A Pakistani Taliban spokesman quickly rejoined with a threat, telling AFP “We will target her again and attack whenever we have the chance.” It’s a threat that Malala easily shrugs off. “I don’t know why, but hearing I was being targeted did not worry me,” she wrote about earlier Taliban threats against her and her family in her recently-released autobiography, I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban. “It seemed to me that everyone knows they will die one day. So I should do whatever I want to do.” In an appearance Tuesday on Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show, after he offered to adopt her, Malala recounted an early conversation she had with herself when she first heard of Taliban threats to her life, when she was 12. First, she said, she thought she would hit any Taliban attacker with her shoe—a comment that drew hearty chuckles. She added: “I said to myself, if you hit a Talib with your shoe, there will be no difference between you and the Talib. You must not treat others with that much cruelty and harshness. You must fight others, but through peace and through dialogue and through education.” Then, she said to herself, “I will tell him how important education is and that I even want education for [his] children as well.” Even Stewart choked up.
Malala Marches Toward the Nobel Peace Prize

Malala Yousafzai speaks after winning this year's International Children's Peace Prize at The Hague, on Sept. 6, 2013.
This Friday, the Nobel committee announces the 2013 recipient of
the Nobel Peace Prize. As far as global opinion is concerned, the award
is a 16-year-old Pakistani girl’s to lose.
Long before she became a global symbol of children’s education, Malala Yousufzai was one girl squirming under the thumb of the Pakistani Taliban, whose draconian interpretation of Islamic law saw girls’ schools
closed in her hometown of Mingora in early 2009. In a frank and witty
blog published on the BBC Urdu website under a pseudonym, Malala,
then 11-years-old, chafed at the new regulations that limited her
freedom, stopped her from learning and kept her from seeing her friends.
The pseudonym, of course, was meant to protect her identity, but it was
not long before her private persona—the outspoken daughter of a
prominent school administrator—meshed with her public one, and she took
her demand that a girls’ right to education
be recognized across Pakistan to a national audience, appearing several
times on TV talk shows and eventually in an international documentary.
“I wanted to speak up for my rights,” she told the BBC
on Monday, when reminiscing about her early activism. “And also I
didn’t want my future to be just sitting in a room and be imprisoned in
my four walls and just cooking and giving birth to children. I didn’t
want to see my life in that way.”
Less than four months after the shooting, Malala appeared in a video
announcing that she was taking her campaign for girl’s education global
through a new charity: “I want every girl, every child to be educated.
And for that reason, we have organized Malala Fund.” On March 19, 2013,
she returned to school, this time in Birmingham. On July 12, her 16th
birthday, she appeared before the United Nations at a specially-convened
assembly of 1000 youth leaders to exhort nations to make education a
priority. “Let us pick up our books and our pens. They are our most
powerful weapons,” she said in a voice ringing with strength and
conviction. “One child, one teacher, one book and one pen can change the
world. Education is the only solution. Education first.”
By winning the Nobel Peace Prize, Malala would join a long list of
recipients that have sought to achieve peace through human development,
from Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank in 2006 to Médecins Sans Frontières in
1999. To Malala, peace and education are inextricable; without one, you
can’t have the other. “I hope that a day will come [when] the people of
Pakistan will be free, they will have their rights, there will be peace
and every girl and every boy will be going to school,” she told the
BBC. Peace, she suggested, starts with a conversation. “The best way to
solve problems and to fight against war is through dialogue,” she told
the BBC, an exhortation that she hopes her Taliban attackers will follow
as well. “They must do what they want through dialogue,” she said.
“Killing people, torturing people and flogging people … it’s totally
against Islam. They are misusing the name of Islam.”
A Pakistani Taliban spokesman quickly rejoined with a threat, telling
AFP “We will target her again and attack whenever we have the chance.”
It’s a threat that Malala easily shrugs off. “I don’t know why, but
hearing I was being targeted did not worry me,” she wrote about earlier
Taliban threats against her and her family in her recently-released
autobiography, I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban.
“It seemed to me that everyone knows they will die one day. So I should
do whatever I want to do.” In an appearance Tuesday on Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show,
after he offered to adopt her, Malala recounted an early conversation
she had with herself when she first heard of Taliban threats to her
life, when she was 12. First, she said, she thought she would hit any
Taliban attacker with her shoe—a comment that drew hearty chuckles. She
added: “I said to myself, if you hit a Talib with your shoe, there will
be no difference between you and the Talib. You must not treat others
with that much cruelty and harshness. You must fight others, but through
peace and through dialogue and through education.” Then, she said to
herself, “I will tell him how important education is and that I even
want education for [his] children as well.” Even Stewart choked up.
Little seems to have changed in the wake of the shooting. “I was
spared for a reason — to use my life for helping people,” she writes in
her book. In the BBC interview, she reiterated her desire to return to
Pakistan one day to become a politician. One that will make education
compulsory for both boys and girls. If anything, she says, the Taliban
attack only amplified her voice. “When I was shot they thought the
people would be silenced, they thought that no one would talk,” she told
the BBC. “I think they might be repenting why they shot Malala.”
1 comment:
កុំគិតតែពីស្ដាប់គេនិយាយគេថា៖ កុំចេះតែនិយាយតាមគេក្ដក់បញ្ជារ៖
មនុស្រឥឡូវមិនស្ដាប់តែសម្ដីទេ គេស្ដាប់រួមទាំងភាសារបស់ការសម្ដែងផងដែរ (Body language) ក៏អាចផ្ដល់តម្រុយឲ្យយើងយល់ជាមុនខ្លះបាន! ដូច្នេះភាពពិតប្រាកដរបស់មនុស្សម្នាក់ ចេញពីការអនុវត្តន៍របស់មនុស្ស! ភាសាអង្គគ្លេស គេតែងនិយាយថា៖ "Action louder than word" បើយើងស្វែងយល់ពីមនុស្សម្នាក់ទៅតាមលក្ខណៈនេះវាយូរបន្តិច តែពេលវេលា វានឹងបញ្ហាញការពិតរបស់វាយ៉ាយជាក់ច្បាស់!
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