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  • Malala Day at the UN

    Pakistani girl shot by Taliban claims triumph over terrorists
    July 12, 2013



    Malala Yousafzai isn’t the first to proclaim the pen mightier than the sword, but she is probably the only teenager to emerge defiant after taking a bullet for the right of literacy. The Pakistani girl shot in the head by Taliban gunmen nine months ago for defying their ban on girls’ education celebrated her 16th birthday Friday with an uplifting appeal for universal education in a speech to more than 1,000 young delegates to the United Nations. “Let us pick up our books and our pens. They are our most powerful weapons,” declared the diminutive teen from the rostrum of the U.N. General Assembly forum, given over to the youthful would-be diplomats gathered to mark the first “Malala Day.” Yousafzai, cloaked in a pink, traditional shalwar kameez and a white shawl that belonged to slain Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, thanked God -- before whom, she said, “all are equal.”

    She praised the thousands of strangers and world leaders who have sent her good wishes and the doctors in her homeland and in Britain who helped her recover from the attack. Gunmen boarded her school bus near her hometown of Mingora on Oct. 9, looking for the defiant teen, and shot her repeatedly in the head in an incident that shocked the civilized world and raised consciousness about the plight of girls in fundamentalist Islamic societies. “The extremists were, and they are, afraid of books and pens,” she said in the address webcast by the United Nations. “The power of education frightens them. They are afraid of women.”

    Still, she said, she bore no hatred of her attackers, having learned compassion from the models of Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “This is what my soul is telling me: Be peaceful and love everyone,” she said, casting confident glances over her audience and exhibiting little evidence of lingering injury beyond a slow-opening left eyelid. “The terrorists thought they would change my aims and stop my ambitions,” she said. But all that has changed, she said, is that “weakness, fear and hopelessness died and courage was born.”
    Source: LA Times

    Dear child, you have my utmost respect and best wishes. May all of your blessed dreams come true!

    My deep gratitude to the many doctors and surgeons in Pakistan and Britain who struggled for weeks to save the life of this brave young lady.

    On a sad note, Pakistan ranks second only to Nigeria in the number of children who do not attend school. Most of these disenfranchised millions are girls.
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  • #2
    Not to trivialise her, but I wonder what the UN will do when they have 365 people to honour.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by chanjyj View Post
      Not to trivialise her, but I wonder what the UN will do when they have 365 people to honour.
      If I'm not mistaken, it's a singular and rare honorarium for a private individual to address the General Assembly with the international press in attendance.

      To lend some perspective on rarity and global coverage, a Google enquiry of this event results in 58,600,000 media returns.
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      • #4
        Ah my bad. It seems to be a one-off thing. I thought they had made it a yearly anniversary like "Childrens' Day".

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        • #5
          Originally posted by chanjyj View Post
          Ah my bad. It seems to be a one-off thing. I thought they had made it a yearly anniversary like "Childrens' Day".
          Not to worry chanjyj. Anyway, you may be right because July 12 has been designated as International Malala Day. I know that the UN designates January 27 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

          At any rate, it's probably a moot problem until they are forced to designate day 366... Leap Year Day ;)
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          • #6
            Minskaya Reply

            Wonderfully said, Minskaya. Ms. Malala Yousafzai is an utterly brave and remarkable young lady. May God, the angels and those of good will protect and shield her in the days, months and years to come.
            "This aggression will not stand, man!" Jeff Lebowski
            "The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool." Lester Bangs

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            • #7
              In about twenty years she will return to Pakistan to take up her political career and get her self and many of her followers blown to pieces by a group of religious zealots. Sad that my prediction for Pakistan over the next twenty years is stasis...

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              • #8


                Brave Girl

                May God keep her safe
                Attached Files

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                • #9
                  With limited educational opportunity, her accented English is still very good. All in all, one of the most poignant speeches of my lifetime.

