'Our lives teach us who we are,' Salman Rushdie observed in one of three widely-read and somewhat contradictory statements of faith that he published last year. These are now reprinted at the end of Imaginary Homelands, a compendious collection of book reviews, cultural critiques and political essays written over the last ten years and, for the most part, in much less fraught circumstances. Inevitably one's reading of the volume is dominated by the fact that it is by the author of The Satanic Verses, a book which has brought down more vilification on its author's head than any other text in the history of the novel. In February 1990, after a year spent in hiding under the protection of the British Security forces, Rushdie's essay 'In Good Faith' reiterated his stance as a secular man, a man without religion, and one who was 'not a Muslim'. Then last December he published a three-page declaration: 'Why I have embraced Islam'.
LRB 4 April 1991 | PDF Download
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