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<text id=94TT1050>
<title>
Aug. 15, 1994: Bangladesh:Death To the Author
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 15, 1994 Infidelity--It may be in our genes
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BANGLADESH, Page 26
Death To the Author
</hdr>
<body>
<p> As Muslim mobs demand her death, a writer faces government charges
</p>
<p>By James Walsh--Reported by Farid Hossain and Anita Pratap/Dhaka and Jefferson
Penberthy/New Delhi
</p>
<p> Her face is among the best known in her homeland, a status
most authors would envy. In Taslima Nasrin's case, it is cause
for dread. The writer whose image is framed by a noose on hundreds
of vindictive placards went into hiding two months ago when
her challenge of Scripture prompted legal charges and Muslim
fatwas, or religious decrees, calling for her death. Last week,
as she emerged from a Toyota sedan into Dhaka's High Court building,
a black head scarf and tinted glasses disguised her features.
She appeared grim and jittery through a 45-minute hearing that
ended with her release on $250 bail. Then she fled home to relatives
she had not seen since June 4. By the consensus of literary
critics, Nasrin, an outspoken feminist and atheist, is no Salman
Rushdie. Her rather slapdash stories have gained notice mainly
as screeds against the ill treatment of women. What she shares
with the author of The Satanic Verses, a novel that earned an
Iranian death warrant against Rushdie 5 1/2 years ago, is the
misfortune of becoming a lightning rod for the passions of Islamic
zealots. Five days before her surprise appearance in court to
face charges of making inflammatory statements, a crowd of 100,000
demonstrators gathered outside the Parliament building in Dhaka
to bay for her blood. They branded her "an apostate appointed
by imperial forces to vilify Islam." One particularly militant
faction threatened to loose thousands of poisonous snakes in
the capital unless she was executed.
</p>
<p> Formerly a practicing physician, Nasrin has been a target of
Muslim fundamentalists since the publication last year of her
novella Shame (Lajja) which portrays the brutalization of a
Hindu family amid Muslim reprisals. A Hindu chauvinist party
in India used the book for propaganda purposes, fomenting further
animus against her at home. Bangladesh banned the book.
</p>
<p> What fully enraged Nasrin's opponents, however, was an interview
last May in an Indian newspaper, the Statesman of Calcutta,
which quoted--misquoted, she insists--a comment by her to
the effect that the Koran should be "revised thoroughly" to
give equal rights to women. Islam's central article of faith
is that the Koran is the literal word of God and thus above
revision. Mosques began ringing with calls for her head. Dhaka
experienced an astonishing escalation of violent protests, bombings
and clashes between Islamic militants and secularists. Nasrin's
succes de scandale afforded conservative mullahs and their followers
a means of increasing their influence in a country that is nearly
90% Muslim but traditionally nonsectarian in its government
policies.
</p>
<p> Back home at her apartment last week, Nasrin was virtually crippled
by fright after discovering that TIME reporter Farid Hossain
had slipped past the official security detail. She shouted,
"If he could come in, any killer can walk in!" Two months of
fugitive life, in a hideout Nasrin has refused to identify,
had taken a toll. During her confinement to a single room, she
lost not only weight but all awareness of events in the outside
world after the telephone was removed. "It was like living in
a jail cell," she said. "I felt as if I was dying every moment."
</p>
<p> Her surrender to authorities places her at the mercy of Begum
Khaleda Zia, the female Prime Minister of an otherwise male-dominated
country. The bail ruling had clearly been prearranged with Nasrin's
lawyers, and she was allowed to keep her passport. Zia's government,
which has depended on fundamentalist support in Parliament,
evidently was hoping that the writer would quietly skip the
country to enjoy her newfound celebrity in the West.
</p>
<p> In her own country, even liberals have been loath to champion
a deliberately sensational writer who chain-smokes, wears her
hair in a distinctly untraditional bob and, at the age of 31,
has been married and divorced three times. Her characterizations
of men as insects and rapists, along with the darts she aims
at religion, have made her an easy target for ultraconservatives
who resent much of the social change that is transforming Bangladesh.
In one of the world's poorest nations, Western-sponsored charitable
enterprises provide education, health care and self-employment
to some 12.5 million people, including many illiterate girls
and women; such efforts have begun to take on the dimensions
of culture clash as rural clerics resist what they see as a
challenge to their authority and a sabotage of Muslim folkways.
</p>
<p> The backlash is a familiar theme by now across the belt of Islamic
societies from North Africa to South Asia. Nasrin, while intending
to promote feminism, stumbled into a battleground bigger than
she anticipated. Even her May 13 clarification of the Statesman
quote rebounded against her. She wrote, "I hold the Koran, the
Vedas, the Bible and all such religious texts to be out of place
and out of time." Many of the faithful, however, see the time
as out of joint. They have demonized Nasrin as a way of rewriting
the script.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>