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Choose Your Words Carefully

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  • Choose Your Words Carefully

    Brown Alumni Magazine, RI
    Jan 24 2007

    Choose Your Words Carefully

    Writing would be much easier, says Salmon Rushdie, if its purpose
    were merely to entertain.

    By Lawrence Goodman

    [CENSORSHIP]

    The writers up on the Salomon Center stage may have come from different
    countries, but they all had one thing in common-they've been persecuted
    for speaking their minds.

    "We are gambling with our lives when we choose a word," said Iranian
    novelist Shahriar Mandanipour about the lack of free expression in his
    native land. Mandanipour spoke at a panel on freedom of expression
    that was part of a weeklong program titled "Strange Times, My Dear:
    A Freedom-to-Write Literary Festival." Speaking alongside Mandanipour
    was 2006 Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk, who was threatened with
    imprisonment in his native Turkey after he spoke openly about the
    early twentieth-century mass murder of Armenians there.

    At the forum Pamuk said he preferred not to speak about his battle with
    the Turkish government. "I don't want to go into it," he responded
    when a student asked about his experience, which ended in late 2005
    after the government dropped all charges.

    Instead, Pamuk said, he worried about censorship in the West. As
    immigrants from the East enter Europe, he said, they are "very roughly
    treated." As a result, when they perceive insults against their culture
    they call for less free speech or the banning of certain books. Then,
    he said, Western governments ignore the underlying issues of racism
    and cheap labor and instead "choose to ban books, plays, and films
    just to please these immigrants."

    The festival featured a one-on-one conversation with Salman Rushdie,
    who in 1989 famously became the target of a fatwa offering a reward for
    his murder. In an interview with conference organizer Robert Coover,
    the T.B. Stowell Adjunct Professor of Literary Arts, Rushdie said
    that writers have an obligation to be more than entertainers.

    "It would give us [writers] a much better life if we were
    entertaining," he said, "if all we were doing was to put things out
    there to give people a pleasing evening."

    Rushdie said the writer should be less a political activist than
    an excavator of the memories and experiences a society wishes to
    suppress. "It's not a question of seeking out a political conflict,"
    he explained, "but simply remembering the way it was."

    Rushdie noted he will be starring as a gynecologist in an upcoming
    movie directed by Helen Hunt. "Helen said that when she wrote the
    part she was thinking of Salman," Rushdie said. "I have been thinking
    what it means that when Helen Hunt thinks of me, she thinks of her
    gynecologist."
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