When Sony Pictures caved in last
week to North Korea's extortionate demands to yank "The Interview"
from distribution, my thoughts turned to Salman Rushdie.
Twenty-five years ago Rushdie, a
British author of Indian Muslim extraction, was condemned to death by Iran's
Ayatollah Khomeini for writing things that the Ayatollah deemed insulting to
Islam in his new, critically acclaimed novel, "The Satanic Verses."
Khomeini issued a fatwa ordering
any Muslim who encountered Rushdie to kill him on sight, forcing Rushdie to go
into hiding for his life.
How did the publishing industry
react? As you might expect, the major book chains, including Amazon and Barnes
& Noble, chickened out like Sony and immediately stopped selling "The
Satanic Verses."
But Cody's Books, an independent bookstore
on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, in the heart of the student quarter, decided
to stand up for freedom of speech and stocked the book.
In the early morning hours of May
4, 1989, Cody's owner, Andy Ross, was wakened by a phone call from the Berkeley
Police. Somebody had thrown a firebomb through the store's front window.
After the firefighters put out the fire,
Ross and his staff started cleaning up. He looked down and spotted a second
device – an unexploded pipe bomb rolling on the floor next to the poetry section.
It was too dangerous to move, so he and his
staff watched from across the street while the bomb squad blew it up. Though
they packed it with sandbags first, it still made the whole building shake.
After it was all over they filed back
inside, and Ross told his staff that it was up to them whether to continue
stocking the book.
They took a vote. It was unanimous. The
book stayed.
"That was Cody's finest moment,"
Ross said proudly.
A few months later, Rushdie briefly came
out of hiding to make a surprise visit to Cody's. Ross showed him the hole in
the ceiling from the second bomb. Next to it someone had written, "Salmon
Rushdie Memorial Hole."
"Some authors get statues,"
Rushdie quipped. "Others get holes."
Other independents followed Cody's
example, and the writers' community – led by Susan Sontag, Kurt Vonnegut and
Norman Mailer - rallied around
Rushdie with petitions, press conferences and full-page ads in the papers.
Compare that to the shameful
behavior of the Hollywood community last week when George Clooney circulated a
petition urging Sony to call the North Koreans' bluff. He couldn't get a single
signature.
Some people are questioning whether
it's worth taking even a remote risk for the sake of a dumb comedy like
"The Interview."
But, as Clooney pointed out, "With the First Amendment, you’re never
protecting Jefferson. It’s usually protecting some guy who’s burning a flag or
doing something stupid." We need to defend Seth Rogen's freedom of speech
not for his sake, but for ours.
Epilogue: That one firebombing aside, the Ayatollah's threat turned out
to be more bark than bite. He died in 1989, but Rushdie is still alive and well.
So are Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
I wish I could say the same about Cody's Books. After years of
struggling against the huge Internet giants, Ross reluctantly closed Cody's
doors in 2006.
The space it used to occupy on Telegraph Avenue is still vacant.
3 comments:
Well, of course, these are free speech rights, protected by the First Amendment, the Amendment relating to a prohibition against government infringement. The principal idea is that government should protect citizenry against threats from any quarter, particularly those emanating from those who threaten others exercising their free speech right. This time North Korea went too far, but hey, it happens all the time. But not with impunity. Stay tuned.
Nice piece. Thanks.
Nice piece. Thanks.
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