CBS News
Salman Rushdie on the attack that nearly killed him and his new book “Knife”
Prolific author Salman Rushdie doesn’t like to think about the man who almost stabbed him to death at a literary festival in Chautauqua, New York in August 2022.
In less than half a minute, Rushdie was stabbed and slashed in the face, neck, chest, abdomen, thigh and hand. He lost an eye in the attack and is still adjusting to the change. Rushdie doesn’t use his attacker’s name and it doesn’t appear in his newest book, “Knife,” hitting bookshelves Tuesday.
“He and I had 27 seconds together, you know? That’s it,” Rushdie, now 76, told 60 Minutes correspondent Anderson Cooper. “I don’t need to give him any more of my time.”
“Knife,” Rushdie’s 22nd book, is one he initially did not want to write. The book, however, felt unavoidable, and it became an opportunity for Rushdie to come to terms with the attack.
“I need to focus on, you know, to use the cliché, the elephant in the room,” Rushdie said. “And the moment I thought that, kinda something changed in my head. And it then became a book I really very much wanted to write.”
Rushdie’s previous brushes with death
For years, no place was safe for Salman Rushdie, whose sprawling 600-page novel “The Satanic Verses” offended some Muslims for its depiction of the Prophet Muhammad. Iran’s then-Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, issued a fatwa—a religious decree— calling for Rushdie’s death in 1989. There were worldwide protests from London to Lahore. “The Satanic Verses” was burned and 12 people died in violent clashes with police. The book’s Japanese translator was murdered, and others associated with the tome were attacked.
Rushdie had no idea then that his book would lead to such a violent backlash.
“I thought probably some conservative religious people wouldn’t like it. But they didn’t like anything I wrote anyway,” he said. “So I thought, ‘Well, they don’t have to read it.'”
Rushdie, who was born in India, was living in London when he went into hiding to evade the assassins sent to kill him. The British government provided him with 24-hour police protection for 10 years. Over that period, Rushdie said there were as many as half a dozen serious assassination attempts from state-sponsored terrorism professionals.
The Iranian state called off its assassins in 1998 after diplomatic negotiations, but the bounty on his head remained.
What happened during the attack
Rushdie moved to New York in the early 2000s and for the next two decades lived openly. He continued writing and publishing books and became a celebrated advocate for freedom of expression.
In 2022, Rushdie was invited to speak at a literary festival in Chautauqua, New York about a subject he knows all too well: the importance of protecting writers whose lives are under threat.
Two days before the event, Rushdie had a dream in which he was being attacked, what he calls “a premonition.”
“And it was just somebody with a spear stabbing downwards, and I was rolling around on the floor trying to get away from him,” Rushdie said. “And I woke up and was quite shaken by it.”
Rushdie almost pulled out of going to Chautauqua, but brushed off his concerns as he’d presented at many events in his years living in America. Rushdie hadn’t had security detail in a long time, but the venues he spoke at usually had venue security. In this case, he said, there wasn’t any.
Rushdie was seated at stage right before the attack, and writes about what happened next in his book “Knife.”
“Then, in the corner of my right eye — the last thing my right eye would ever see — I saw the man in black running towards me down the right-hand side of the seating area,” Rushdie writes.
He describes his attacker as a “squat missile” wearing black clothes and a black mask.
“I confess, I had sometimes imagined my assassin rising up in some public forum or other, and coming for me in just this way.” Rushdie writes. “So my first thought when I saw this murderous shape rushing towards me was, ‘So it’s you. Here you are.'”
Rushdie didn’t see the knife and thought, at first, that he’d just been punched. Then he saw the blood.
“I think he was just wildly, you know, flailing around,” Rushdie said about his attacker.
Rushdie doesn’t remember being stabbed in the eye.
“I remember falling. Then I remember not knowing what had happened to my eye,” Rushdie said.
The attack lasted 27 seconds.
“That’s quite a long time,” Rushdie said. “That’s the extraordinary half-minute of intimacy, you know, in which life meets death.”
Rushdie’s attacker was a 24-year-old Muslim man from New Jersey who lived in his mother’s basement. He’s believed to be a lone wolf. He has pleaded not guilty to attempted murder and is awaiting trial.
In an interview, he told the “New York Post” he’d only read a couple of pages of “The Satanic Verses” and seen some clips of Rushdie on YouTube. He said he “didn’t like him very much” because Rushdie had “attacked Islam.”
His motive remains something of a mystery to Rushdie, who feels that if he’d written a character who knew so little about his proposed victim, his publishers would tell him the character was “under-motivated.”
Aftermath of the attack on Rushdie
Audience members pulled the attacker off Rushdie while others desperately tried to stem the flow of his blood.
“I remember thinking that I was probably dying. And it was interesting because it was quite matter of fact…It wasn’t, it wasn’t like I was terrified of it or whatever,” Rushdie said.
Rushdie’s near-death experience hasn’t left him with any revelations about what comes after death, “except that there’s no revelation to be had.”
Paramedics flew Rushdie to a hospital in Erie, Pennsylvania, 40 miles away, where a team of doctors battled for eight hours to save his life. When he finally came out of surgery, his wife Eliza Griffiths, a poet and novelist, was waiting.
“He was a different color. He was cold,” she said. “His face was stapled. Just staples holding his face together.”
Rushdie was on a ventilator, unable to speak. After 18 days in the hospital and three weeks in rehab, Rushdie was discharged. One of the surgeons told Rushdie he was both really unlucky and really lucky.
