Author Salman Rushdie — the subject of a decades-old death threat from Iranian Muslim clerics — was knifed in the neck Friday in a stunning attack as he prepared to deliver a lecture in western New York.
Rushdie, 75, was on a ventilator Friday night, his agent, Andrew Wylie said. He has a damaged liver, severed nerves in one arm and is likely to lose an eye, the agent said. Rushdie was flown to a hospital in Erie, Pa., where he underwent surgery.
Dr. Martin Haskell, one of the people one the scene who rushed to help, described the prolific and controversial author’s wounds as “serious but recoverable.”
At the scene, cops arrested 24-year-old Hadi Matar of Fairview, N.J., a town in Bergen County across the Hudson River from Manhattan.
Rushdie was set to speak as part of an event held at the Chautauqua Institution, a nonprofit center near Lake Erie. The institution, about 55 miles southwest of Buffalo, describes itself as “a community of artists, educators, thinkers, faith leaders and friends dedicated to exploring the best in humanity.”
Instead, the audience saw a stunning display of the worst in humanity.
Rushdie was being introduced around 11 a.m. when a man rushed the stage and then began punching and stabbing him, sending shockwaves through audience members gathered together to participate in the lecture series, titled “More than Shelter.”
Matar managed to knock Rushdie off his feet and stab him at least once in the neck and once in the abdomen before he was detained by a state trooper assigned to the event, according to New York State Police. The amphitheater was quickly evacuated.
Photos taken on the scene show a small crowd of people huddled around Rushdie, some of who can be seen tending to his injuries. Blood can also be seen on the ground near Rushdie and on the chair he was sitting in just prior to the attack.
His condition was not immediately known, but he was able to walk off the stage with some assistance, said witnesses. The person set to interview Rushdie, Henry Reese, suffered a minor head injury during the chaos.
Gov. Hochul praised the speedy action by New York State Police and all those who responded following the stabbing.
“Our thoughts are with Salman and his loved ones following this horrific event,” she said. “I have directed State Police to further assist however needed in the investigation.