Het woord op zondag: Salman Rushdie
Gepost door Tjerk
Salman Rushdie werd wereldvermaard door de fatwa van Ayatollah Khomeini, roepend om zijn dood. Onlangs kwam hij hernieuwd in het nieuws vanwege zijn riddering. Als directeur van PEN, een organisatie van schrijvers en dichters, riep hij zijn collega’s op de relatie tussen geloof en rede te onderzoeken. In een gesprek met Bill Moyers (in 2006) legt hij uit waarom.
Moyers: “TIME magazine had a cover ‘God is dead’.” Rushdie: “Yes I know, many people made that mistake … including me. As a young man, the idea that religion would come to be right at the centre of public life seemed unthinkable”
“You can look in different parts of the world and see the growth of religious fanaticism as a response to the disillusionment with secularism”
“There is so much mutual incomprehension between the West and the rest of the world; out of that incomprehension can come many abuses, many morbid symptoms, and I think as writers, as artists - and it’s a thing every writer I know is thinking about - is how do you deal with that incomprehension, how do you lessen this incomprehension (..) I do think there’s also a crucial role for the imaginative dimension, because we need to understand imaginatively who each other is.”
Over de ayatollah’s en andere radicalen: “They are the pimple on the nose of islam. I think the way in which radical islam will be defeated, will be when ordinary islam, the regular world of the muslim faith, comes to reject the idea that they will be represented by, defined by, that kind of extremist behaviour.”

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