Salman Rushdie, New York, dreams, Midnights Children, Victory City
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Salman Rushdie accepted the PEN Centenary Courage Award in New York on Thursday (May 18). This was his first public appearance since he was severely wounded in a knife attack nine months ago. Photo: Twitter/PEN America.

Salman Rushdie speaks of 'crazy dreams' about last year's traumatic knife attack


Salman Rushdie has spoken for the first time about having “crazy dreams” following the near-fatal knife attack on him in New York in August last year, which has left the Mumbai-born author blind in one eye, and working with a therapist to help him process the mental impact of the trauma.

The 76-year-old Booker Prize-winning author was on stage almost a year ago when he was stabbed up to 10 times by the suspect Hadi Matar, who is being held in prison for attempted murder.

Also read: Salman Rushdie honoured at his first in-person public appearance in New York

Speaking to BBC this week, Rushdie said he was in “two minds” about whether to face his alleged attacker, who has pleaded not guilty, in court.

“I have a very good therapist who has a lot of work to do. I have crazy dreams,” the British-American novelist said.

“If he changes his plea to guilty, then actually there’s not a trial, there’s just a sentencing, and it may well be that then my presence isn’t required. I’m in two minds about it. There’s one bit of me that actually wants to go and stand in the court and look at him and there’s another bit of me that just can’t be bothered.”

Also read: Salman Rushdie attacker denies any link with Iran; acted alone, he says

“I don’t have a very high opinion of him. And I think what is important to me now is that you’re able to find life continuing. I’m more engaged with the business of, you know, getting on with it,” he said, when asked if he planned to attend Matar’s trial later this year.

‘The human body has an amazing capacity to heal’

The injuries from the attack resulted in damage to his liver, loss of vision in one eye, and a paralysed hand caused by nerve damage to his arm.

“The human body has an amazing capacity to heal. And so I’m fortunate to be well on that way,” said the author of Midnight’s Children who says he feels physically more or less OK.

He was put on a ventilator and spent six weeks in hospital after being stabbed up to 10 times.

Rushdie is now writing a book about the near-fatal stabbing incident as a means of processing what he has been through. In the virtual interview, he told the BBC it would not be more than a “couple of hundred pages” long.

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“There’s this colossal elephant in the room and, until I deal with that, it is difficult to take  anything else seriously,” he noted.

The British-American author, who lives in New York, has been the subject of a fatwa by the Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini for his controversial novel The Satanic Verses issued over 30 years ago and has had several death threats over that time.

His latest book, Victory City, was finished just before the attack in August last year, and has been well-received by critics.

(With agency inputs)

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