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Rushdie's poser to Muslims
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, OCT. 6. In remarks which are likely to infuriate his
Muslim critics, the controversial novelist, Mr. Salman Rushdie,
who lives in New York, has called upon Muslims to ask themselves
why Islam breeds ``so many violent mutant strains''. ``If the
West needs to understand its Una bombers and McVeighs, Islam
needs to face up to its bin Ladens,'' he says in an article in
today's Guardian on the September 11 terrorist attacks in
America.
Mr. Rushdie, who has barely emerged from the late Ayotallah
Khomeini's fatwa against him for writing Satanic Verses, prefaces
his remarks with the comment that those responsible for the
September 11 outrage in New York and Washington were ``tyrants,
not Muslims'' but says that ``there needs to be a thorough
examination, by Muslims everywhere, of why it is that the faith
they love breeds so many violent mutant strains.'' His remarks
come amid a raging controversy here over the former British Prime
Minister, Mrs Margaret Thatcher's criticism of the Muslim
``clerics'' for not having sufficiently condemned the events in
America.
Mr. Rushdie denounces as ``appalling rubbish'' attempts, mostly
in the Muslim world incidentally, to explain the September 11
tragedy in terms of the U.S. foreign policy towards West Asia.
``To excuse such an atrocity by blaming U.S. Government policies
is to deny the basic idea of all morality: that individuals are
responsible for their actions,'' he says echoing the British
Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair's insistence that there can be
``no moral ambiguity'' about what happened in America four weeks
ago and that nothing can justify it.
Describing the ``savaging'' of America as a lot of
``sanctimonious'' humbug, he says:` `A country which has just
suffered the most devastating terrorist attack in history, a
country in a state of deep mourning and horrible grief, is being
told heartlessly, that it is to blame for its own citizens'
deaths.'' Mr. Rushdie's comments contrast sharply with the Indian
novelist, Ms Arundhati Roy's stinging attack on U.S. foreign
policy in the same newspaper. In a Guardian article last week,
she called the September 11 atrocities as a ``monstrous calling
card'' from the victims of American policies. ``The message may
have been written by bin Laden (who knows?) and delivered by his
couriers, but it could well have been signed by the ghosts of the
victims of America's old wars,'' she wrote.
Mr. Rushdie, however, does call for a restrained response and in
a reference to indiscriminate U.S. military actions in the past,
he cautions: ``No more Sudanese aspirin factories to be bombed,
please. And now that wise American heads appear to have to
understood that it would be wrong to bomb the impoverished,
oppressed Afghan people in retaliation for their tyrannous
masters' misdeeds, they might apply that wisdom, retrospectively,
to what was done to the impoverished, oppressed people of Iraq.
It's time to stop making enemies and start making friends.''
The most effective response to the fundamentalists, he says, is
to confront their warped worldview and agree on ``what matters:
kissing in public places, bacon sandwiches, disagreement,
cutting-edge fashion, literature, generosity... movies, music,
freedom of thought, beauty love... Not by making war, but by the
unafraid way we choose to live shall we defeat them.''
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