Tag: Booker Prize

  • ‘We must tell better stories than the tyrants’: Revisiting Salman Rushdie’s speech months before fatal attack on him

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: Three months ago at PEN World Voices Festival, Salman Rushdie had said that a poem cannot stop a bullet, a novel cannot defuse a bomb, but we are not helpless, we can sing the truth and name the liars. We must tell better stories than the tyrants!

    Today the 75-year-old India-born British-American novelist Rusdhie is battling for his life after he was attacked in New York yesterday.

    This incident has come as a shock across the world and leaders and intellectuals have expressed their grief and shock.

    Condemning the incident, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson called it an attack on his freedom of expression.

    “Appalled that Sir Salman Rushdie has been stabbed while exercising a right we should never cease to defend. Right now my thoughts are with his loved ones. We are all hoping he is okay,” Boris tweeted.

    France’s President Emmanuel Macron said that the author has been a victim of a coward attacks by people filled with hatred and barbarism.

    “For 33 years, Salman Rushdie has embodied freedom and the fight against obscurantism. He has just been the victim of a cowardly attack by the forces of hatred and barbarism. His fight is our fight; it is universal. Now more than ever, we stand by his side,” he said in a tweet.

    The 75-year-old Booker Prize winner writer would probably lose an eye in addition to having his liver damaged and one arm’s nerves severed – according to his agent Andrew Wylie.

    US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said, “today the country and the world witnessed a reprehensible attack against the writer Salman Rushdie. This act of violence is appalling. All of us in the Biden-Harris Administration are praying for his speedy recovery. We are thankful to good citizens and first responders for helping Rushdie so quickly after the attack and to law enforcement for its swift and effective work, which is ongoing.”

    Former UK chancellor Rishi Sunak also took to Twitter and said, “Shocked to hear of the attack on Salman Rushdie in New York. A champion of free speech and artistic freedom. He’s in our thoughts tonight.”

    The Mumbai-born British writer’s “The Satanic Verses” was released in 1980 and was later banned in Bangladesh, Pakistan, South Africa and other countries, along with banned for import to India. In 1989, Iran issues a fatwa, or religious decree, that calls for Rushdie to be killed for insulting Islam in “The Satanic Verses”. 

    The novel was considered by some Muslims as disrespectful of the Prophet Mohammed.

    “Disgraceful attack on Sir Salman Rushdie. People must be able to speak freely and freedom of speech must be defended. My thoughts are with him, his family and loved ones,” UK’s Foreign Secretary Liz Truss tweeted.

    NEW DELHI: Three months ago at PEN World Voices Festival, Salman Rushdie had said that a poem cannot stop a bullet, a novel cannot defuse a bomb, but we are not helpless, we can sing the truth and name the liars. We must tell better stories than the tyrants!

    Today the 75-year-old India-born British-American novelist Rusdhie is battling for his life after he was attacked in New York yesterday.

    This incident has come as a shock across the world and leaders and intellectuals have expressed their grief and shock.

    Condemning the incident, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson called it an attack on his freedom of expression.

    “Appalled that Sir Salman Rushdie has been stabbed while exercising a right we should never cease to defend. Right now my thoughts are with his loved ones. We are all hoping he is okay,” Boris tweeted.

    France’s President Emmanuel Macron said that the author has been a victim of a coward attacks by people filled with hatred and barbarism.

    “For 33 years, Salman Rushdie has embodied freedom and the fight against obscurantism. He has just been the victim of a cowardly attack by the forces of hatred and barbarism. His fight is our fight; it is universal. Now more than ever, we stand by his side,” he said in a tweet.

    The 75-year-old Booker Prize winner writer would probably lose an eye in addition to having his liver damaged and one arm’s nerves severed – according to his agent Andrew Wylie.

    US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said, “today the country and the world witnessed a reprehensible attack against the writer Salman Rushdie. This act of violence is appalling. All of us in the Biden-Harris Administration are praying for his speedy recovery. We are thankful to good citizens and first responders for helping Rushdie so quickly after the attack and to law enforcement for its swift and effective work, which is ongoing.”

    Former UK chancellor Rishi Sunak also took to Twitter and said, “Shocked to hear of the attack on Salman Rushdie in New York. A champion of free speech and artistic freedom. He’s in our thoughts tonight.”

    The Mumbai-born British writer’s “The Satanic Verses” was released in 1980 and was later banned in Bangladesh, Pakistan, South Africa and other countries, along with banned for import to India. In 1989, Iran issues a fatwa, or religious decree, that calls for Rushdie to be killed for insulting Islam in “The Satanic Verses”. 

    The novel was considered by some Muslims as disrespectful of the Prophet Mohammed.

