Novel
The Satanic Verses
A sprawling magical-realist novel about two Indian migrants, with dream sequences that satirize prophecy, revelation, migration, and political power.
Description
About the work
The novel begins with two Indian Muslim actors, Gibreel Farishta and Saladin Chamcha, falling from a hijacked plane and surviving in transformed bodies. From that opening, Rushdie braids migration, performance, memory, and religious argument into a book about what happens when people are forced to remake themselves between languages, nations, and belief systems.
Its most controversial sections are dream sequences that rewrite sacred history through satire, ambiguity, and layered narration. But the deeper subject of the book is instability: unstable identity, unstable revelation, unstable belonging, and unstable public truth. Rushdie treats faith not as a simple target of mockery but as something entangled with power, storytelling, exile, love, shame, and the desire to make a fractured life feel whole.
Overview
Why it was banned
The Satanic Verses entered censorship debates as a novel associated with religion, migration, and magic realism. In the current dossier, the main state objections cluster around blasphemy, public order, and religious offense.
The earliest event currently captured here is 5 October 1988 in India, where Government of India and customs authorities banned imports. Rajiv Gandhi's government blocked import of the novel after pressure from Muslim politicians and protests claiming that it insulted Islam. A 2024 Delhi High Court proceeding later found the original ban notification untraceable, casting doubt on whether the import ban still has operative legal force.
The record already stretches across India, Pakistan, South Africa, Bangladesh, Sudan, Sri Lanka, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Somalia, Iran, Jordan, Qatar, Malaysia, Brunei, Kenya, Thailand, Tanzania, Indonesia, Singapore, Venezuela, Japan, Bulgaria, Poland, and Turkey, which is why the page should be read as a cross-border censorship trail rather than a single isolated dispute.
This page is intentionally incomplete. The ban history is a starter dataset, not a final census of every jurisdiction or decree.
Counter and critical readings
Context, rebuttals, and criticism
- Assassins of the Mind Christopher Hitchens
Frames the Rushdie affair as a test of free speech against violent religious intimidation.
- From Fatwa to Jihad Kenan Malik
Tracks how conflicts over blasphemy, race, and offense evolved after the Rushdie controversy.
- 100 Banned Books: Censorship Histories of World Literature Nicholas J. Karolides, Margaret Bald, and Dawn B. Sova
A compact reference on how censorship systems moved across states, churches, and courts.
- Banned Books: 387 B.C. to 1978 A.D. Anne Lyon Haight
Useful for comparing older obscenity, heresy, and political bans with modern free-speech disputes.
Ban history
Known government actions
| Date | Jurisdiction | Action | Reason | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 October 1988 | India | banned imports | Rajiv Gandhi's government blocked import of the novel after pressure from Muslim politicians and protests claiming that it insulted Islam. | A 2024 Delhi High Court proceeding later found the original ban notification untraceable, casting doubt on whether the import ban still has operative legal force. |
| December 1988 | Sri Lanka | banned circulation | Sri Lanka joined the growing list of states that removed the novel from circulation at the end of 1988. | The available reporting places Sri Lanka in the first year of the global censorship cascade, before several Southeast Asian bans followed. |
| November 1988 | Pakistan | banned circulation | Pakistani authorities prohibited the novel as offensive to Islam before mass protests escalated into deadly unrest. | The Pakistan case became one of the most violent early flashpoints in the wider controversy. |
| November 1988 | South Africa | banned import and sale | Apartheid-era authorities joined the first wave of state bans over alleged insults to Islam. | South Africa appears in both broad censorship timelines and later retrospective reporting on the affair's first year. |
| November 1988 | Bangladesh | banned circulation | Bangladesh moved against the novel during the affair's first regional wave of bans. | The ban predates the Iranian fatwa and shows how quickly the controversy jumped borders. |
| November 1988 | Sudan | banned circulation | Sudanese authorities barred the book as offensive to Islam during the initial round of prohibitions. | This record is supported by later timeline reporting rather than a harvested decree text. |
| 14 February 1989 | Iran | issued state-backed fatwa and prohibition | Iran's supreme leader declared the novel blasphemous, called for Rushdie and those involved in publication to be killed, and turned the affair into a state-backed international crisis. | This was not merely clerical commentary: it was a public decree from the head of the Iranian state that shaped censorship and violence worldwide for decades. |
| 1989 | Qatar | banned circulation | Qatar is listed among the governments that prohibited the book because it was considered offensive to Islam. | Like Somalia and Saudi Arabia, Qatar is presently represented by high-confidence timeline sources rather than a harvested order text. |
| 1989 | Brunei | prohibited import, sale, and circulation | Brunei formally listed The Satanic Verses under an order prohibiting the importation, sale, or circulation of undesirable publications. | This entry is anchored in a primary-law source that names the book directly under GN 328/89. |
