I Am Malala Essay

635 Words2 Pages

When faced with oppression and forced to comply with certain limitations due to gender, there will be those that comply while there are people like Malala Yousafzai who will not stand aside any longer. Within the novel, I am Malala; the author shares the experiences that inevitably led her to become the Robin Hood of Swat Valley at a time of extreme injustice towards innocent people. The incessant acts of terrorism by the Taliban and the silence of the political leaders in the Pakistani government while the citizens suffer could no longer be ignored. This series of events, overtime, led to one important character to appear because she was driven for change due to the terrors she witnessed and experienced. However, opposition towards the Taliban …show more content…

Ziauddin is the reason Malala has such a strong interest for attending school which inevitably cemented this sense of resistance within her when faced with a tyrannical government that viewed education as unimportant. At the beginning of opening his dream school, Ziauddin opposed the idea of having to pay the government to educate children since it is a natural right of the citizens. This is illustrated by Malala, “The other principals took paying bribes for granted, but my father argued that if all the school joined together they could resist. “Running a school is not a crime, he told them. “[…] they are your servants. They are taking salaries and have to serve you. You are the ones educating their children” (Yousafzai 51). In addition to representing the rights of others, Ziauddin became a prime role model for Malala by showing her that one should not be ashamed to attend school based on gender. This type of mentality and view led Malala to see the flaws in the school systems within Pakistan. Malala understood the importance of schools and like her father knew

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