Blocking Rushdie shameful
By objecting to Salman Rushdie’s participation in the Jaipur Literature Festival, the Darul Uloom of Deoband has not covered itself in glory. That the country’s premier body of Islamic learning has seen it fit to get involved in petty sectarian matters is shameful and shocking.
Salman Rushdie has been coming to India regularly for many years, and as a “Person of Indian Origin” doesn’t even need a visa. Indeed, he attended the same festival once earlier without any trouble whatsoever. Yet the Darul Uloom chose to rake up a needless controversy, which was inevitably picked up by obscure busybodies in Rajasthan claiming to speak on behalf of Muslims.
That appears to have given an excuse to the Rajasthan government to invoke fears of a possible law and order situation and try to “persuade” the festival’s organisers to withdraw the invitation to Mr Rushdie. While the organisers claim the invitation remains open, Mr Rushdie’s participation now looks doubtful and his name no longer figures in the rescheduled itinerary. The Ashok Gehlot government’s craven attitude is, of course, fairly typical of administrations everywhere. West Bengal’s former CPI(M) government had also quickly buckled under pressure when some Muslims objected to Taslima Nasreen’s presence, and asked her to leave Kolkata.
Such an attitude goes against the democratic and secular letter and spirit. Governments cannot buckle under pressure from narrow vested interests; it only encourages other fanatic elements to object to anything they find inconvenient. In the end, it has a chilling effect on freedom of speech. How much better it would have been had both state and Central governments promised Rushdie full security and welcomed this illustrious son to the land where he was born? That would have been the correct thing to do.
Comments
The aforesaid piece was a
JIGME WANGDI
20 Jan 2012 - 21:07
The aforesaid piece was a well thought out write up. Strangely enough this gives me a sense of deja vu primarily because it was thissame kind of unacceptablebehavior that compelled greats like Maqbool Fida Hussin to leave his own country and seek citizenship in a foreign country..keeping in mind India as a country of many sensitivities and myriad dispensations the incident that compelled Rushdie to cancel his visit does point to a serious state of affairs in the state..it is an outright insult to our secular credentials and ethos..perhaps we belong to a class of hypocrites where LAWS are only passed in paper not in the spirit.
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