http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7895604.stm

Page last updated at 09:56 GMT, Saturday, 28 March 2009

 

'Most religious leaders are fools' 

The author and playwright Hanif Kureishi was born in London in 1954. He is the 
author of The Buddha of Suburbia, Intimacy and Something to Tell You. His first 
play, Soaking the Heat, was staged in 1976, and My Beautiful Laundrette , for 
which he wrote the screenplay, was released in 1985. 

He was appointed to the Order of CBE in 2007, for services to literature and 
drama. Here he briefly tells BBC News his thoughts about religion. 

Would you describe yourself as religious? 

I've always been fascinated by religion. For me it's the deepest form of human 
expression, along with culture. 

God is mankind's finest creation. Has there been a better idea than that of 
God? 

Do you believe in God, and if so, what sort of god? 

I believe in the need to understand what the idea of God, or gods, do for us. 

What do you think happens after you die? 

You dissolve into the minds of others, and you haunt them until they are tired 
of you, and even after. 

Does it change your view of someone when you find out that they are religious 
and how? 

You have to think about whether they are merely following the values of those 
around them, or whether they are delusional psychotics! 

Is religion a good thing? 

That's an impossible question. 

Most people in most societies during human history have lived in what could be 
described as 'religious' communities. 

Religions, like novels and myths, describe the world and help make it safer. 

What impact has religion had on your life? 

It's made me think about the important questions: sexuality, childhood, 
authority, death, power. 

Have you ever had a religious experience and can you describe it? 

I was thrown out of the East London mosque for being a dissident writer and 
critic of radical Islam. 

What is your favourite religious song? 

Sympathy for the Devil, by the Rolling Stones. 

What religious leader, if any, most inspires you? 

Most religious leaders are ignorant fools. 

It's a shame so few of them are intelligent or even interesting. 

It makes you wonder why the dullest people hang around religions. Gives the 
whole thing a bad name. 

What is your favourite religious book? 

The most interesting work about the use of religion as a form of organisation 
of the resentful and envious is Nietzsche's "On The Genealogy of Morals". 



Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/7895604.stm

Published: 2009/03/28 09:56:45 GMT

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