http://www.juancole.com/2004_09_01_juancole_archive.html#109592379002363404
Thursday, September 23, 2004
Cat Stevens Deported
I know that it is faintly ridiculous that Cat Stevens a.k.a. Yusuf
Islam was deported on Wednesday from the US after the airplane he was
on was diverted to Maine, on the grounds that he is a dire security
threat to the country. David Letterman in his monologue allowed darkly
as how the Feds were no doubt gunning for Gordon Lightfoot next. He
also wickedly observed that despite Osama Bin Laden being at large,
what with Cat Stevens deported and Martha Stewart in jail, he felt a
lot safer.
But I have a hard time rushing to Yusuf Islam's defense because I
never forgave him for advocating the execution of Salman Rushdie in
1989. He endorsed Khomeini's "fatwa" or death edict against Rushdie
for the novel, Satanic Verses. He later explained this position away
by saying that he did not endorse vigilante action against Rushdie,
but would rather want the verdict to be carried out by a proper court.
These are weasel words, since he was saying that if Khomeini had been
able to field some Revolutionary Guards in London to kidnap Rushdie
and take him to Tehran, it would have been just dandy if he were then
taken out and shot for having written his novel. In my view, that
entire episode of the Khomeini fatwa showed how sick some forms of
Muslim activism had become, and served as a foretaste of al-Qaeda's
own death warrant served on a lot of other innocent people.
And, the disavowal wasn't even consistent. AP reported on March 8,
1989, that "Cat Stevens Endorses Rushdie Death Sentence Again,"
writing:
' Former pop singer Cat Stevens reiterated his support for the
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's death sentence against Salman
Rushdie, saying the author's treatment of Islam was "as good as
stabbing Moslems in the heart." . . . "It's got to be seen as a
deterrent, so that other people should not commit the same mistake
again," Stevens said in an interview with the television show
"World Monitor," produced by The Christian Science Monitor . .
Stevens, who said the novel's treatment of Islam was "as good as
stabbing Moslems in the heart," suggested that Rushdie should
repent writing the book. "If he manages to escape (the death
sentence) he still has to face God on the day of judgment," he
said. "So I would recommend to him to sincerely change his ways
right now." '
At the time, Rushdie's life was in imminent danger, and Cat Stevens
was skating pretty close to inciting to murder. (What else is the
"deterrent" he is talking about?)
So, to steal from Bill Maher:
NEW RULES: If you advocate the execution of novelists for writing
novels, you and John Ashcroft deserve one another.