No regrets as Rushdie reappears in public
He had evaded bounty hunters for 10 years, but had reckoned without the paparazzi. “Come on Salman, punch the air,” instructed one snapper. Nothing doing. “Come on, a picture’s worth a thousand words.” “Stick yer ‘ead out of the window, Salman,” shouted photographers desperate for a picture of him breathing the sweet air of freedom. Nothing doing. “Bleedin’ git, what’s his problem?”
Freedom can bear a heavy price, including talking to the British press. It wasn’t exactly Nelson Mandela’s long walk to freedom, more a short sidle to safety, as Rushdie appeared from a room of the Islington offices of Article 19, the anti-censorship organisation which has coordinated the Rushdie campaign.
Rushdie performed as if he had been preparing for this moment for 10 years. He was happy, funny and wonderfully fluent. He was also admirably honest. “There were times,” he said, “when I attempted to compromise, when I said things that weren’t true. I’m not a religious person and I shouldn’t have said I’d rediscovered religion.:
Above all, he was pleased to go back to being a writer rather than a cause. Had the threats changed him, limited him as a writer? “I did not want the threats against me to define my writing,” he said. This is the end of the story. Now is the time for the next story.”
What would that story be? He said he had finished a new novel and had kept a journal of the entire period spent in hiding after the fatwa issued in 1989 by the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini. He would now attempt to shape that journal. “It’s a hot story and most of you don’t know it. I wanted to wait until I knew the last chapter.”
“What would freedom mean; what could he do now, go to the ball game?” asked a French journalist. He already went occasionally, he said. He saw Spurs v Middlesbrough last week. “It is very hard being a Spurs fan,” he said, but that is the burden I have to bear, that is my fate.” There are worse fates.
← Love among the reviews
A passage through India →