Throughout the ages came some women who are signatures of femininity and femininity. They are successful in their work as well as in their own life. Influence thousands of women to be like them, to follow their path. Malala Yousafzai is one such struggling woman. In this article we will learn about this majestic woman today:
Birth and Growth:
Malala Yousafzai was born on July 12, 1997, to a Muslim Sunni family belonging to the Pashtun tribe in the Swat district of northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Malala lived there with her father Ziauddin, mother Tor Pekai and two younger brothers.
Movement for Education:
In 2009, the Taliban seized control of the Swat Valley and took drastic measures, including stopping girls from attending school. The Taliban issued a fatwa stating that no female student would be able to go to school after January 15, destroying hundreds of schools specifically for girls. In 2009, when Malala was just 11 years old, she began writing about her experiences of living under the Taliban in an Urdu-speaking blog under the pseudonym "Gul Makai" at the initiative of the BBC and in collaboration with her father.
Later in 2011, Malala Yousafzai gave regular interviews to Pakistani media, attended various events and said that she was Gul Makai of the BBC Diary.
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Attempted assassination:
As Malala gradually began to become famous, her danger began to increase. According to the newspaper, death threats started at home and on Facebook. In the summer of 2012, Taliban leaders decided to assassinate her. On October 9, 2012, while Malala was returning home from a bus test, a Taliban gunman boarded the bus. The gunman boarded the bus and threatened to kill all the passengers on the bus, trying to find out who Malala was, and eventually fired three shots at her, one of which went through the left side of her forehead and hit her on the shoulder with her face and neck. Two more girls were injured.
Treatment:
Malala was first taken to a military hospital in Peshawar, where doctors operated on her. After five hours of surgery, doctors were able to remove the bullet from his shoulder. A team of Pakistani and British doctors later decided to move her to the Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology in Rawalpindi. After a short treatment there, offers for Malala's treatment began to come from around the world. He was taken to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, where he was later treated.
Response:
The assassination attempt drew media attention around the world and sparked public sympathy for Malala and anger against the Taliban. The day after the attack, protest rallies were held in various cities in Pakistan and more than two million people signed up for the right to education in Pakistan, recognizing Pakistan's first right to education as a bill. After recovering, Malala resumed her movement.
"The terrorists thought they would change my goal and stop my aspirations, but nothing changed in my life except that: weakness, fear and despair are dead. Strength, power and courage are born… I am not against anyone, nor am I here to speak of personal aggression against the Taliban or any other terrorist group. I am here to speak for every child's right to education. I want education for the sons and daughters of the Taliban and all terrorists and extremists. ুন Let us start a great struggle against illiteracy, poverty and terrorism, we pick up our books and our pens, they are the most powerful weapons. A child, a teacher, a book and a pen can change the world. Education is the only solution "
Excerpts from Malala's speech at the UN on July 12, 2013.
The activities of this woman are so extensive that if you search for Malala on Google, you can read her biography for a whole day. This woman is so wide, wide, successful and struggling. Received honors and awards for his work.
Awards and honors:
Malala Yousafzai has received the following national and international awards and honors:
2011: International Children's Peace Prize (nominated)
2011: National Youth Peace Prize
January, 2012: Anna Frank Award for Moral Courage
October, 2012: Sitara-e-Shujat
November, 2012: Top 100 Global Thinkers in Foreign Policy Magazine
November, 2012: Mother Teresa Award
December, 2012: Time Personality of the Year
December, 2012: In Peace and Humanitarian Activities
Rome Prize for
January, 2013: Simon de Beauvoir Award
March, 2013: Memminger Frey Heatspress 1525
March, 2013: Duty Street Advocacy Award of Index on Censorship
March, 2013: Fred and Anna Jarvis Awards
April, 2013: Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards
April, 2013: Time Magazine is one of the 100 most influential people in the world
May, 2013: Premiere International Catalunya Award
June, 2013: OPEC International Development Fund Annual Development Award
June, 2013: Best International Promoter of 2013 from The Observer Ethical Awards
August, 2013: Tipperary International Peace Prize
August, 2013: International Children's Peace Prize
September, 2013: Ambassador of Conscience Award from Amnesty International
September, 2013: Clinton Global Citizen Awards
September, 2013: Peter Gomes Humanitarian Award from the Harvard Foundation
2013: Anna Politkovskaya Award
2013: Reflection of Hope Award from Oklahoma City National Memorial
2013: Shakharov Award
2013: Honorary Master of Arts Degree from the University of Edinburgh
October, 2013: Pride of Britain Teenager of Courage Award
November, 2013: Glamor Magazine's Woman of the Year
November, 2013: GG2 Hammer Award
November, 2013: International Prize for Equality and Non-Discrimination
February, 2014: World Children's Award for Child Rights
March 2014: Honorary life membership of the Executive Union of Ireland
2014: School Global Treasure Award
2014: Honorary Doctorate, University of King's College, Halifax, Canada
Jointly with India's Kailash Satyarthi 2014: Nobel Peace Prize
2014: Philadelphia Liberty Medal
2014: Time 2014 is one of the 25 most influential teenagers of the year
2014: Honorary Canadian citizenship
2015: An asteroid named 316201 Malala was named in her honor.
Throughout the ages, struggling women came to earth. Malala of this era like Mother Teresa, Begum Rokeya. They have taught us that women are not weak, there is no work they can't do if they want to. They can face injustice in the middle of the four walls as they can, and again raise their voices against all the injustices in the outside world, hold the pen. Let thousands of Malala come to this society from age to age, this is the expectation.
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