Salman Rushdie: 'Literature Is Powerful, Writers Are Fragile'
"If we can't trust ourselves as a culture to accommodate ideas we don't like," the novelist said at the Library of Congress, "then our ideas lose their value as well, because they become authoritarian."

"In the free speech field, you find yourself constantly defending stuff that you really don't like," author Salman Rushdie said during an interview with Princeton University professor Bernard Haykel on Wednesday night. "You defend it not as itself but for its right to be."
"I think if we give up that principle, we're losing something very, very important," he continued. "If we can't trust ourselves as a culture to accommodate ideas we don't like, then our ideas lose their value as well, because they become authoritarian."
Rushdie spoke at the inaugural gala of the American Academy of Sciences and Letters (AASL), a new academic association formed to promote "excellence in scholarship, independence of mind, and intellectual courage," according to a Thursday press release. The event, which took place at the Library of Congress, was one of Rushdie's first onstage appearances since he was brutally stabbed last August.
"The only reason to write is because you cannot avoid doing so because the book feels so necessary to you—not to the world, to you—that you have to. Those are the books to write," Rushdie said. "It takes a long time to write a book, and a very short time for it to be dismissed."
Rushdie's best-known novel, The Satanic Verses, was published in 1988, and is partially inspired by the life of Muhammad. The book sparked widespread outrage in much of the Muslim world, culminating in the 1989 fatwa issued by Iranian Ayatollah Khomeini against Rushdie and his publishers, calling on Muslims to kill him and those involved in producing the novel.
In the decades that followed, Rushdie has faced frequent serious threats of violence—most notably, he was forced to live under British police protection and in various safe houses for several years. Last August, Rushdie was nearly killed when he was stabbed multiple times while giving a public lecture.
"A unifying thing of all the people who had led the attack on The Satanic Verses was that they had not read it," Rushdie said. "If you look at the attacks on works of literature, they're almost always conducted by people who haven't read them…So this book that was attacked, in a way, didn't exist."
Rushdie emphasized how literature can endure in the face of censorship, but that writers themselves often fall victim to state repression.
"The poet Ovid was exiled by Augustus Caesar to this dump on the Black Sea, spends his life pleading to be allowed to come back to Rome, never allowed to do so," Rushdie said. "The poetry of Ovid has outlasted the Roman Empire."
At the gala, AASL awarded Rushdie the first Robert J. Zimmer Medal for Intellectual Freedom. The award, named after the late University of Chicago president, will be conferred annually upon an individual "who displays extraordinary courage in the exercise of intellectual freedom," according to the AASL. The AASL awarded 10 additional prizes to scholars including New York University professor Jonathan Haidt and Princeton legal scholar Robert P. George.
"You are all familiar with the decades of death threats and violence [Rushdie] has faced with resolute courage," said AASL President Donald W. Landry on Wednesday. "His refusal to be silenced or deflected has inspired millions around to world, providing a model for us all. His example reminds us that the only thing more costly than standing up for intellectual freedom would be failing to make that stand."
"Literature is powerful, writers are fragile," Rushdie said. "Of course, we need to defend literature itself. But we actually need to defend the writers because they are more vulnerable."
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Salman Rushdie is my favorite. I have seen his writings. It takes a lot of efforts. But to write on should understand the assignment or hire someone who can do the job like this one. https://www.easkme.com/2023/05/assignmentpay-review.html
Most people are willing to take a bullet for some person that they love.
Many people are willing to die for their country.
Not many people are willing to take a knife to the eye for words; for that Mr. Rushdie will always have my very deep respect.
I'm not sure if "willing" is the right term there. I'm guessing, if he'd been asked beforehand, he'd have said no.
That's fair, but I meant more that he was willing to keep writing and speaking despite the death threats and continues to do so after actually being nearly killed.
Yeah, the dude had a fatwa out on him, basically like an Islamic burn notice from the Iranian Ayatollah, and never stopped challenging authority.
I don’t always agree with his opinions, but his willingness to keep talking shit to power is amazing.
And sadly lacking in just about everyone else in modern literary circles where they seem to prefer cancelling formerly loved authors for being slightly off the progressive orthodoxy rather than just allowing them their heterodox viewpoints.
Ok, I can accept that.
“It was all worth it to be bangin’ Padma!” – Salman R.
https://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/padma-lakshmi-responds-to-attack-on-ex-salman-rushdie/amp/
Salman Rushdie isn't only talking about campus idiocy.
He might be talking about the guy who wrote the book length fatwa against him, who lives quietly and peacefully in London.
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So back in college I worked at a bookstore that was selling his book. All the big chains at the time refused to: Waldenbooks, B Daltons, etc. But as an independent bookstore, we were one of only two bookstores in San Diego that was "brave" enough to sell the book.
It sold like hotcakes, we could not keep it in stock, we actually had a waiting list of buyers.
Anyway, as such, I do have a fatwah on my head. A fatwah endorsed by Cat Stevens. Famous for the song "Peace Train". So apparently lets all have peace and get along, unless I don't like the peaceful book you are selling, then it's okay if religious fanatics kill you.
Salman Rushdie is a brave man and I salute him.
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Sounds like "Banned in Tehran" is even better advertising than "Banned in Boston".
You are a brave person! I salute you for your courage!
🙂
While The Artist Formerly Known As Cat did "Peace Train" before he jumped on the "War Wagon" of Islam, I refuse to listen to that song and all songs by The Artist...just the same. I don't want to do anything that even vaguely supports what The Artist...is now.
I can "Name That Tune" with his songs in two notes and automatically change the station immediately. The Artist Former Known As Cat is dead to me! That is my right of free expression.
Natalie Merchant and 10,000 Maniacs also refused to sing "Peace Train" after The Artist... did the notorious interview with ABC's Elizabeth Vargas defending the fatwa against Rushdie and defending domestic violence against women in Islam. That is Natalie's and the Maniacs' free expression right too.
Again, you are a brave person along with the man we both support, Mister and Sir Salman Rushdie, a Knight for free expression even without the title!
"Rushdie's best-known novel, The Satanic Verses, was published in 1988, and is partially inspired by the life of Muhammad. "
Perhaps it's his best known work, but it's not very good. I doubt the author or any of the commenters have read it, so anyone curious about Rushdie's work, I urge to start with Midnight's Children. It's a magical realist novel set during the partition of India. It's a masterpiece worthy of the Nobel Prize, and does ample justice to the monumental events of the setting.
https://libgen.is/fiction/661E8B2FF0C454C425E9EB6E0480E89A
I shake my head at the folks who would celebrate Rushdie but now join protests supporting Palestine.
Rushdie is from a Muslim Kashmiri family. Kashmir is another festering sore the British left behind when their empire receded. And it’s been fought over since the end of WWII, and subjected to all manner of atrocities and indignities. Along with Israel, Kashmir is seen as a likely flashpoint were WWIII to break out. If one supports the cause of Kashmir, then Palestine would naturally follow suit.