William Nygaard
William Nygaard is a Norwegian retired businessman and publisher, who was the CEO of publishing company Aschehoug and the chairman of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation.
Business career
From 1974 to 2010, Nygaard was the chief publisher of Aschehoug, Norway's second largest publishing house, which is owned by the Nygaard family. When William Nygaard took this job, he followed the footsteps of his father Mads Wiel Nygaard and grandfather William Martin Nygaard, who had led the company in earlier years, and the tradition continues since he left the job to his son, Mads Nygaard. William Nygaard was chairman of the Norwegian Publishers Association from 1987 to 1990. From 2010 to 2014, he was employed as a director of NRK.Assassination attempt
On 12 April 1989, Aschehoug and William Nygaard were responsible for publishing the Norwegian edition of Salman Rushdie's novel The [Satanic Verses |The Satanic Verses]. This was two months after Ayatollah Khomeini issued the following fatwa against Rushdie and his publishers:Owing to the fatwa, direct threats were made against Nygaard and translator Kari Risvik, and in the resulting controversy, Nygaard was given police protection for a period.
On the morning of 11 October 1993, Nygaard was shot three times outside his home in Dagaliveien in Oslo. Most people — including Nygaard — link the incident to the fatwa. After several months of hospitalization, mostly at Sunnaas Hospital, Nygaard slowly recovered. In early October 2018, almost a quarter-century after the attempted assassination, charges were made against the alleged perpetrators. Their names and nationalities were not publicized at the time. In November 2021, the two were identified as the Lebanese man Khaled Moussawi and an unnamed former Iranian diplomat.
Other positions
Both before and after the attack, William Nygaard has been an outspoken defender of free speech, and is a board member of the Norwegian division of International PEN. He is a member of the Norwegian Academy [for Language and Literature].Nygaard has been a member of the board of Norway's National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design. In 2010, he was elected chairman of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation.
Personal life
Nygaard has two children.Awards
- 1994: Fritt Ord Award.
- 1998: Segerstedt award
- 1998: knight of 1. class of St. Olavs Orden
- 1998: honorary doctor at Universitetet i Tromsø
- 2019: Gunnar Sønstebys award