I Am Malala Research Paper

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Malala Yousafzai, the fifteen year old girl shot in the face for speaking out. Her story begins just like any other girl in her hometown, Swat Valley, Pakistan; an area where women struggle to keep their basic rights. One of those rights being the right to education, which then grew to be the main influence in Malala’s advocacy and eventual worldwide campaign for women’s schooling. This happened to be against the edicts of the political group, the Taliban, an extremist islamic party in Pakistan responsible for a civil war and downgrading the roles of women, who used Malala’s movement as a rationale to shoot her. Malala’s courage and determination through all of this is what made her stand out between other girls in her small valley, and it …show more content…

Malala’s awe-inspiring story came to create a global awareness of girls like Malala’s lives and stimulated a widespread movement fighting ignorance and promoting education for all. She now lives her life as the youngest individual in history to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her outstanding and honorable efforts, alongside many more well deserved awards and acclamations from numerous reputable individuals. Malala has earned herself millions of supporters worldwide, where her unrestricted perseverance, the significant impact she made despite her young age, and righteous character all gave them more than enough reasons to view her as an exemplary hero and role …show more content…

People expect an eleven year-old girl would spend her time playing with dolls and toys, numb and oblivious to any political or social happenings around her, but not Malala. Even before that age, an age where you are considered to be naive and unworldly, Malala has exhibited great interest regarding women’s rights to education and even politics. As she puts it, “From an early age I was interested in politics and sat on my father’s knee listening to everything he and his friends discussed” (Yousafzai, 47). Even as a girl, in a place where being a is more or less condemned, she didn’t let her feelings about certain subjects prevent her from speaking forward and criticizing the most dominant and threatening group that is taking over their valley. Not even school, one of her utmost priorities as demonstrated in her autobiography, stopped her from doing so, as she was expected to sacrifice school and studying in order to write or speak to journalists. All the more, because of her tenacity, Malala was faced with death threats from the Taliban against her and her father. Nevertheless, Malala explains her reaction to this news as follows: “hearing I was being targeted did not worry me. It seemed

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