Safety concerns loom as writers show public support for Rushdie
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[August 20, 2022]
By Randi Love and Danielle Broadway
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Under the watch of
counterterrorism officers and police in tactical gear, hundreds of
people gathered in front of the New York Public Library on Friday to
show support for Salman Rushdie, the author stabbed multiple times at a
literary event a week ago.
Irish novelist Colum McCann, British writer Hari Kunzru and others read
passages from Rushdie's works from the top of the flagship library
branch's steps off Manhattan's Fifth Avenue. Below, at a distance
enforced by organizers, a crowd of about 400 people gathered to listen,
breaking out into a chant of "Stand with Salman" when the event
concluded.
Some held signs depicting Rushdie and quoting him saying, "If we are not
confident of our freedom, then we are not free."
Police say Rushdie was attacked by a 24-year-old New Jersey man who
rushed a stage and stabbed the writer in the neck and torso at a
literary festival in western New York last week. Rushdie, who was rushed
to a hospital, survived.
There were no bag checks or metal detectors to screen for weapons ahead
of the appearance by Rushdie, who had been living under a death sentence
for 33 years.
The suspect has pleaded not guilty to second-degree attempted murder and
assault charges.
"I hope this is a wake-up call that people like Salman, who are
fearless, who write things as they see them, who are not afraid to speak
the truth as they view it, really are in danger," said PEN America Chief
Executive Suzanne Nossel. The nonprofit free-expression and human rights
group helped organize the event.
Attendees spoke of their worries for themselves and other writers
following the attack.
"We're all in danger. And some of us are more overtly in danger than the
rest," Iranian-American author Roya Hakakian said in an interview.
While the death sentence, or fatwa, ordered on Rushdie by Iran was among
the most high-profile threats, many authors say harassment and calls for
violence have become part of the experience of being a writer.
"Love Is an Ex-Country" author Randa Jarrar said in an email interview
this week that she had to learn how to "better aim a gun" and prepare
physically in case of attack after a tweet about former first lady
Barbara Bush prompted threats.
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Supporters of author Salman Rushdie
attend a reading and rally to show solidarity for free expression at
the New York Public Library in New York City, U.S., August 19, 2022.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
When Bush died in 2018, Jarrar described her as an "amazing racist"
for a comment about the majority-Black communities displaced by
Hurricane Katrina.
The Muslim author said she feared for her life when critics posted
her home address and phone number online. She and her child began
receiving death threats.
Every threat she received mentioned that she is Muslim and warned
her to go back to where she came from, Jarrar said. She moved, and
hired a company to scrub her private data from the internet.
Queer Chicana writer Myriam Gurba faced threats after she criticized
author Jeanine Cummins in 2020 of cultural appropriation in writing
the novel “American Dirt,” which focused on a Mexican woman who
escaped a drug cartel to build a new life in the United States as an
undocumented immigrant.
Gurba said many people supported her, but she also received threats
of violence on her phone and the internet.
"The first death threat that I received stated that the police
should execute me for my stupidity,” she said.
This week, police in Scotland said they were investigating a threat
against "Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling following her tweet
voicing concern for Rushdie.
At least one upcoming literary festival is tightening security.
Organizers of September's National Book Festival, hosted by the
Library of Congress in Washington, had already planned to require
bag searches.
Now, the festival is working with law enforcement to add extra
measures, a spokesperson said.
At the New York Public Library, some writers said they did not fear
gathering in public.
"The only time I got anxious was when they told us how much security
there was going to be, thinking maybe there have been some threats,
but I doubt it,” author Paul Auster said.
(Reporting by Randi Love and Sofia Ahmed in New York and Danielle
Broadway in Los Angeles; Writing by Lisa Richwine; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
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