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If Rushdie deserves free speech, why not Harry?

14 January 2009
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Salil Tripathi says that the Prince’s remarks were ill chosen and regrettable but the deeper principle concerns freedom of expression and ever greater encroachments upon it

And then there is the curious silence over how Asians refer to other communities. Ziauddin Sardar’s personal journey into our Asian communities, Balti Britain, reveals a term many Asians use for whites — gora. Like Paki, it can be seen as light-hearted banter, but is sometimes used derisively, for instance as a reference to simple-minded whites who can’t ‘get’ Asian complexities. And much else, often worse — although Balti Britain avoids going down those alleys. Furthermore, the terms used within Asian communities to describe blacks are offensive: kallu, for black, is perhaps the mildest one among them, and beyond the pale are epithets with which angry Hindus describe Muslims, and angry Muslims describe Hindus. Indeed, among certain Hindu communities, daughters are told they can date anybody ‘except a BMW’. That’s not the car; that’s short for Black, Muslim or White. These are the dark little secrets not widely known outside Asian communities.

So it has come to this. Every interest group that can organise itself and make aggressive demands to limit speech appears to succeed in some form. This is in spite of the government not caving in to demands to proceed against The Satanic Verses. The moment we accept that those who claim offence have the right to seek removal of offending words and images from the public domain, we give authority over our public discourse to those who were not elected by anybody to perform such duties.

This is wrong at so many levels. Twenty years ago, Inayat Bunglawala, now media secretary of the Muslim Council of Britain, rejoiced when the Ayatollah declared the fatwa. Now he knows better; now he says it was wrong to call for the novelist’s death. It won’t take Harry 20 years to realise what he can — and cannot — say.

Harry’s silly remarks on a home video are hardly the same stuff as a literary novel. But the response to one follows from the climate fostered by the culture of acquiescence which has roots in the other. This can have only two consequences. To paraphrase the late Bernard Levin, those who live in glass houses will have to undress in the dark. And those of us who wish to speak will have to watch our words. But sunlight is a good disinfectant: why not let our schmucks be schmucks, so that our Voltaires can imagine, and express their views, without fear?

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Comments Post comment

ian skidmore

January 15th, 2009 2:45pm Report this comment

I am not a royalist and rarely share your point of view. But this week you are bang on the same target.
If I were one of the Prince's superior officers I would be much more worried that one of my officers is so deaf to honour that he shops a comrade for money;

Kevin

January 15th, 2009 8:40pm Report this comment

"These are the dark little secrets not widely known outside Asian communities."

That's the money quote here. That's what stinks about this whole affair - the air of one-upmanship, whether practised among English people or against them. The fact that this video is three years old - is this designed to distract attention from something more important?

Once again Gordon Brown rides unnecessarily to the rescue of a subcontinental, following on his defence of the fabulously wealthy and in no way imperilled Shilpa Shetty. Where's the PM when people throughout the continent of Europe and in the United States are shouting "Death to the Jews" - and actually meaning it?

Herbert Thornton

January 15th, 2009 11:07pm Report this comment

My previous comment having perhaps being found too strongly worded, I try again by observing that merely because Prince Harry used a four letter word, all hell breaks loose.

This is not so much a matter of free speech – which concerns substance – but one of mere form. It simply demonstrates that as a society we've evolved hardly at all from the primitive mindset that has the urge to make some things "Taboo".

50 years ago, the busybodies in our society would have caused just as loud a commotion if they had heard quite different four letter words spoken on the radio.

Now the busybodies have abandoned those particular taboos and substituted more fashionable ones. One of them is this silly taboo on the word Paki.

My sympathy lies entirely with Prince Harry. I think it's a pity that he isn't allowed to tell his critics to f-off.

David Short

January 16th, 2009 1:59am Report this comment

How many 'gaffes' does it take before people realise how awful the 'ruling class' is?

Pity we can't do something about it.

Grant

January 16th, 2009 4:14am Report this comment

And anyway, just how is 'our little Paki friend' any different to 'our little Kiwi friend', or Aussie, or whatever.

richard

January 16th, 2009 9:22am Report this comment

there was a black boy in my 11 year old sons rugby team his nick name was a chocolate bar, I can't remember what, but a black chocolate bar. One day I was watching a match against another school when all hell broke out in the scrum and two of my sons team were seriously told off by the ref, "but sir" said one of them "he called Snicker (if that was his nickname) a black bastard!

Shrinath

January 16th, 2009 2:39pm Report this comment

Wonderfully written. It is about time to look and take things in context rather than employing in mindless spouting of words just to sound politically right.

Mark Darey

January 16th, 2009 5:35pm Report this comment

We should ignore these hypocrites who cynically jump at every opportunity to take offence at some unguarded remark from a public figure. They are beneath contempt. It was a harmless piece of army banter, that's all.
The most important thing Harry should learn from this is to choose his so-called friends a bit more carefully. All the rest is just so much PC cant.

