Rushdie cancelling trip unfortunate: Netaji's daughter

01 February,2013 07:21 AM IST |   |  Agencies

Saying that religious intolerance was unnecessary, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's daughter Anita Bose Pfaff (in pic) yesterday dubbed as 'unfortunate' the circumstances that forced Booker prize-winning author Salman Rushdie to cancel his visit to the city.


Talking to reporters Pfaff said the Indian National Army (INA) founded by her father could be taken by the country as a model for co-existence of various communities and religious groups.

"It is unfortunate that something like Salman Rushdie being not allowed to come to India has happened. Religious intolerance is unnecessary," she said.

"India can learn from the INA on how different communities and religious groups can co-exist," she said. The 65-year-old Rushdie, author of the controversial The Satanic Verses, was slated to visit Kolkata to promote Deepa Mehta's film Midnight's Children, but called off the trip at the last moment.

Hours before Rushdie's scheduled arrival, Muslim groups under the banner of Milli Ittehad Parishad demonstrated against his visit, and only relented after being told by the authorities that he was not coming.u00a0

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