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Explainer: Who is Salman Rushdie, and why was he attacked?

Explainer: Who is Salman Rushdie, and why was he attacked?
Though controversy and even death threats have followed him for decades, India-born British-American novelist Salman Rushdie has lead as public a life as possible
4 min read
13 August, 2022
Salman Rushdie's most controversial work, 'The Satanic Verses', was published in 1988 [Getty]

On 12 August, acclaimed novelistÌýprepared to step on stage at a book event in quiet upstate New York.Ìý

The India-born British-American citizenÌýhad been targeted for years over allegations of blasphemy and insulting the , who Muslims consider aÌýmessenger of God.

Accustomed toÌýcriticism, insult, and even death threats, he continued to lead as public a life as possible.Ìý

However, after decades avoiding serious physical attack, the 75-year-old’s fate changed on Friday.

Chaos at ChautauquaÌý

Rushdie was due to speak at a lecturer series at the Chautauqua Institution.

But just as the event got underway, a man,Ìýdressed all in blackÌýaccording to eyewitnesses, rushed on stage and started punching and Rushdie.

Some audience members initially thought it was a stunt,ÌýbutÌýit quickly became clear that Rushdie’s life was in serious danger.Ìý

Event moderator Henry Reese and a police officer rushed to the author’s aide.Ìý

RushdieÌýwas flown to a hospital and underwent surgery. He was on a ventilator Friday evening with a damaged liver and severed nerves in his arm. Doctors said he is likely to lose an eye.Ìý

Police identified the attacker as 24-year-old Hadi Matar, of Fairview, New Jersey.

They said that their preliminary social media review Matar to be "sympathetic to Shia extremism"Ìýand to Iran's IslamicÌýRevolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) - but that his exact motive for attacking Rushdie was still unclear.

No stranger to controversyÌý

Rushdie was born in to a Muslim family two months before India gained independence from Britain.Ìý

At 14, he was sent to study in England and later secured a place at the prestigious Kings CollegeÌý.Ìý

Rushdie’s made his name as an author with the publication of ‘Midnight’s Children’ in 1981.Ìý

In 1988, his most controversial work was released: 'The Satanic Verses’.ÌýÌý

The surrealist post-modern novel follows the story of Indian Muslims living in England. It was denounced as blasphemous by Muslims across the world whoÌýsaw one of its characters as an insult to the Prophet Muhammad.Ìý

Some 45 people were killed in subsequent riots over the novel and multiple translators have been attacked.Ìý

The book was banned in Iran, where the late leader issued a 1989 fatwa -Ìýor edict - calling for Rushdie’s death.Ìý

YetÌýthe book became a best-seller on both sides of the Atlantic.Ìý

Rushdie - who has since expressed hisÌýregret for the distress caused publication of the novelÌý-Ìýwent into hiding under a British government protection program after its release.Ìý

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What Rushdie did next?Ìý

Following nine years of seclusion, Rushdie re-emerged into public life.Ìý

Iranian leader Khomeini died that same year he issued a fatwa against Rushdie. Current supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has never issued a fatwa of his own against the author. However, he once said threats against Rushdie were "fired like a bullet that won’t rest until it hits its target".Ìý

Nevertheless, determined not to be defeated by efforts to intimidate and silence him, Rushdie became an advocate for across the world.Ìý

"The best thing I can do is to go on being the best writer I can be and to lead as open a professional and personal life as I can. It’s just a way of saying, there may be this danger and it’s a terrible thing… and we need to fight it and we need to defeat it," he told CNN.Ìý

Rushdie later released a series of works, including a memoir about his experiences in hiding. In 2007, he was knightedÌýby the Queen of England for his services to literature.Ìý

As time passed,Ìýthe author lived an increasingly public life, appearing at several events and travelling widely.

However, the threat of an attack was everpresent.ÌýÌý

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