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The Freedom To Publish

'The Jewel of Medina' may not be a good book--and its depiction of Muhammad just might provoke violence--but its release is something to celebrate.

The novel fictionalizes the relationship between the Prophet Muhammad and his youngest bride, Aisha. After paying the author a significant advance and making plans for the release of the book, Random House sent copies of the galleys to various scholars, some of whom told the publisher that the content distorted history, would inflame Muslims and could cause much trouble. Security experts were also consulted. Random House decided to cancel publication of Jones' work, invoking reasons of "safety."

Certainly this was not a case of censorship: no one has a "right" to be published by anyone else. But insofar as the business decision of the publisher was dictated by fear of retribution arising from past examples of reprisals against people perceived to have denigrated Islam, the implications went beyond the contractual relationship between Random House and Jones. Any time, any place in which the threat of violence inhibits the exercise of free expression, the imperfect freedoms of Western civilization that so many people around the world struggle to imitate are in danger. Which is why the implications of the British publisher's audacious decision to print "The Jewel of Medina" also go beyond the contract between Gibson Square and Jones.

The book's content -- which has been described, promisingly, as being full of sex and violence -- is irrelevant to the discussion. It may well be, as one scholar who read it contends, that "The Jewel of Medina" is pure trash. And in any case, a book of historical fiction should never be judged on its accuracy. Great novels such as Tolstoy's "War and Peace," Victor Hugo's "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame" and Marguerite Yourcenar's "Memoirs of Hadrian" are all "inaccurate." So are bad historical novels.

It is true that a naughty novel about Muhammad has the potential to inflame passions. Salman Rushdie's "The Satanic Verses," one of his least interesting creations, earned him a death sentence from the Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989. I remember asking Rushdie, whom I interviewed in hiding when "The Moor's Last Sigh" came out, if he had reconsidered some of his leftist positions against those who stood firmly for the freedoms of the West. He had. The Indian author added that those values are only ‘Western" in the sense that the West is where they developed, but that their validity is universal.

Some distributors of "The Satanic Verses" were killed by Muslim fanatics. Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh was murdered in 2004 for

"Submission," a 10-minute documentary on the oppression of women in Islamic societies. When in 2005 the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published 12 caricatures of Muhammad, Danish embassies were attacked in various countries; dozens of people died in the protests.

Any responsible publishing house would, of course, take all of this into account. And it has the right to do what it pleases with any manuscript that it receives -- even the right to change its mind about it. The problem is not whether Random House was entitled to its decision, but what the decision to go against its own desire to publish the book tells us about the fear that fanaticism has instilled in Western countries through systematic acts of intolerance.

Many people in the West misunderstand what freedom of expression means. They associate it with the restriction on the power of the government to interfere with the freedom to express oneself. It is really a restriction on the power of anyone to interfere with anyone else's right to free expression, including but not limited to the government. If a business decision is made under extreme fear -- directly or indirectly caused by force from a third person rather than the government -- freedom of expression also suffers.

I am not interested in the reasons why Gibson Square has decided to publish the book -- whether opportunism, greed, love of scandal, a dislike of the prophet, or a belief in the merits of the novel. But the fact that someone, somewhere, is willing to run the risk of not letting the threat of violence inhibit free expression is tremendously comforting.

Alvaro Vargas Llosa is the editor of "Lessons from the Poor" and the director of the Center on Global Prosperity at the Independent Institute.

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By Alvaro Vargas Llosa