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The author, who was stabbed on stage in 2022, tells the BBC that he thought he was dying.
BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityCultureSalman Rushdie: Losing an eye upsets me every dayPublished7 hours agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRelated TopicsBooker PrizeThis video can not be playedTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.Media caption, Sir Salman Rushdie on the stabbing attackBy Alan Yentob & Noor NanjiBBCSir Salman Rushdie has spoken in chilling detail to the BBC about what he remembers of the attack two years ago, in which he was stabbed on stage.The Booker Prize-winning author said his eye was left hanging down his face “like a soft-boiled egg”, and that losing the eye “upsets him every day”.”I remember thinking I was dying,” he said. “Fortunately, I was wrong.”Sir Salman said he is using his new book, Knife, as a way of fighting back against what happened.Rushdie has ‘crazy dreams’ about stabbing attackSalman Rushdie in surgery after stabbing attackHorrifying, ghastly: Authors condemn Rushdie attackThe attack took place at an education institute in New York state in August 2022, as he was preparing to give a lecture.He recalled how the assailant came “sprinting up the stairs” and stabbed him 12 times, including in his neck and abdomen, in an attack lasting 27 seconds.”I couldn’t have fought him,” the author said. “I couldn’t have run away from him.”This video can not be playedTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.Media caption, Watch: From the scene where Salman Rushdie was attacked on stageSir Salman said he fell to the floor, where he lay with “a spectacular quantity of blood” all around him.He was taken to a hospital by helicopter and spent six weeks recovering there.The Indian-born British-American author, 76, is one of the most influential writers of modern times. The attack dominated news headlines across the world.Image caption, Alan Yentob and Sir Salman, pictured with Lady Rushdie, have known each other more than 40 yearsSir Salman previously spent several years in hiding after the 1988 publication of The Satanic Verses triggered threats against his life.He admitted he had thought someone might “jump out of an audience” one day.”Clearly it would’ve been absurd for it not to cross my mind.”‘Upset every day’The attack damaged Sir Salman’s liver and hands, and severed nerves in his right eye.His eye looked “very distended, swollen,” he said. “It was kind of hanging out of my face, sitting on my cheek, I’ve said like a soft-boiled egg. And blind.”Sir Salman said losing one eye “upsets me every day”. He finds he has to take greater care when walking down stairs, or crossing a road, or even when pouring water into a glass.But he considers himself lucky to have avoided brain damage. “It meant I was actually still able to be myself.”Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, A rally to show solidarity for free expression was held in New York after Sir Salman was attackedThe moderator at the event where Sir Salman was stabbed told the BBC he wished he could have done more to prevent the attack.”You feel like if you had acted quicker, a lot of this could’ve been prevented,” said Henry Reese.But Sir Salman’s gratitude to the people who helped him on the day, including Mr Reese, as well as the doctors who cared for him, is clear from the very opening page of Knife.The book is dedicated, simply, to “the men and women who saved my life”.’Is that a reason to kill?’For the first time, Sir Salman has revealed what he would like to say to his alleged attacker.Hadi Matar, a 26-year-old New Jersey resident, has been charged with stabbing him. Mr Matar has pleaded not guilty and is being held without bail.In an interview with the New York Post from jail, Mr Matar said he had watched videos of Sir Salman on YouTube. “I don’t like people who are disingenuous like that,” Mr Matar said.Sir Salman Rushdie: The InterviewSir Salman Rushdie speaks about the knife attack which almost ended his life in 2022, in an interview with Alan Yentob ahead of the publication of a new book about the aftermath of the incident.Watch now on BBC iPlayer (UK Only)In Knife, Sir Salman has an imaginary conversation with his attacker, in which he responds to that.”In America, many people pretend to be honest, but they wear masks and lie. And would that be a reason to kill them all?” he asks.Sir Salman has never met Mr Matar. But he is likely to come face to face with him in court when the trial gets under way.The trial was delayed after lawyers for the defendant argued they were entitled to review Sir Salman’s book, as it could be evidence. It’s now expected to take place in the autumn.Why was The Satanic Verses so controversial?Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, The Satanic Verses prompted widespread protestsSalman Rushdie shot to fame with Midnight’s Children in 1981, which went on to sell more than one million copies in the UK alone.But his fourth book, The Satanic Verses’, depiction of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and its references to religion were considered blasphemous and banned in multiple Muslim-majority countries.Iran’s then-leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwa – or religious decree – in 1989, calling for Rushdie’s assassination and placing a $3m (£2.4m) bounty on the author’s head. That fatwa has never been rescinded.As a result, Rushdie was forced into hiding for nearly a decade and required an armed bodyguard due to the number of death threats he received.Sir Salman, who was born to non-practising Muslims and is an atheist, has long been a vocal advocate for the freedom of expression.But he warned it has become “much more difficult”.Salman Rushdie: The writer who emerged from hiding”A lot of people, including a lot of young people, I’m sorry to say, have formed the opinion that restrictions on freedom of speech are often a good idea,” he said.”Whereas of course, the whole point of freedom of speech is that you have to permit speech you don’t agree with.”Sir Salman recalls how, when he was lying in a pool of blood, he found himself “idiotically thinking” about his personal belongings.He was worried his Ralph Lauren suit was getting ruined, and that his house keys and credit cards might fall out of his pocket.”At the time of course, it’s ludicrous. But in retrospect, what it says to me, is there was some bit of me that was not intending to die. There was some bit of me that was saying, ‘I’m going to need those house keys, and I’m going to need those credit cards’.”He added that it was a “survival instinct” that was saying to him: “You’re going to live. Live. Live.”A year before the attack, Sir Salman married his fifth wife, the American poet and novelist Rachel Eliza Griffiths.Lady Rushdie told the BBC that when she heard about the attack, she “just started screaming. This was the worst day of my life.”Lady Rushdie describes being at Sir Salman’s side as doctors sewed his eyelids together.”I love his eyes, and he left home with two of them, and then our world changed,” she said. “And now I love his single eye even more because of how he sees the world.”Sir Salman describes Knife as “at least as much a love story” as a story of horror.”There were two forces in collision here. One was a force of violence, fanaticism, bigotry, and the other was the force of love,” he said. “And of course, the force of love is embodied in the figure of my wife Eliza.””And in the end, the way I understand what happened is that the force of love proved to be stronger than the forces of hatred.”Sir Salman said he will do public events again, but he will be “more careful” in future. “The security question is going to be the first question. Unless I’m satisfied about that, I’m not going to do it.”But he added, he is “a pretty obstinate person”.”I don’t want some restricted or confined life,” he said. “I’m going to have my life.”Related TopicsSalman RushdieFreedom of expressionNew York CityBooker PrizeNew YorkPennsylvaniaMore on this storyRushdie has ‘crazy dreams’ about stabbing attackPublished12 July 2023Salman Rushdie: The writer who emerged from hidingPublished13 August 2022Horrifying, ghastly: Authors condemn Rushdie attackPublished13 August 2022Top StoriesLive. 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[ad_1] Jury selection is under way in Donald Trump’s New York City hush-money trial, with hundreds of people selected as potential jurors. They must answer a questionnaire to determine, among…
BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityUKEnglandN. IrelandScotlandAlbaWalesCymruIsle of ManGuernseyJerseyLocal NewsFirst product of Meghan’s lifestyle brand revealedPublished11 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, ReutersImage caption, Meghan pictured at a polo match in Florida last weekBy Sean CoughlanRoyal correspondentA first glimpse of the new business venture from the Duchess of Sussex has been teased on social media, with pictures of a jar of strawberry jam.In a bid to preserve a sense of mystery, the jam from the new American Riviera Orchard brand seemed to be spread among friends and influencers.Fashion designer Tracy Robbins posted a picture of the jam on Instagram.It was numbered “17 of 50”, suggesting the number of recipients of this first fruit of the new business.The arrival of Meghan’s new California-based lifestyle brand had been signalled on social media last month and this suggests that it will be selling food products.What do we know about Meghan’s new brand?Five things about Harry and Meghan’s brand revampWhy did Harry and Meghan leave the Royal Family?There seemed to be have been something of a re-launch for Meghan and husband Prince Harry’s brands and businesses this year, beginning with the overhaul of their regal-looking website under the sussex.com label.Their latest projects seem to be moving away from a previous focus on their time as working royals, such as their Netflix film Harry and Meghan and Prince Harry’s memoir Spare.The hint about the strawberry jam from Meghan’s American Riviera Orchard brand seems to fit with the couple’s latest Netflix plans.Meghan is going to launch a Netflix show which will “celebrate the joys of cooking and gardening, entertaining, and friendship”.Prince Harry will be involved in another Netflix venture showing the inside track on the world of polo. That’s the equestrian sport, not the mints.Delfina Blaquier, married to Prince Harry’s polo-playing friend Nacho Figueras, also posted a picture of the new jam, with hers labelled “10 of 50”.The social media trail for American Riviera Orchard evokes a sense of the couple’s home in California – and this soft launch for the jam show pictures of the jars in a sunny basket of lemons.It’s not known how much items from the new lifestyle brand will cost. Although there are already plenty of other royals getting into jams. Visitors to the gift shops in royal palaces can get a Buckingham Palace Strawberry Preserve for £3.95 or Windsor Castle Fine Cut Seville Orange Marmalade, also for £3.95.On both sides of the Atlantic they seem to be conserving their finances.Related TopicsUK Royal FamilyMeghan, Duchess of SussexMore on this storyWhat we know about Meghan’s regal lifestyle brandPublished16 MarchMeghan launches surprise new lifestyle brandPublished14 MarchTop StoriesMPs back smoking ban for those born after 2009Published8 minutes agoMuslim student loses school prayer ban challengePublished2 hours agoBowen: Iran’s attack on Israel offers Netanyahu a lifelinePublished7 hours agoFeaturesJeremy Bowen: Iran’s attack on Israel offers Netanyahu a lifelineIranians on edge as leaders say ‘Tel Aviv is our battleground’A really, really big election with nearly a billion votersWhat is the smoking ban and how will it work?Martin Tyler: I nearly lost my voice foreverWho are the millions of Britons not working?How to register to vote for the local elections ahead of midnight deadlinePlaying Coachella after cancer emotional, says DJHow the Alec Baldwin fatal film set shooting unfoldedElsewhere on the BBCFrom weight loss to prolonging lifeIs intermittent fasting actually good for you? James Gallagher investigatesAttributionSoundsCould Nina shake up the unspoken rules of modern dating?Brand new comedy about love, friendship and being your own selfAttributioniPlayerWill the UK introduce tough anti-tobacco laws?Under new plans, anyone turning 15 from this year would be banned from buying cigarettesAttributionSoundsCan William Wisting find the truth?The Norwegian detective returns, tackling more grisly cold casesAttributioniPlayerMost Read1Nursery boss ‘killed baby she strapped to beanbag’2Birmingham Airport flights disrupted by incident3Muslim student loses school prayer ban challenge4First product of Meghan’s lifestyle brand revealed5MPs back smoking ban for those born after 20096Police told to shut down right-wing Brussels conference7Historic Copenhagen stock exchange goes up in flames8Bowen: Iran’s attack on Israel offers Netanyahu a lifeline9Marten a ‘lioness’ who ‘loved her cubs’, court told10Sons of McCartney and Lennon release joint single
[ad_1] The jars of strawberry jam, labelled America Riviera Orchard, have been shared with friends and influencers.