-Caveat Lector-

French author causes storm by attacking Islam

By John Lichfield in Paris

The Independent/Books
01 September 2001
http://enjoyment.independent.co.uk/books/news/story.jsp?story=91780

France's most acclaimed young novelist has provoked a storm of controversy
and faces possible prosecution  after describing Islam as "stupid" and
"dangerous" and writing of "enthusiasm" for the murder of Palestinian
children.

Michel Houellebecq, 43, a veteran controversialist, rocketed to the top of
the French fiction best-sellers' list this week with his third novel,
Plateforme, which is set amid the tourist industry, including the
sex-based tourist industry, in Thailand. The heroine of the book dies in
an Islamic terrorist attack on a night-club. Her lover called Michel like
the author launches into a diatribe against Islam and Arabs.

"Each time that I hear that a Palestinian terrorist, or a Palestinian
child or a pregnant Palestinian woman has been shot in the Gaza Strip, I
shiver with enthusiasm," the fictional Michel says.

The passage was initially defended by French literary critics as
expressing the views of a character in a book rather than its author.
However, Houellebecq embarrassed his supporters in an interview with a
literary magazine, published on Friday, in which he expressed personal
contempt for the Islamic religion. In the interview with Lire, he said
that he rejected all mono-theistic religions but the "most stupid
religion" was Islam. To read the Koran was to be "shocked", he said.
"Islam is a dangerous religion, and always has been," but "luckily", he
said, it is condemned to disappear because it is being undermined by
capitalism. Later in the interview, Mr Houellebecq whose mother converted
to Islam, before handing him over to his paternal grandmother at the age
of six expressed his sympathy for the French Vichy regime, which
collaborated with the Nazis during the Second World War. He said that
Marshall Philippe Ptain, the head of the Vichy government, was "preferable
to [General Charles] de Gaulle", who led the Free French forces from
London.

If he had been alive at the time, the author said, he would have been a
Vichy sympathiser, "who tried to save Jews".

The insensitivity, and incoherence of this remark in particular, has
persuaded some French commentators that Houellebecq is not for the first
time deliberately goading the French literary and social establishment.
They suggest that his remarks are intended to boost sales of his book and
are best ignored. Others, including leaders of the French Islamic
community, say that Houellebecq should be prosecuted for breaking the
French law that forbids "the provocation of hatred against a group of
persons on the grounds of their religion". Unlike the author Salman
Rushdie in The Satanic Verses, they say, Houellebecq's comments in the
book and in his interview amount to an expression of personal contempt for
Islam and its followers.

The author, who lives in a former bed-and-breakfast hotel on the Island of
Bere, off the coast of County Cork, has refused to make any further
comment until he appears on the France Culture radio station on Monday.

Houellebecq, once a junior official in the computer department of the
French parliament, shot to literary stardom in 1998 with his novel Les
Particules Elemntaires ("Elementary Particles), which is a mordant attack
on the post-hippy, post-1968 generation. The book has been translated into
25 languages.

Houellebecq, like most French intellectuals, thinks Western society is
decadent and doomed but, unlike most French intellectuals, he blames the
libertarianism of the 1960s and 1970s as much as he blames capitalism and
the consumer society. His work, written in dispassionate but technically
brilliant French, dwells on sex and violence but also on abstruse
scientific subjects, as well as social and political questions.

His new book, written in the same deadpan style, suggests that love
between men and women in Western society is no longer possible. Feminists,
among others, are to blame. The only logical solution is sexual tourism,
in which Western men and increasingly women seek the emotional and
physical fulfilment that they are denied at home by travelling to less
socially and emotionally repressed countries in the Third World.

In an interview with the newspaper Le Monde before the present
controversy, Houellebecq said he wished that people would not ask for or
take any interest in his personal opinions.

It was "typical of the times" that he was constantly being dragged into
political arguments, he said. His writing should stand for itself.
"Personally, I think that I write well. I'm rather proud of it. That being
said, it seems I have a pig's flair for sniffing out whatever is rotten in
the society around me," he said.

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