Rushdie in Frankfurt

Some would say about time, others better late than never. On Sunday October 22 in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt, Salman Rushdie was rewarded for a profound and courageous literary life – rather, LIFE without need of a conditional. And awarded with the Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels. And, he was there – so very ALIVE with sparkling intelligence and infectious good humor (granted, das große deutsche Publikum in the pews didn’t always get it! but what the … I did!). And, with humanity, and a gift for finding the right words to articulate the misplacement and perversion of humanity and how it may be retrieved in a fractious world. Only weeks after the terror attack against Israel and the repercussions in Gaza, such a clear voice is most sorely needed

Here now is Rushdie’s marvelous acceptance, audio is available elsewhere on the site, and embedded below in PDF format all the speeches, including the laudatio by Daniel Kehlmann.

Salman Rushdie – Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels

Salman Rushdie – Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels
— Read on www.friedenspreis-des-deutschen-buchhandels.de/alle-preistraeger-seit-1950/2020-2029/salman-rushdie

On the run, I make note of this! Perhaps Deutschland’s most prestigious award & for those who have campaigned for Salman Rushdie – loudly & quietly & for so long – to be imagined only expirations of relief (sub-text: better late than never!) – given voice by (rare) unanimity amongst the Feuilletons…

Salman Rushdie update

On a number of occasions recently I have searched for an update on Salman Rushdie’s condition following the brutal attack upon him at a literary event in rural New York in the summer just gone – and mostly have came up short. His (super)agent, Andrew Wylie, did divulge the extent of Rushdie’s injuries, which include the loss of an eye, during an El País interview – reported upon here at The Guardian.

Now, and without having to take the initiative, on Radio Four’s Today programme this morning, Mishal Husain spoke with Alan Yentob, a long time friend of Salman Rushdie (at about 2:19:00 – usually available for about 30 days). We are told that very recently Rushdie has “listened in” at a couple of special readings of his works by friends and colleagues, amongst them Yentob, who says that Rushdie is working hard at getting well, that he remains optimistic and his humor as razor sharp as ever.

Very good news indeed.

And … his new book, called Victory City, finished before he sustained such dreadful injuries is due out in February 2023. Yentob actually said January, but I have checked at Penguin Random House and it is indeed February 7 in the US and February 9 in the UK. From what Yentob says and following the publisher’s blurb we will be taken back anew to Rushdie’s literary roots in a magical, mystical, shape shifting India – this time to the 14th century and to the tale of a little girl possessed by a powerful goddess and sent on a divine mission to guide the fate of a great city and expose and conquer the patriarchy. A mission that will span centuries, and be interwoven with the city’s rise and fall and with it that of its rulers and its citizens.

Now if that doesn’t sound like the Salman Rushdie that gave us Midnight’s Children – who could believe it! – forty odd years ago.

Salman Rushdie

That, after all these years, this price-tag, bounty, or, if you will, fatwa, hanging over Salman Rushdie has been acted upon, is truly devastating. Yesterday, Rushdie was attacked and stabbed multiple times during an event at the Chautauqua Institution, a venerable arts and education venue, in western New York State. His personal fate remains in the balance, and that of a writer’s right – even duty – to contribute to public debate, something that Rushdie vehemently pleaded for in his literature and presence – irrespective of duress – over many years, likewise.

The focus has, of course, immediately turned to this, so-called fatwa edict from over three decades ago. But, I am just as concerned about the wider pervasiveness of intolerance, to the point of hate, in our discourse; one that has become almost inextricable from the free exchange of ideas and opinion, and the tradition of respectful debate.

And these concerns have, in recent years, moved way beyond fanatical religious or political animosities, and are very much in the middle of society – with very much main stream disputes about gender, language, food – you name it and I could probably come up with a recent example. For some – even most – these very often social media driven shitstorms – to use a very un-Deutsch but nevertheless Deutsch expression – are fleeting; sometimes though they fester and take on a much darker tenor… And, it has to be said, tensions are being created and stretched at all ends of the political and pseudo-political spectrum.

For me, the despicable attack against Rushdie has led to a confluence of ideas – some of which I have been occupied with of late anyway. Beyond, those omnipresent contemporary preoccupations just mentioned, another is the 75th anniversary of the partition of India, and how informed I was of the birth of the modern state of India and the legacy of the colonial state that preceded it, and in a wonderfully literary way, by Rushdie’s magnificent novel, Midnight’s Children. More so than by some non-fictional accounts I have read, and certainly more than by more strident renderings that have veered increasingly towards an unreflected post-colonial rhetoric that can have not good societal repercussions.

Any offerings of condolence would be trite and unheard, but there are issues here I want to write about further.

Sunday 14 August: Though suffering from horrific wounds, Salman Rushdie’s condition in a Pennsylvania hospital is reported – and from reliable sources – to have stabilized somewhat. One can only hope that to be so, and a good recovery possible. On The Guardian site this morning an excellent Observer piece by Kenan Malik that explores some of the concerns I mentioned above.