Dear Friends:

You will agree we can at least listen to what Salman Rushdie has to say. So I 
copy the article published in the Times of India (18 03 2012):


-bhuban
[Note: I.m a liberal because I read Rushdie's infamous book]





Salman Rushdie in Delhi, tears into Imran and Congress
TNN | Mar 17, 2012, 10.52PM IST



8
















Salman Rushdie Indian electorate is smarter than these politicians.



NEW DELHI: In India two months after being forced to skip the Jaipur Literature 
Festival, the novelist Salman Rushdie hit out at the Congress on Saturday, 
suggesting that his presence there was blocked because of "useless electoral 
calculations" and told Rahul Gandhi that "it did not work". 

The renowned author, who has been castigated by fundamentalist Muslim groups 
for his book 'The Satanic Verses', observed that blocking his presence in 
Jaipur "led the Congress party down the road" in the Uttar Pradesh assembly 
elections. 

Participating in the India Today Conclave, he said India "deserves to be led by 
better leaders than is being now". Referring to the controversy which 
surrounded the Jaipur festival in January and forced him to skip the event, he 
said, "What happened there is not Deobandi bigotry... It was pretty useless 
electoral calculations. It did not work, Rahul (Gandhi)." 

"Indian electorate is smarter than these politicians... People can be whipped 
as in Jaipur Literature Festival," Rushdie said, adding that 95% of Muslims 
were not interested in violence and that that would be true for Hindus too. 

Rushdie, who spoke at a session with the theme 'Liberty versus: I am what I am 
and that's all that I am', said the culture of "offendedness is growing" in 
India. Citing the opposition by fundamentalists to the late MF Hussain and 
other artists and writers, he said, "It seems every day there is a piece of 
bullying by groups of Muslims, Hindus... voices are being silenced... the 
chilling effect of violence is telling and it is growing in this country." 

Regretting the public apathy against such measures to silence free expression, 
the author contended, "People are asleep. You need to wake up." He said that 
"freedom is not a tea party, freedom is a war... Freedom is not absolute, it is 
something which somebody is there to take away. If you don't defend it, you 
will lose it." On his presence in India again as promised by him two months 
ago, he said: "This seems normal that a writer of Indian birth who loves this 
country turns up to speak. This is normal. But it is abnormal that he is 
prevented. That danger is growing." Talking about the stiff opposition by some 
fundamentalists to 'The Satanic Verses' written 24 years ago, the London-based 
writer said: "Who gives the people the right to attack me?" 

He said he was extremely shocked that the writers who read from 'The Satanic 
Verses' at the Jaipur festival to express solidarity with him were not defended 
and were still in the danger of being prosecuted. He took a dig at the chief 
ministers of Jammu & Kashmir Omar Abdullah and UP Akhilesh Yadav, besides 
Pakistani cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan for not turning up at the 
event reportedly because of his presence. 

"Some politicians suddenly discovered that they had ridiculously overcrowded 
schedules," he said. 

Rushdie hits out at Imran Khan 

Salman Rushdie hit out at Imran Khan, describing him as a "dictator in 
waiting". The formerPakistan cricketer-turned-founder of the political outfit 
Tehreek-e-Insaf withdrew from the conclave two days ago, saying "he did not 
dream of being seen with Rushdie for the immeasurable hurt he has caused to 
Muslims". 

"A British writer described Imran Khan as a dictator in waiting. I am happy 
that nobody else is protesting this time than Imran Khan. Imran is afraid of 
facing my bouncers. Imran knew that he would share the stage with me," the 
Booker prize-winning writer said. 

"Imran never read 'The Satanic Verses'. Imran is not a liberal," Rushdie said. 

Rushdie, who returned two months after he vowed on Indian television that he 
would come back to India after being stopped from the Jaipur Literature 
Festival in January, said he had "not caused immeasurable harm to Mulsims". 

"Fanatics cause biggest harm to Islam. Immeasurable harm has been caused to 
Muslims by terrorists," he said. 

Rushdie said common people were more sensible than their leaders and 95% of 
Muslims in India were not in favour of violence and the things being said in 
their name. 

Freedom of speech is a casualty of bigotry, Rushdie said. 

"India always had tradition of accepting free speech. Every day there is a 
price for hooliganism by bigots," he said, taking a dig at the "disgraceful 
vote-bank politics taking place in India". 

Rushdie said the ban on the import of 'The Satanic Verses' in the age of the 
internet was useless. 

(Inputs from PTI & IANS)


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