    “Disgraceful attack on Sir Salman Rushdie. People must be able to speak freely and freedom of speech must be defended. My thoughts are with him, his family and loved ones,” UK’s Foreign Secretary Liz Truss tweeted.

  • Event to felicitate Booker Prize winner author cancelled in Agra

    Express News Service

    LUCKNOW: ‘Ret Samadhi’ (Tomb of Sand), which won its author Geetanjali Shree the prestigious Booker Prize-2022, has courted controversy leading to the cancellation of an event to felicitate Geetanjali organised by Agra-based cultural and a theatre groups. The event was due to take place on Saturday.

    The event had to be organized by two organisations of Agra – ‘Rangleela’, involved in the promotion and revival of theatre activities and ‘Agra Theatre Club.’

    As per the organisers of the event, the controversy was kicked up on the content of the novel after a police complaint against it was filed in Hathras. Complainant Sandeep Kumar Pathak of Sadabad in Hathras claimed that the author had allegedly given objectionable reference to Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati in her book hurting the religious sentiments of Hindus.

    Issuing a joint statement, the organisers – Anil Shukla of ‘Rangeela’ and Harvijay Bahia of ‘Agra Theatre Club’– said that it was unfortunate that they could not felicitate Geetanjali Shree who was born in Mainpuri and did her schooling and college from different institutions of the state. Moreover, her father was an IAS officer who was posted in Agra division for a respectable period.

    “It is really sad that the event had to be called off in such a manner,” said the organisers in the joint statement.

    They claimed that complainant Sandeep Kumar Pathak submitted a ‘tehrir’ (written complaint) at Kotwali police station in Hathras against Geetanjali Shree and tweeted the complaint tagging UP CM and UP DGP, seeking registration of FIR against Geetanjali.

    However, the Hathras police reportedly stated before local media that they would proceed in the case only after studying the content of book, claimed Anil Shukla.

    The organisers also claimed that earlier, there was a failed attempt made allegedly by a group of ABVP to sabotage her event organised by the teachers’ union at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in Delhi a couple of days ago.

    Disturbed over the turn of events, author Geetanjali Shree had apparently decided to stay away from public events for some time, they said.

    However, attempts to contact the author went in vain as the person. Geetanjali Shree is a celebrated Hindi writer who has five novels and five short stories to her credit. Her fifth novel, ‘Ret Samadhi’, was translated into English as ‘Tomb of Sand’ by American translator and writer Daisy Rockwell. This creation of Geetanjali won her the prestigious International Booker Prize in May.

    LUCKNOW: ‘Ret Samadhi’ (Tomb of Sand), which won its author Geetanjali Shree the prestigious Booker Prize-2022, has courted controversy leading to the cancellation of an event to felicitate Geetanjali organised by Agra-based cultural and a theatre groups. The event was due to take place on Saturday.

    The event had to be organized by two organisations of Agra – ‘Rangleela’, involved in the promotion and revival of theatre activities and ‘Agra Theatre Club.’

    As per the organisers of the event, the controversy was kicked up on the content of the novel after a police complaint against it was filed in Hathras. Complainant Sandeep Kumar Pathak of Sadabad in Hathras claimed that the author had allegedly given objectionable reference to Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati in her book hurting the religious sentiments of Hindus.

    Issuing a joint statement, the organisers – Anil Shukla of ‘Rangeela’ and Harvijay Bahia of ‘Agra Theatre Club’– said that it was unfortunate that they could not felicitate Geetanjali Shree who was born in Mainpuri and did her schooling and college from different institutions of the state. Moreover, her father was an IAS officer who was posted in Agra division for a respectable period.

    “It is really sad that the event had to be called off in such a manner,” said the organisers in the joint statement.

    They claimed that complainant Sandeep Kumar Pathak submitted a ‘tehrir’ (written complaint) at Kotwali police station in Hathras against Geetanjali Shree and tweeted the complaint tagging UP CM and UP DGP, seeking registration of FIR against Geetanjali.

    However, the Hathras police reportedly stated before local media that they would proceed in the case only after studying the content of book, claimed Anil Shukla.

    The organisers also claimed that earlier, there was a failed attempt made allegedly by a group of ABVP to sabotage her event organised by the teachers’ union at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in Delhi a couple of days ago.

    Disturbed over the turn of events, author Geetanjali Shree had apparently decided to stay away from public events for some time, they said.

    However, attempts to contact the author went in vain as the person. Geetanjali Shree is a celebrated Hindi writer who has five novels and five short stories to her credit. Her fifth novel, ‘Ret Samadhi’, was translated into English as ‘Tomb of Sand’ by American translator and writer Daisy Rockwell. This creation of Geetanjali won her the prestigious International Booker Prize in May.