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Salman Rushdie To Write Book About Iranian Fatwa, Decade In Hiding

DORIE TURNER   02/23/10 09:51 PM ET   AP

Salman Rushdie

ATLANTA — Novelist Salman Rushdie said Tuesday he plans to write a book about his decade in hiding under a death threat from the Iranian government.

Rushdie discussed the planned book at Emory University, where an exhibit of the author's personal papers opens on Friday. He donated manuscripts, letters and photos to the school, which catalogued them and transferred them to digital form.

"It's my story, and at some point, it needs to be told," he said during a news conference before touring the exhibit with reporters. "That point is getting closer, I think. When it was in cardboard boxes and dead computers, it would have been very, very difficult, but now it's all organized."

Rushdie, 62, was forced into hiding in England for a decade because the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran issued a 1989 fatwa, or religious edict, ordering Muslims to kill the author, saying his book, "The Satanic Verses," insulted Islam. The Iranian government declared in 1998 that it would not support the fatwa but could not rescind it.

Still, some hardline Muslim groups have protested Rushdie in recent years and threatened to boycott organizations that are associated with him. Rushdie has said the fatwa is more "a piece of rhetoric than a real threat" now.

Rushdie in 2006 gave Emory the collection of manuscripts from many of his novels, unpublished works, photos of him as a child and letters from public figures supporting him after the fatwa was issued. The archive will be open to the public.

Some of the items are being displayed in the exhibit, which runs through September. One wall is filled with Post-It notes he wrote while working on novels.

"I never realized my doodles would have been blown up to 3 feet tall," he said. "From the moment I agreed to do this, I knew it was going to be sort of embarrassing."

The India native is in the middle of a five-year stint as a distinguished lecturer at Emory.

"You get to sit in a room with intelligent, young people and talk about books you like. What's wrong with that?" he said of the experience.

Rushdie's novel "Midnight's Children" won Britain's Booker Prize, and was selected in 1993 as the best novel in 25 years of the Booker Prize.

He was knighted in 2007 by Queen Elizabeth II of England, the same year he divorced model and "Top Chef" host Padma Lakshmi after three years of marriage. He lives most of the year in England, where he is a citizen.

___

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Emory University: http://www.emory.edu

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ATLANTA — Novelist Salman Rushdie said Tuesday he plans to write a book about his decade in hiding under a death threat from the Iranian government. Rushdie discussed the planned book at Emory ...
ATLANTA — Novelist Salman Rushdie said Tuesday he plans to write a book about his decade in hiding under a death threat from the Iranian government. Rushdie discussed the planned book at Emory ...
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12:53 AM on 02/24/2010
Hasn't he milked this subject for all it's worth?

I can think of a better, more useful undertaking for him: he can explain in agonizing detail why the Iraq war was a lie and a sham, and he can wag his moral finger at one of his Oxbridge buddies who famously defended the bombing of Baghdad.
11:29 AM on 02/24/2010
Rushdie is a genius novelist, not a sanctimoniously banal blogger like yourself. Dig the difference, if you can.
12:32 PM on 02/24/2010
You managed to strike out in a single sentence:

1. Rushdie is NOT "a genius novelist." A genius would be someone like Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, or Kafka.

2. There is nothing santimonious about my comments. Please look up the word in the dictionary.

3. Nor, too, are my comments "banal." And I'm not a "blogger," either!
12:13 AM on 02/24/2010
The book " Satanic Versus " (which is a must read) was seen as a insult to Islam by the supreme leader of Iran who is highest ranking political AND religious authority of the nation . Therefore he issued a" fatwa"
calling on Muslims worldwide and ordering the authors death.

Why should you care?

Because freedom of speech and free inquiry trumps everything, especially theocracy.
Because murder for hire for the crime of writing a fictional novel should not be tolerated.
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dreamsugar
11:44 PM on 02/23/2010
Bridget Jones!!!
11:31 PM on 02/23/2010
Sir Salman is a hero, easily compared to Solzhenitsyn
11:25 PM on 02/23/2010
This poor rich man.
He wrote a an insulting fantasy and now he has to do what, worry?
Who cares?
It is called, FAITH..... not Obligation.
FOR THOSE WHO KNOW REALITY
If you know truth...Don't give a damn what critics say or do???
Do as you would have someone do to you.
Then,. mind your own business and serve the weak.
12:19 AM on 02/24/2010
People involved with The Satanic Verses were seriously injured and killed, so perhaps you should reconsider your flippant dismissal of his 'worry' as you call it. Also, he did not write an 'insulting fantasy,' he wrote a novel, and whether fanatical religious fascists can tell the difference or not is incidental. It is not Rushdie's fault that a certain segment of Islam thinks its own hurt feelings are a justification for barbarism, and neither he or anyone else should have to die on behalf of such childish absurdities.

Écrasez l'infame.
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12:44 AM on 02/24/2010
Je conviens. Well said.
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02:00 AM on 02/24/2010
Excellent post.
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terry63
10:44 PM on 02/23/2010
Let sleeping dogs lie, Salmon.
10:27 PM on 02/23/2010
As of early 2010 Rushdie has not been physically harmed, but others connected with the book have suffered violent attacks. Hitoshi Igarashi, the Japanese language translator of the book, was stabbed to death on 11 July 1991; Ettore Capriolo, the Italian language translator, was seriously injured in a stabbing the same month; William Nygaard, the publisher in Norway, barely survived an attempted assassination in Oslo in October 1993, and Aziz Nesin, the Turkish language translator, was the intended target in the events that led to the Sivas massacre on 2 July 1993 in Sivas, Turkey which resulted in the deaths of 37 people.

- Wikipedia

wow.
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09:38 PM on 02/23/2010
In spite of his amazing literary work, the first thing that always comes to mind when I see his picture is "how the F*CK did he land Padma Lakshmi"
08:14 PM on 02/23/2010
can someone really explain to me why an average person should even give two shakes of a dogs tail to him?

i know the muslims want him gone and such but seriously? why the hype?
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09:23 PM on 02/23/2010
Your probably right the "average person" who feels comfortable with folksy comments probably does not appreciate his works or care about his fate. Then again if it were up to "average people" the only books available would be Oprah Book Club titles, schlock about angels, fad diet books and pulp fiction.
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09:27 PM on 02/23/2010
That should read "You're..."

Curse English homonyms and contractions.
11:25 PM on 02/23/2010
i wasn't really trying to be mean about it.

just what is so special about this guy?
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TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
08:08 PM on 02/23/2010
I hope one can read this proposed book. I read the book which got him into such hot water and it was difficult to read, did not flow, and was not a literary highlight, frankly.
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09:26 PM on 02/23/2010
Both Midnight's Children and The Satanic Verses, his most famous works, require some a priori knowledge of the history of India (region, not just nation-state) and/or Islamic tradition.
07:27 PM on 02/23/2010
Ahhh Islam the religion of peace and perpetual outrage!
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TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
08:08 PM on 02/23/2010
So right.
09:41 PM on 02/23/2010
Do you ever notice how people who tell the truth about Islam have to live under 24 hour armed guard. But we must never forget that it is a religion of peace despite all the evidence to the contrary.
10:37 PM on 02/23/2010
it was fiction, and that is where the problem lies. Do your homework before making outrageous claims.
11:56 PM on 02/23/2010
***Do you ever notice how people who tell the truth about Islam have to live under 24 hour armed guard. But we must never forget that it is a religion of peace despite all the evidence to the contrary***

Same could be said for Christianity in extreme forms.

If you doubt that, try and make an appointment with Dr George Tiller and see how far you get.