Rushdie: Still Hounded After All These Years

Emboldened by the Indian government’s two-decade-long ban on
Salman Rushdie’s Satanic Verses, some Indian Muslim
clerics are now trying to get the author himself banned from the
country. They want the government to stop Rushdie from attending
the Jaipur Literary Festival, the biggest and most prestigious
powwow of its kind in the subcontinent, where the author is
scheduled to dissertate on the topic of ‘Inglish, Amlish, Hinglish:
The chutnification of English,’ later this month.

Darul Uloom Deoband Islamic Seminary’s vice chancellor, a man
obviously unfamiliar with the concept of free speech,
urged
the government to cancel Rushdie’s visa for hurting the
sentiments of Muslims in the past.

But fortunately there are plenty of
sensible
Indian Muslims this time around resisting such calls,
including  the law minister Salman Khurshid. He has
steadfastly stood up for Rushdie’s right to come and go as he damn
well pleases from his native country without a visa since he is a
duly certified Person of Indian Origin. “This should not be made an
issue. These are matters of normal processes of legal rights,”
Khurshid said. “”A person of Indian origin’ can visit the country
without visa and Rushdie can come here likewise.”

The book, readers will recall, earned Rushdie a fatwa on his
head for, among other things, suggesting that Muhammad had
unwittingly included some verses from Satan in the Quran.

Padma Lakshmi, the super model who stole and broke Rushdie’s
heart here.

Padma

And my 2005 interview with Rushdie here.