The name comes from an apocryphal story about the martyrdom of Saint Peter where he requested to be crucified “with the head ...
Jewelry insurance can help you replace a lost item or even cover repairs. While homeowners insurance and renters insurance usually cover valuables, even when outside of the home, most have a limit ...
New Delhi: Salman Rushdie's famous novel, 'The Satanic Verses', has made its return to India after being banned for 36 years. The controversial work, first banned in 1988, is now available for ...
The Satanic Verses by Sir Salman Rushdie has returned to the shelves of Indian bookshops 36 years after sparking a fatwa that forced him into hiding for almost a decade. The book, which is ...
Satanic Verses was banned by the Rajiv Gandhi government in 1988 after outrage over it as parts of it were considered blasphemous. (Image: Shutterstock) The go-ahead by Delhi High Court to release ...
Salman Rushdie‘s novel The Satantic Verses hadn’t been sold in India, the country of the author’s birth, for 36 years, until this week. The novel, which forced the India-born author into ...
The show quickly went viral due to claims of satanic imagery. Many users on X speculated that Beyoncé wore a medallion resembling devil horns and made hand gestures that appeared to mimic the ...
The Satanic Verses is available at a major bookstore in Delhi. X/@sorcerical Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses is now available at bookstores in India, 36 years after its import was banned by the ...
Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses arrived at a bookstore in India 37 years after it was published. An import ban by the Rajiv Gandhi government kept it away from Rushdie's native country for almost ...
This time, it's not because of a personal remark, any fatal attack, or his relationships; rather, it's because his immensely controversial book, The Satanic Verses, is returning to India after a ...
Salman Rushdie's controversial novel, ‘The Satanic Verses’, is back on the shelves in bookstores across India, 36 years after the ‘ban’ was imposed when Muslims found it ‘blasphemous’.
The clip was called 'demonic' and 'satanic' by many on social media, but there may be more to the video than meets the eye. One fan has now shared a wild theory online that said the clip ...