(BBC) - Pakistani
schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai first came to public attention in 2009 when she
wrote a BBC diary about life under the Taliban. Now recovering from surgery after being shot by
the militants, the campaigner for girls' rights is in the spotlight again.
Malala was 11
when she began writing a diary for BBC Urdu.
Her blogs
described life under Taliban rule from her home town of Mingora, in the
northwest region of Pakistan she affectionately calls "My Swat".
I am afraid -
3 January 2009
"I had a
terrible dream yesterday with military helicopters and the Taliban. I have had
such dreams since the launch of the military operation in Swat. I was afraid
going to school because the Taliban had issued an edict banning all girls from
attending schools. Only 11 students attended the class out of 27. The number
decreased because of Taliban's edict.
On my way from
school to home I heard a man saying 'I will kill you'. I hastened my pace... to
my utter relief he was talking on his mobile and must have been threatening
someone else over the phone."
By 2009, the
Taliban controlled much of the Swat Valley and applied their austere
interpretation of sharia law.
"When the
Taliban came to Swat they banned women from going to the market and they banned
shopping," Malala told the BBC last year.
Malala Yousafzai
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But Malala's
primary objection was to the Taliban's prohibition of female education.
Militants had destroyed over 150 schools in 2008 alone.
"Malala
Yousufzai was one of the few brave voices who spoke out", writes The Daily
Telegraph's Pakistan correspondent Rob Crilly.
"She did
it anonymously - to do otherwise would have brought immediate death. But her
blog for the BBC Urdu Service detailing the abuses meant no one could pretend
an accommodation with the terrorists was anything other than a deal with the
devil."
Halima Mansour
in the Guardian heralds Malala as a young "Pakistani heroine" for her
bravery and independence.
"Malala
doesn't want to play to some western-backed or Taliban-loved stereotype. She
shows us that there are voices out there, in Pakistan, that need to be heard,
if only to help the country find democracy that is for and from the people, all
the people."
Do not wear
colourful dresses - 5 January 2009
"I was
getting ready for school and about to wear my uniform when I remembered that
our principal had told us not to wear uniforms and come to school wearing
normal clothes instead.
"So I
decided to wear my favourite pink dress. Other girls in school were also
wearing colourful dresses. During the morning assembly we were told not to wear
colourful clothes as the Taliban would object to it."
Pakistani schoolgirls pray for her recovery |
When she wrote
her blogs for BBC Urdu, Malala was already able to speak English and hoped one
day to become a doctor.
One sombre
entry, titled "I may not go to school again", details the imminent
closure of her school in January 2009. Other entries express her fear of being
killed by the Taliban.
But she
received support and encouragement in her activism from her parents. The idea
for the blog was even that of her father Ziauddin, who runs a local private
school.
"Of
course, it was a risk [to let her write the blog]", he told BBC Outlook in
January this year, "But I think that not talking was a greater risk than
that because then ultimately we would have given in to the slavery and the
subjugation of ruthless terrorism and extremism."
I may not go
to school again - 14 January 2009
"I was in
a bad mood while going to school because winter vacations are starting from
tomorrow. The principal announced the vacations but did not mention the date
the school was to reopen.
"The
girls were not too excited about vacations because they knew if the Taliban
implemented their edict [banning girls' education] they would not be able to
come to school again. I am of the view that the school will one day reopen but
while leaving I looked at the building as if I would not come here again."
Malala's
father was himself an outspoken education activist who received death threats
from the Taliban.
Along with
many locals, Malala and her family went into exile from the Swat Valley when a
government military operation attempted to clear the region of Taliban
militants.
"I'm
really bored because I have no books to read", she told Adam B. Ellick,
who made a documentary about her in 2009.
Following the
military's partial success in driving back the Taliban, Malala was able to
return to Mingora later that year.
During 2009,
Malala began to appear on television and publically advocate female education.
With her
raised public profile, becoming the "progressive face of Swat",
Waseem Ahmad Shah, of Pakistani paper The Dawn, finds it inexcusable that Malala
was ultimately "left at the mercy of militants".
In 2011 she
was nominated for the International Children's Peace Prize by The KidsRights
Foundation.
Later last
year the government awarded her the National Peace Award - subsequently renamed
the National Malala Peace Prize - for those under 18 years old.
Malala's
experiences have had an impact upon her future aspirations. She told The Dawn
earlier this year that she plans to form her own political party focused on
promoting education.
For many
Pakistanis, Malala has become a symbol of resistance to the Taliban.
"Malala
was the lone voice in that wilderness," writes Feryal Gauhar in the local
Express Tribune.
"Hers was
the voice which made us consider that indeed, there can be alternatives, and
there can be resistance to all forms of tyranny. Today, the attempt to silence
that voice shall only make her stronger; the blood stains on her school uniform
shall only feed the conviction that as long as there is breath and life, there
shall be struggle."
"Malala
rose to heights few of us can aspire to," adds Gauhar.
Interrupted
sleep - 15 January 2009
"The
night was filled with the noise of artillery fire and I woke up three times.
But since there was no school I got up later at 10am. Afterwards, my friend
came over and we discussed our homework. Today is the last day before the
Taliban's edict comes into effect, and my friend was discussing homework as if
nothing out of the ordinary had happened.
"Today, I
also read my diary written for the BBC in Urdu. My mother liked my pen name Gul
Makai. I also like the name because my real name means 'grief stricken'."
Malala is now
recovering in hospital after being shot in the head and neck by a Taliban
militant on Tuesday.
Her shooting
"has shocked an unshockable Pakistan", notes Samira Shackle in the
New Statesman.
Shackle is not
alone in juxtaposing Malala's bravery with "the fact that major
politicians and indeed, entire governments, have shied away from making such
bold statements [about female education] against the Taliban".
But Rob Crilly
in the Telegraph states how "on this occasion they [the politicians] have
sensed the public horror and begun making a beeline for Malala's sickbed".
"If she
makes a full recovery - and she still has a long, long way to go - I suspect
Malala will remain one of the few voices prepared to take on the extremists.
And the politicians will make their excuses and forget all about their
promises."
From BBC
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