MALALA YOUSAFZAI
- Amazing Kid -
G'day folks,
I have featured this wonderful girl before, but today is fairly special for her, and the kids she fights for. Pakistani
teenager Malala Yousafzai, who was shot in the head by the Taliban in 2012 for
advocating girls' right to education, and Indian children's right activist
Kailash Satyarthi, have won the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize. With the prize, Ms Yousafzai,
17, becomes the youngest Nobel Prize winner, eclipsing Australian-born British
scientist Lawrence Bragg, who was 25 when he shared the Physics Prize with his
father in 1915. The Norwegian Nobel Committee
said the pair were awarded the prize for their struggle against the suppression
of children and young people.
Background:
Traumatized by the near miss, Ayesha spent most of the day curled up in a corner of her couch, unsure whom to be angrier with: the would-be assassins or her father for putting himself in danger. She desperately wanted someone to help her make sense of things.
At around 10:30 p.m., she got her wish. Ayesha’s father had just come home from work, and he handed her his BlackBerry. “She wants to speak to you,” he said. The voice on the phone was weak and cracked, but it still carried the confidence that Ayesha and millions of other Pakistanis had come to know through several high-profile speeches and TV appearances.
“This is Malala,” said the girl on the other end of the line. Malala Yousafzai, 15, was calling from the hospital in Birmingham, England, where under heavy guard she has been undergoing treatment since Oct. 16. “I understand that what happened was tragic, but you need to stay strong,” Malala told Ayesha. “You cannot give up.”
In trying, and
failing, to kill Malala, the Taliban appear to have made a crucial mistake.
They wanted to silence her. Instead, they amplified her voice. Since October
her message has been heard around the world, from cramped classrooms where
girls scratch out lessons in the dirt to the halls of the U.N. and national
governments and NGOs, where legions of activists argue ever more vehemently
that the key to raising living standards throughout the developing world is the
empowerment of women and girls. Malala was already a spokesperson; the Taliban
made her a symbol, and a powerful one, since in the age of social media and
crowdsourced activism, a parable as tragic and triumphant as hers can raise an
army of disciples.
If Malala decides to continue her crusade, hers will be a platform backed with financial means and wired with well-connected allies. “She’d be great as both a fundraiser and a public speaker,” says former First Lady Laura Bush, who’s spent years campaigning for women’s rights in Taliban-controlled areas. Several funds and initiatives have been founded, including at least one that Malala and her father will directly influence once she has recovered. However, a return to Pakistan, where Malala would likely be most effective, would be fraught with danger. The Taliban have on several occasions sworn to target her again.
VIDEO OF MALALA'S SPEECH
TO THE UNITED NATIONS:
Clancy's comment: I have said this before but will say it again. I sincerely hope that she stays alive long enough to complete her work. Too often, we lose those who walk out of the mist to do great things. Yes, we lose them because some idiot doesn't like what they do.
Love ya work, Malala! Love ya work!
I'm ...
Think about this!
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