we can have no intervention.

Also I often wonder what motivates this view. Many people once felt that there was a causal link between poverty and terrorism, but this does two things: first, it doesn’t take note of the facts; people who have had otherwise stable backgrounds, university educations and decent jobs have committed terror acts (such as the 7/7 bombers), while not every person who experiences poverty commits terror, so it doesn’t follow ipso facto that terrorism is a determinant of poverty. Second, it assumes people of a certain class, or I dare say race or nationality, are simply automaton not able to think for themselves and act upon the sort of compulsion that Greer assumed those who wanted to kill Rushdie did.

Drawing this back to Rushdie, by blaming him for not apologising gives credibility to the murderous bastards that wanted to kill him or anyone involved with the book he had written on the grounds that they did not like what he’d written (or they’d heard from someone else that they wouldn’t like what had been written – Malik in his aforementioned book made note that Khomeini had definitely not read the book before forming an opinion on it).

By pretending certain people cannot form opinions or carry out actions without their being some obvious symptom is to allow the opinion that people are stupid. Since Muslims were involved in the Rushdie affair, I’ve little doubt that to blame Rushdie for the desire of certain Muslims to kill Rushdie is to assume Muslims are stupid.

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  1. August 13, 2010 at 5:24 pm | #1

    There is a causal link between poverty and terrorism, but of course this relation doesn’t apply mechanically in individual cases. Terrorism is the last resort of the hopeless and the first resort of the clueless.

    • August 13, 2010 at 5:44 pm | #2

      Care to qualify your statement with an example, or fill the word shaped hole you’ve created?

  2. Jon
    August 14, 2010 at 1:46 am | #3

    There was an interview/book plugging in New Scientist recently which was a psychological exploration of those who plan, and those who carry out terror attacks.

    The study was based on Palestinian attacks against Israel (and studied failed suicide bombers and those who had planned these attacks), and was quite interesting. I’ll try and dig it up tomorrow morning, as it may be worth a read in this context.

  3. Jon
    August 14, 2010 at 2:54 pm | #5

    Found the interview here > http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/culturelab/2010/07/a-psychologist-inside-the-mind-of-suicide-bombers.html

    although I’m pretty sure the article in the magazine was longer than that, might have to dig the hard copy out…

    http://worlddefensereview.com/docs/PsychologyofTerrorism0707.pdf < This article is also a decent exploration of why people become terrorists, page 24 mentions those who engage in terrorism to gain social status or financial reward.
    At the bottom of page 27, a "recognition of oppression" and that such oppression is "social" is mentioned. This, to me, invokes some echo of class struggle. It's an interesting read, anyway.

    • August 14, 2010 at 3:25 pm | #6

      Cheers Jon for pulling that out.

      There is a crucial difference between “perceived victimhood” which that latter reports draws on quite heavily, and class struggle. The conclusion I feel is based on evidence as thin as the “perceived victimhood” of the eldest bomber of the 7/7 whose name is Mohammed Sidique Khan, who felt there was a war taking place between the West and Islam – which there categorically is not.

      As I said it does not follow that terrorism is caused by poverty logically, therefore it is not a subcategory of class struggle, but is possibly a product of perceived victimhood, but evidence of this can often be paper thin. The centre for social cohesion makes tireless note that many terrorists are homegrown, around 31% go or have been to university, have stable jobs – it is often a get out clause to understand what makes a terrorism to suggest it must be oppression.

      It takes certain type of thinking to accept that misreadings of holy texts can lead a person to commit attrocious acts without having been, so to speak, oppressed. This thinking is very often absent among nice people.

  4. August 16, 2010 at 9:26 am | #7

    Yes, there’s plenty of research suggesting that terrorism is a middle-class phenomenon. Terrorists may originate from deprived countries, or to at least identify with those societies, but the quant research shows that on average terrorists tend to be better-off and better-educated than most in their community. Scott Atran has done great work on the motivations and backgrounds of terrorists: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-atran/how-do-even-the-privilege_b_568489.html.

    I agree with your thoughts on the Rushdie affair, though it can be problematised in terms of more mundane tensions in a multicultural society rather than the thankfully rare examples of political violence. Does our society negatively essentialise Muslims because of the dogmatic loudmouths who claim to represent ‘the Muslim community’? Is Islamic identity compatible with liberalism and secularism?

    • August 18, 2010 at 3:42 pm | #8

      Thanks for your comment Jako;

      it doesn’t presuppose a full picture, but certainly a good deal of people who have comitted terrorist acts in recent times and on behalf of what they think is Islam, have been well to do people, perhaps in less well off countries, but have never felt the full force of negative class antagonisms. It is largely a kop out to suggest they did this through oppression alone, but it’s not unusual; I suggest two possible reasons:

      a) we choose this instead of confronting pure human evil;

      b) it is a hubristic, mostly western perception of guilt, which stems from an empire attitude, that helps us explain why terrorism is created, and holds us directly responsible for it (for a better, more accurate explanation, see Pascal Bruckner’s The tyranny of guilt).

      I think I see what you mean here Jako; it is too easy for us to say multiculturalism has gone pear shaped when thngs like this happen, but we’d do well to remember that these incidents are still rare. Again, there is a compulsion to explain away pure evil by blaming anything else; western imperialism, Salman Rushdie, multiculturalism, we’ve tried it all havne’t we.

  1. April 28, 2011 at 12:37 pm | #1

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