""Like many writers of non-western backgrounds in the west, Rushdie had suffered
the ambiguous fate of being hastily appointed as a representative and
spokesperson of India, South Asia, the "third world", multiculturalism, the
immigrant condition – whatever seemed alien and incomprehensible to the white
majority. In reality, there was little in common between Rushdie, an atheistic,
Cambridge-educated upper-class intellectual from Bombay, and the devout
guest-worker from Anatolia (representative of the mostly working-class Muslims
of rural origins who had been imported to service Europe's post-war economies),
or the Pakistani trade unionist chased out by the torturers of Zia ul-Haq, the
CIA-backed radical Islamist who had spent most of the 1980s facilitating an
anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan. The
Satanic Verses itself
is less about the immigrant condition than a helplessly Anglophilic Indian's
profound ambivalence about a British ruling class that regards him as a wog."" (thanks Redouane)