“I said, ‘What’s the lucky part?’ And he said, ‘Well, the lucky part is that the man who attacked you had no idea how to kill a man with a knife,” Rushdie said.
Have brushes with death changed Rushdie?
After “The Satanic Verses” was published, Rushdie felt the only thing people knew about him was the death threat against him and he doesn’t want the 2022 attack to be yet another defining incident.
For Rushdie, the worst part of the attack two years ago beyond the physical wounds, was the feeling of being dragged into the past.
“That sense of time warp, you know, of being dragged into a narrative that I thought had concluded,” he said, “and then it turned out had not.”
While Rushdie was attacked with a physical knife, he fought back with one that’s more metaphorical: his writing. Rushdie thought he could use his book to take charge of what happened to him.
“I mean, language is a way of breaking open the world,” Rushdie said. “I don’t have any other weapons.”
He says he feels the presence of death more than he did before.
“I think that shadow is just there,” Rushdie said. “And some days it’s dark and some days it’s not.”
Almost 25 years ago, Rushdie, addressing the fatwa, said that he wanted to find an “and to this story. It is the one story I must find an end to.” He thought he had found that ending until he was attacked in 2022.
“I’m hoping this is just a last twitch of that story,” he said. “I don’t know. I’ll let you know.”
CBS News
Teamsters set to strike against Amazon at New York City warehouse
NEW YORK — The Teamsters union is launching a strike against Amazon at numerous locations across the country, including in Maspeth, Queens.
The Teamsters are calling it the largest strike against Amazon in United States history, and it’s set to begin at 6 a.m. Thursday. In addition to New York City, workers will be joining picket lines in Atlanta, Southern California, San Francisco and Illinois.
In a video announcement released Wednesday night, workers voiced their frustrations.
“Us being strike ready means we’re fed up, and Amazon is clearly ignoring us and we want to be heard,” one worker says in the video.
“It’s really exciting. We’re taking steps for ourselves to win better conditions, better benefits, better wages,” another worker in the video says.
The union says it represents about 10,000 Amazon employees and that Amazon ignored a deadline to come to the table and negotiate. The $2 trillion company doesn’t pay employees enough to make ends meet, the union asserts.
At the height of the holiday season, many are wondering what this means for packages currently in transit.
Teamsters President Sean O’Brien said, “If your package is delayed during the holidays, you can blame Amazon’s insatiable greed.”
Amazon says Teamsters are misleading the public
An Amazon spokesperson says the Teamsters are misleading the public and do not represent any Amazon employees, despite any claims.
“The truth is that the Teamsters have actively threatened, intimidated, and attempted to coerce Amazon employees and third-party drivers to join them, which is illegal and is the subject of multiple pending unfair labor practice charges against the union,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
An Amazon representative says the company doesn’t expect operations to be impacted.
CBS News
12/18: CBS Evening News – CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
CBS News
Wisconsin school shooter was in contact with California man plotting his own attack, court documents say
The shooter who killed a student and teacher at a religious school in Wisconsin brought two guns to the school and was in contact with a man in California whom authorities say was planning to attack a government building, according to authorities and court documents that became public Wednesday.
Police were still investigating why the 15-year-old student at Abundant Life Christian School in Madison shot and killed a fellow student and teacher on Monday before shooting herself, Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes told the Associated Press Wednesday. Two other students who were shot remained in critical condition on Wednesday.
A Southern California judge issued a restraining order Tuesday under California’s gun red flag law against a 20-year-old Carlsbad man. The order requires the man to turn his guns and ammunition into police within 48 hours unless an officer asks for them sooner because he poses an immediate danger to himself and others.
Carlsbad is located just north of San Diego.
According to the order, the man told FBI agents that he had been messaging Natalie Rupnow, the Wisconsin shooter, about attacking a government building with a gun and explosives. The order doesn’t say what building he had targeted or when he planned to launch his attack. It also doesn’t detail his interactions with Rupnow except to state that the man was plotting a mass shooting with her.
CBS’ San Diego affiliate KFMB-TV reported that law enforcement searched the man’s home Tuesday night after the order was signed by the judge.
Police, with the assistance of the FBI, were scouring online records and other resources and speaking with the shooter’s parents and classmates in an attempt to determine a motive for the shooting, Barnes told the AP.
Police don’t know if anyone was targeted in the attack or if the attack had been planned in advance, the chief said. Police said the shooting occurred in a classroom where a study hall was taking place involving students from several grades.
“I do not know if if she planned it that day or if she planned it a week prior,” Barnes said. “To me, bringing a gun to school to hurt people is planning. And so we don’t know what the premeditation is.”
On a Madison city website providing details about the shooting, police disclosed Wednesday that two guns were found at the school, but only one was used in the shooting. A law enforcement source previously told CBS News the weapon used appears to have been a 9 mm pistol.
Barnes told the AP that he did not know how the suspected shooter obtained the guns and he declined to say who purchased them, citing the ongoing investigation.
No decisions have been made about whether Rupnow’s parents might be charged in relation to the shooting, but they have been cooperating, Barnes told the AP.
Abundant Life is a nondenominational Christian school that offers prekindergarten classes through high school. About 420 students attend the institution.
The Dan County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the two people killed Wednesday as 42-year-old Erin West and 14-year-old Rubi Vergara.
An online obituary on a local funeral site stated Vergara was a freshman who leaves behind her parents, one brother, and a large extended family. It described her as “an avid reader” who “loved art, singing and playing keyboard in the family worship band.”
West’s exact position with the school was unclear.