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India-Pakistan
Icon of peace
2017-04-11
[DAWN] IN a country with a more assured sense of identity and its place in the world, Malala Yousafzai
...a Pashtun blogger and advocate for girls' education from Mingora, in Swat. She is esteemed as an ambassador of international good will, even though she can't go home lest some fellow in a turban shoots her in the head again...
’s latest accolade would have been cause for an outpouring of national pride. After all, being appointed a UN Messenger of Peace, the highest honour that can be bestowed by the UN secretary general, is no mean feat -- even for a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, and the youngest ever laureate to boot. This time around too, Malala, now 19, is the youngest ever messenger of peace, and the first Pak designated as such. To appreciate the enormity of this achievement, consider some of the distinguished high-achievers currently on the list: among them, astronaut Scott Kelly, anthropologist Jane Goodall and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. Why then the deafening silence from the government and the churlish lack of acknowledgement from most of Malala’s fellow citizens -- who do not hesitate to play up the Pak connections, however nebulous, of people with far less consequential achievements?

Therein lies a clue to our society’s contrariness and the confoundedly perverse lens through which it views the world, indeed to the self-fulfilling prophecy of its perpetual victimhood. For Malala was an advocate for education long before she was shot in the head by a TTP bully boy in October 2012 when she was 14; she had even won a certain degree of international recognition for her courageous activism. But the attack, which required her to be flown to the UK for treatment, elevated her global profile exponentially. It was then, inexplicably, that perceptions about her in her country began to shift. The more praise she garnered from world leaders -- which increasingly became the case given that her brush with death did nothing to deter her from tirelessly campaigning for universal education -- the more reviled she became at home. Though but a child, she was labelled a ’Western agent’, a ’traitor’, ’anti-Islam’ etc. The malevolence directed at her since then has been such that Malala who should have been the pride of Pakistain, is forced to live in self-exile, the threat to her life in her country very real and ever-present. Meanwhile,
...back at the abandoned silver mine, there was another kaboom...
her Malala Fund continues doing laudable work for girls’ education in several African and Middle Eastern countries. And also in Pakistain, whose people sadly do not have the clear-headedness to see this remarkable young woman for what she is: an eloquent force for good in an increasingly violent world.
Posted by:Fred

#5  We can only hope she never sets foot in Pakistain again.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2017-04-11 14:13  

#4  ...another set of shared traits with the Left.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2017-04-11 09:13  

#3  Their choice is to ditch the modern world and reality.
Posted by: Crusoling Turkeyneck1852   2017-04-11 09:01  

#2  Ain't Islam grand? This is a perfect example of why Islam is not fit to exist in a modern world.
Posted by: AlanC   2017-04-11 08:15  

#1  Or a pathetic excuse for people who refuse to recognize reality?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2017-04-11 06:17  

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