Muhammad novel set for UK release

Almaas

Junior Member
:salam2:

Well this is interesting...

Muhammad novel set for UK release​


A controversial novel about the Prophet Muhammad and his child bride, scrapped in the US, will be released in the UK.

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The cover of the scrapped US version, as seen on amazon.co.uk

Last month, publisher Random House cancelled the US publication of The Jewel of Medina, by Sherry Jones, fearing it could offend Muslims.

Random House said it had been advised the book "could incite acts of violence by a small, radical segment".

But independent UK firm Gibson Square will publish the book next month saying its release is "imperative".

The novel follows the life of A'isha, often referred to as Muhammad's favourite wife, from her engagement at the age of six until the prophet's death.

Martin Rynja, of Gibson Square, said there must be "open access to literary works, regardless of fear".
He added: "If a novel of quality and skill that casts light on a beautiful subject we know too little of in the West, but have a genuine interest in, cannot be published here, it would truly mean that the clock has been turned back to the dark ages."

Jones, a US journalist, has defended the book to German newspaper Leipziger Volkszeitung.

"To claim that Muslims will answer my book with violence is pure nonsense," she said.

"Anyone who reads the book will see that it honours the prophet and his favourite wife."

Her agent, Natasha Kern, said the book was "a wonderful and inspiring love story".

She added that there were also plans for the book to be released by other publishers in other parts of western Europe, as well as in North America.

'Bad precedent'

The Jewel of Medina, Ms Jones's debut novel, was due to be released in the US on 12 August.

However, a few days beforehand, Random House confirmed that the publication was to be postponed indefinitely "for the safety of the author, employees of Random House, booksellers and anyone else who would be involved in distribution and sale of the novel".

At the time, Random House said Jones was free to sell her book to other publishers.

Sir Salman Rushdie - whose 1988 book Satanic Verses prompted Iran's then-spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomeini to issue a fatwa ordering his execution - said the book should not have been shelved in the US.

"This is censorship by fear and it sets a very bad precedent," he said.


Taken from http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7597437.stm

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xSharingan01x

TraVeLer
:salam2:

I've read her interview on altmuslim.com
According to the author "it's a fiction book, and thus she portrayed Aisha (RA) and Muhammad (Salalleli wasalam) how she imagined them to behave in 6th century Arabia".
She also puts alot of words "into the mouth of Aisha" and portrays Muhammad Salalal alahey wasalam, to be normal human being with some 'flaws and mistakes'.

She also took the story of Sufiwan (the alleged temptation of Aisha (R.A.) ), and portrayed it as Aisha was tempted to commit adultery with Safwan, but eventually overcame it.
Which is obvious nonsense.
The real story was she was so light that people took her camel and the thingi she stayed in (kind of like a box room top of the saddle) without realizing she wasn't inside the box thingi.
Verses of the Quran were revealed to defend her innocence. This rumor was further spread by the Munafiq from the tribe of Khajraz who hated RasulAllah, salel la aleyhi wasalam.


So according to the author "it's a fiction based on her imagination and her truth".


My opinion

Her intentions of portraying Aisha (RA) as a strong, intelligent, and empowering women I think is sincere. Her audience is mainly western readers, thus a biography of Aisha RA would appear boring to the readers so she decided to "dramatize, fictionalize, and IMO put some nonense in there (story of Sufiwan)".


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