| 1989 | Singapore | banned circulation | Singapore later confirmed that it banned The Satanic Verses in 1989 because the mainstream Muslim community took offense and the state assessed the work as a threat to religious harmony. | The useful part of the source is that the government itself retrospectively acknowledged the ban as a deliberate policy example. |
| 1989 | Venezuela | criminalized possession and reading | Venezuelan officials threatened prison terms for people who owned or read the novel. | This stands out because the sanction was framed not simply as import control but as punishment for possession itself. |
| 1989 | Japan | restricted sale of the English-language edition | In Japan, the English-language edition was reportedly subject to fines or sale restrictions as part of the novel's broader censorship trail. | The later murder of the novel's Japanese translator was not a state act, but it shows how the formal restriction existed alongside a wider climate of fear and violence. |
| 1989 | Bulgaria | restricted distribution | ALA's censorship timeline records Bulgaria as a government that restricted distribution of the novel. | The current entry intentionally uses narrower wording than a blanket ban because the surviving source describes restriction rather than a complete prohibition. |
| 1989 | Poland | restricted distribution | Poland appears in ALA's censorship timeline as a government that restricted the novel's distribution. | As with Bulgaria, the terminology here stays conservative because the harvested source describes restriction, not a total ban. |
| 1989 | Saudi Arabia | banned circulation | Saudi authorities are listed among the governments that prohibited the novel because it was judged insulting to Islam. | The Saudi case is part of the broad regional consensus that formed around state-backed religious offense claims. |
| 1989 | Egypt | blocked circulation | Egyptian authorities treated the novel as religiously offensive and restricted access amid wider regional protest. | The Egypt entry shows how state power and clerical outrage reinforced each other. |
| 1989 | Somalia | banned circulation | Somalia appears in contemporary censorship timelines as one of the states that prohibited the novel over its treatment of Islam. | The record is included here as part of the verified first-pass country census rather than a harvested local order text. |
| 26 February 1989 | Jordan | banned libraries and imports | Jordan ordered libraries to remove the novel and directed border posts to stop travelers from bringing it into the country. | The surviving report is unusually specific about both domestic libraries and border enforcement. |
| 30 September 1989 | Turkey | banned import, sale, and distribution | Turkey formally banned import, sale, and distribution of the novel months after the first bans elsewhere. | Turkey later became one of the deadliest aftershock sites of the Rushdie affair because of violence directed at the book's Turkish translator and defenders. |
| March 1989 | Malaysia | banned circulation | Malaysia joined the expanding regional ban list in March 1989 as the controversy deepened. | Secondary timelines also note penalties for possession or circulation, but the current entry stays with the better-supported ban description. |
| March 1989 | Kenya | banned circulation | Kenya was part of the second regional wave of bans reported in March 1989. | The current note reflects timeline-level evidence rather than a harvested Kenyan ban order. |
| March 1989 | Thailand | banned circulation | Thailand joined the March 1989 prohibition wave as governments across Asia reacted to the controversy. | This is one of several cases where the event is well attested in timelines but still awaits a primary Thai record. |
| March 1989 | Tanzania | banned circulation | Tanzania appears in the March 1989 expansion of bans around the novel. | Later secondary timelines connect Tanzanian enforcement to possession penalties, but this seed record stays with the best-supported circulation ban. |
| March 1989 | Indonesia | banned circulation | Indonesia followed the earlier South Asian bans as the affair spread across Southeast Asia. | The Indonesian record is consistently listed in both broad censorship timelines and later retrospective reporting. |
Sources
Harvested references for this page
- Wikipedia: List of books banned by governments reference partial
- Wikipedia REST summary API database partial
- Banned Books: Literature Suppressed on Religious Grounds book partial
- 100 Banned Books: Censorship Histories of World Literature book partial
- Deutsche Welle: The Rushdie fatwa, 25 years on news partial
- ALA Intellectual Freedom Blog: Timeline entry for 1989 - The Satanic Verses article partial
- AP: India's ban on Salman Rushdie's 'The Satanic Verses' may end - thanks to missing paperwork news partial
- The Indian Express: Storm of controversies across globe news partial
- TIME: The Satanic Verses article partial
- UPI Archives: Ayatollah Khomeini issues a fatwa against author of The Satanic Verses news partial
- UPI Archives: Jordan bans 'The Satanic Verses' news partial
- Laws of Brunei: Undesirable Publications official partial
- Singapore Ministry of Home Affairs: Ministerial Statement on Restricting Hate Speech official partial
- Los Angeles Times: Turkey Bans Rushdie Book news partial
- Christopher Hitchens: Assassins of the Mind article partial
- From Fatwa to Jihad book not started
- Banned Books: 387 B.C. to 1978 A.D. book partial