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Lionel Mandrake

(4,076 posts)
Tue Sep 18, 2012, 12:46 PM Sep 2012

Irate Muslims, then and now

The latest news about Muslims venting their anger over a clip from an amateurish movie reminds me of the earlier episode of murderous violence precipitated by Ayatollah Khomeini, who was upset over Salman Rushdie's novel, The Satanic Verses. By a remarkable coincidence, Rushdie himself has recently written a memoir of the ordeal he suffered at the hands of the murderous Ayatollah:

THE NEW YORKER

THE DISAPPEARED
How the fatwa changed a writer’s life.

BY SALMAN RUSHDIE
SEPTEMBER 17, 2012


1989
Afterward, when the world was exploding around him, he felt annoyed with himself for having forgotten the name of the BBC reporter who told him that his old life was over and a new, darker existence was about to begin. She called him at home, on his private line, without explaining how she got the number. “How does it feel,” she asked him, “to know that you have just been sentenced to death by Ayatollah Khomeini?” It was a sunny Tuesday in London, but the question shut out the light. This is what he said, without really knowing what he was saying: “It doesn’t feel good.” This is what he thought: I’m a dead man. He wondered how many days he had left, and guessed that the answer was probably a single-digit number. He hung up the telephone and ran down the stairs from his workroom, at the top of the narrow Islington row house where he lived. The living-room windows had wooden shutters and, absurdly, he closed and barred them. Then he locked the front door

It was Valentine’s Day, but he hadn’t been getting along with his wife, the American novelist Marianne Wiggins. Five days earlier, she had told him that she was unhappy in the marriage, that she “didn’t feel good around him anymore.” Although they had been married for only a year, he, too, already knew that it had been a mistake. Now she was staring at him as he moved nervously around the house, drawing curtains, checking window bolts, his body galvanized by the news, as if an electric current were passing through it, and he had to explain to her what was happening. She reacted well and began to discuss what they should do. She used the word “we.” That was courageous.


Read more http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/09/17/120917fa_fact_rushdie#ixzz26q6JENhz
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Irate Muslims, then and now (Original Post) Lionel Mandrake Sep 2012 OP
Apparently the bounty has just been raised on him ProgressiveProfessor Sep 2012 #1
Thanks for the link. Lionel Mandrake Sep 2012 #3
K&R for an excellent link, and for the truth. CaliforniaPeggy Sep 2012 #2
You're right. Lionel Mandrake Sep 2012 #4
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