Martin

January 17th, 2009 5:15am Report this comment

What is the big Huh-Hah here. A Paki is a Paki, or isn't he??
How about Limey, or Paddy?? Is that taboo, too??
Why should the Prince apologize??

A. MacAulay

January 17th, 2009 10:28pm Report this comment

Would that Lenny Bruce were alive today!

Daibhidh MacAdhaimh

January 18th, 2009 6:44pm Report this comment

Linguistically speaking, PC and its thin skinned, self-righteous albeit inconsistent advocates have rendered us all Harrys. PC imposes its bland lexicon the rest of us. We're no longer allowed to control the meaning of our words and sentences. By virtue of simply uttering a shortened nationality title, we're automatically deemed 'racist' (yawn!)I speak as a thick skinned 'Jock', 'Sweaty sock,' or 'Tight Scots git' or whatever refreshingly delightful non-PC epithet folks care to label me.

Verity

January 19th, 2009 12:42am Report this comment

Herbert Thornton, what a witty and ace post!

Verity

January 19th, 2009 1:25am Report this comment

Shrinath writes: "rather than employing in mindless spouting of words just to sound politically right." A reasonable, fair-minded man. As is the British tradition.

Mark Darey opines: "The most important thing Harry should learn from this is to choose his so-called friends a bit more carefully."

I believe one does not get to "choose" one's comrades in arms "carefully" or otherwise. They're a bunch of fighting men thrown in together. Clearly, you have never been deployed in defending our nation, Mark Darcy. Thank God.

These are words not "mindlessly spouted". These are words used as weapons against the right of free speech as per our ancient bill of rights.

There was a curry house in London in Thackeray's time. Yes, in the 1800s, (200 years ago for the numerically illiterate) the posh people in London went out for a curry on cook's night off. No one thought a thing of it.

Verity

January 19th, 2009 1:33am Report this comment

David Short writes: How many 'gaffes' does it take before people realise how awful the 'ruling class' is?

"Pity we can't do something about it."

But you can, darling! You can emigrate! To a country that would accept you!

.... oops! I share your despair ...

Strauss

January 19th, 2009 12:25pm Report this comment

A considered and well written piece, thank you. A minor, probably pedantic point: how is it relevant that another event (the Satanic Verses crisis) occurred exactly twenty years ago, and further why should one speculate why that is so?

It is perhaps entirely coincidental, but it is exactly 20 years since The Satanic Verses crisis, when angry Muslims in Bradford burned copies of Salman Rushdie’s novel.

Jak

January 19th, 2009 11:05pm Report this comment

Three years after the event, coinciding with the massacre in Palestine and British complicity (2.6 billion of sales last year) - sounds fishy!

Fergus Pickering

January 22nd, 2009 4:39am Report this comment

There is a poem by Wiliam Dunbar, freely available in bookshops and libraries that contains the offensive line, 'Then think I hiddowus Mahowne hes me in armes', which, being translated is 'Then think I hideous Mahomdet has me in his arms'. Ther is a novel by Ronald Firbank, freely available etc, called 'Prancing Nigger'. Of course, both Dunbar and Firbank are dead, but that's no excuse. What is to be done?

Mark DAREY

February 4th, 2009 1:21am Report this comment

Verity,
you're absolutely right, I have never been deployed in defending our nation,though why you should feel the need to thank God for it is a little beyond me. My comment was not at all meant as a criticism of Harry, who has my fullest sympathy, but was rather directed at the weasel who leaked the video to the press (and the even bigger weasels who jumped on the bandwagon once the news was out). He knew exactly what he was doing, and what the consequences would be.It's just a shame he won't get the punishment he deserves, because he deserves a righteous kicking. And so do you, for doubting my patriotism!

Straight Talk

February 5th, 2009 7:15pm Report this comment

Not forgetting the degrading term Dhimmi used by Muslims (as per Sharia Law) to refer to non muslims. Dhimmis have second class status in Islam, with the freedom to practice their religion, display their symbols, repair their buildings etc being severely restricted.
In addition the testimony of non muslims is less than that of a muslim, they also cannot rise above muslims in employment status and must pay extra taxes.

Listening to the Ramadhan foundation criticising Prince Harry is laughable when you consider that they believe in a 1300 year old legal system that actually instituionalises discrimination against non muslims.

Don't take lectures from these Islamist hypocrites

Lydia P Troyer

March 16th, 2009 9:00pm Report this comment

I, too, would like to know 1> who was the sneak who sold his brother officer out to the gutter Press and 2> why is Lt Windsor's father still a commissioned officer when he openly & notoriously engaged in adultery with a brother officer's wife? same regiment I believe.
Just curious.

Malc Dow

March 21st, 2009 11:10am Report this comment

Certainly does!

>> Jak
January 19th, 2009 11:05pm

Three years after the event, coinciding with the massacre in Palestine and British complicity (2.6 billion of sales last year) - sounds fishy!"

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