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                  • #10
                    The thing I can't understand is why ain't her father out there shooting and bombing the bastards to hell. If it were my little girl, they wished they were the ones who died fast.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Officer of Engineers View Post
                      The thing I can't understand is why ain't her father out there shooting and bombing the bastards to hell. If it were my little girl, they wished they were the ones who died fast.
                      Cause he still has other kids to protect from a possibly vindictive TTP

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                      • #12
                        I watch this and am in absolute AWE of her brilliant presentation. Utterly composed despite repeated applause interruption, paced perfectly and enunciated with absolute clarity. Pitch glittered. Light and lilting. Nothing robotic whatsoever. I heard her stammer twice in twenty minutes. No "...ummm...", "...uhhhh...". She was beautiful, deified, humble and dignified at once.

                        She hit it out of the park. This was a text-book presentation in public speaking on a global stage. Or, bluntly, stepping up when the lights come on.

                        The content? Equally compelling given her own tragedy. She was damning and derisive without self-righteous sanctimony regarding the taliban's crude and malevolent act. Yet forgiving too. Invoking the names of many of our greatest pacifists, she bore no vengeance. I truly believed her. Remarkable but it takes all kinds, including those who would turn the other cheek.

                        Her plea is heartfelt when we consider the educational impact upon children that even one jet fighter or tank might provide. I pray her life is allowed to unfold such that her considerable gifts might fully benefit all.

                        Amazing.
                        "This aggression will not stand, man!" Jeff Lebowski
                        "The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool." Lester Bangs

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Minskaya View Post
                          With limited educational opportunity, her accented English is still very good. All in all, one of the most poignant speeches of my lifetime.
                          I believe credit should go to her her father for this. Ziauddin Yousafzai is a civil servant and an educational activist. He runs a chain of schools throughout the KP Province and has actively encouraged female education. He encouraged Malala's education and personally tutored her, that would explain her decent grip on the English language.

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                          • #14
                            Taliban letter urges Malala to return to Pakistan
                            July 17, 2013

                            PESHAWAR: A senior Pakistani Taliban commander has written to Malala Yousafzai, the teenage activist shot by militants, accusing her of "smearing" them and urging her to return home and join a madrassa. Gunmen from the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) shot Malala, now 16, in the head in her home town in Swat, in the country's northwest, where she campaigned for the right of girls to go to school, last October. Malala made a powerful speech to the UN on Friday in her first public appearance since the attack which almost killed her, vowing to continue her struggle for education and not be silenced by the militants.

                            In an open letter released Wednesday, Adnan Rasheed, a former air force member turned TTP cadre, said he personally wished the attack had not happened, but accused her of running a "smearing campaign" against the militants. "It is amazing that you are shouting for education, you and the UNO (UN) is pretending that you were shot due to education, although this is not the reason ... not the education but your propaganda was the issue," Rasheed wrote. "What you are doing now, you are using your tongue on the behest of the others."

                            The letter, written in English, was sent to reporters in northwest Pakistan and its authenticity confirmed to AFP by a senior Taliban cadre who is a close associate of Rasheed. He accused Malala of seeking to promote an education system begun by the British colonialists to produce "Asians in blood but English in taste" and said students should study Islam and not what it called the "satanic or secular curriculum". "I advise you to come back home, adopt the Islamic and Pashtun culture, join any female Islamic madrassa near your home town, study and learn the book of Allah, use your pen for Islam and plight of Muslim ummah (community)," Rasheed wrote.
                            Source: thenews.com.pk

                            Despite international acclaim for Malala and a possible Nobel Peace Prize, the self-serving exculpatory letter of Adnan Rasheed will appeal to many in Pakistan as mainstream thinking.

                            Note: The full text of the letter is available here
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                            • #15
                              BBC News - Senior Pakistani Taliban leader 'shocked' by Malala attack

                              "However, he refuses to condemn the attack, saying the judgement on whether it was correct or not should be left to God."
                              Wow. Just wow. So they need god's permission to criticize but not to kill. Amazing intelect these tailibunnies have.

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