Salman Rushdie addresses rising authoritarianism during First Amendment Summit in Philadelphia

“One of the preconditions for the rise of an authoritarian strongman is that people cease to believe in the truth,” Rushdie said.

<a href=Salman Rushdie speaks from a screen. Behind the screen are windows looking out over Independence Hall." width="640" height="427" />

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The National Constitution Center’s First Amendment Summit focused on the threats to freedom of expression and featured author Salman Rushdie as the keynote speaker.

On Wednesday evening, hundreds of people gathered in Center City for the virtual conversation featuring Rushdie and PEN America CEO Suzanne Nossel.

Rushdie participated virtually — more than a year after he was stabbed on stage in Chautauqua, New York, while attending a lecture series. He’s faced multiple death threats since his book, The Satanic Verses, was published in 1988, including Iran’s leader calling for his assassination in 1989, forcing him into hiding.

<a href=Salman Rushdie speaks from a screen to a large audience. A sign reads "National First Amendment Summit."" width="640" height="427" />

During introductory remarks, Rushdie said the First Amendment was one of the reasons he decided to move to America. He said if you asked him 10 to 20 years ago what the biggest threat to freedom of expression was, it would’ve been religious extremism.

“The destruction of Roe v. Wade being an example of what that could do,” Rushdie said. “I’m not sure that I would give that answer in the same way now because it in a way feels like a kind of 18th-century outset. It feels as if we are still fighting the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment fighting against what was then the main enemy of free expression, which was the church more than the state.”

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He said instead we’re facing “another old enemy,” which is authoritarianism, citing the rising Hindu nationalism within India’s government.

Suzanne Nossel speaks from a seat onstage. <a href=Salman Rushdie speaks from a screen overhead." width="640" height="427" />

“Populist authoritarian demagoguery coupled with that, a willingness amongst at least some part of the population, to cease to value the democratic values enshrined in the First Amendment,” Rushdie said. “So I think the problem is, I would now say political more than primarily religious.”

Rushdie was asked about the trend of book bans nationwide, which has been felt locally within the Central Bucks School District. He said attacks on both education and the “absolute value of the truth” have “been to some degree successful.”

“One of the preconditions for the rise of an authoritarian strongman is that people cease to believe in the truth,” Rushdie said. “People are told so often that what everything they’re being told is a lie that they begin to internalize that, and at that point, the demagogue, the authoritarian, could rise to his feet and can say, ‘I am the truth. Believe me because I am the truth.’ That’s how dictatorships start. That’s how tyrannies rise. And we are seeing phenomena like that in this country, but around the world as well.”

Nossel said they were honored to participate in the keynote conversation and hoped the event reenergized those in attendance to continue fighting for free speech.

Suzanne Nossel speaks while seated onstage.

“I think there is a rising generation that feels sometimes alienated from free speech,” Nossel said. “That free speech is a smokescreen for hatred, that it’s not relevant to the struggles that they’re waging, whether that’s for racial justice or gender justice or climate action. And, you know, it’s just the opposite. Free speech underpins our ability to advocate for all of those causes. It has made possible every great social movement in this country.”

Other panels focusing on the First Amendment also took place, featuring free speech advocates and educators, including former ACLU President Nadine Strossen, who is the first woman to have held the position.

When speaking with WHYY News ahead of the event, Strossen said free speech is “under assault every single day” from “all ends of the ideological spectrum.”

Nadine Strossen gestures as she speaks while seated onstage.

“As a full time educator and advocate, I have come to see that the more people know about the actual principles of free speech, as opposed to the distorted caricatures that people attack when they criticize free speech, the more people understand what it really stands for and how dangerous censorship is the more they support it, ” she said.

“Most people believe in freedom of speech for me, but not for thee,” Strossen said. “I want people to understand that they are never going to have freedom of speech for me unless there is also freedom of speech for thee.”