Pakistan, standing at a critical juncture, or in the defining moment of its history, will have to make key choices that may either lead us out of this current state of affairs or push us further down the ditch. Change is the key word. Those from the current ruling class and their defenders in the media, who advise us that something good will come out of what is currently going on, are just misleading the country. The first change that will lead Pakistan towards progress is education. Anybody who is sincere to the country will have to declare an educational emergency, which will mean that our best resources, efforts and manpower will have to be devoted to the national purpose of spreading education.
Prayers are important for Malala, but that is not the way to honour her. The best way to honour her is to work individually and collectively towards achieving her dream, i.e., education of girls. Malala’s father and family set up and ran a girls’ school in Swat; there are thousands of similar schools being run by philanthropists in the country. These efforts give us hope for Pakistan. It is the resilience of the Pakistani society that has kept it afloat in the rough times it has been through for the past many decades. But that is not enough. My basic argument has been that the private school systems in the country that mostly run for profit or those funded by charities cannot be a substitute for the public education system. Simply put, they cannot accomplish the goal of mass and universal education.
After having described education as a fundamental right in the Constitution, the ruling elite have forgotten about it. Never has education been a priority issue for any leader, party or government in the country. It should be understood why they have and continue to ignore this issue. Knowledge empowers, raises expectations and creates the capacity of questioning those in power. Our traditional ruling classes, with some very noble exceptions, do not want this to happen. Education of girls and education in general are fundamental issues that have determined the destiny of nations. Embracing education as an ideology of progress will enlighten our path to development and help in creating a society that has a purpose, meaning and is in harmony with itself. Neglecting education, the way we have, will keep the good part of society in darkness, making it vulnerable to the forces of extremism.
The best tribute we can pay to Malala is by refocusing our energy, political attention and resources on girls’ education by opening and funding more and better schools. Making education compulsory for all girls and boys must become a starting point in fulfilling the constitutional promise of providing education which has been described as one of the fundamental rights of citizens of the state.
Without real teeth and resources, this will remain just a good sentence on paper. Pakistan has a gigantic task in front of itself in order to recover and rehabilitate and become a normal state and society again. Education, the dream of Malala, will be the starting point to achieve this goal.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 17th, 2012.
COMMENTS (14)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
@wonderer:
I hope you have looked at the video link I sent to you about Malala. Here is another link which will tell you about the importance of Malala to Pakistan and Muslim world in general:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=eu8NyLeMCbc
Please do not miss a word by Munir Saami; you may ignore the rest.
Happy listening!
@ author Of course, education is the key, and the State should focus on primary education, and find ways to encourage education for girls - midday meals, clean and separate bathrooms for girls, security etc. (believe me these make a huge difference). But I would have expected from an academician of your standing also comment on the content of what is taught. The mood in Pakistan presently is one of shock and questioning and there is that little opening of the door for intellectuals like you to send a strong message. Sorry, I found your piece sound but without courage.
@Amanat Ali: Sir Malala took on a bully who tried to take away her right given to her by our beloved Prophet pbuh to educate herself and if need be to go to China to do so. I therefore salute her for standing up to this evil ideology which is obscuring the message of our Prophet pbuh, and therefor in my view is the real blashphemy and insult to our beloved Prophet who is referred to as the saviour of all mankind by people including Sir Bernard Shaw, the great English philosopher .
sir, what r the achievements of this malala in Education. what she has done ?? what r her distinctions. she can not speaks English and can not wrote good urdu how she can write diary for the BBC in such little age. Sir very strange. This story whose author is US and BBC got initiated and we all but Media specially made it a successful show. Just for nothing created a panic. nothing malala there are many other children who done a lot for education and computer, malala has done nothing.
We forgot abt all this and focused on implicating IK and many continue to do so..
And I have flatulence.
While I agree with the writer, It is equally important that we take care to update the contents of education. What we teach is as important as teaching itself. We have been teaching falsehoods for far too long. We must change to truth, and nothing but the truth.
It will not be easy to find enough teachers of desired quality, but all efforts must be made and teachers' salaried should be made attractive.
That will be the best dedication to Malala's sacrifice.
bless her.
We need awareness. What is happening in the eductaional institutions you know better Professor. Are we producing good citizens, productive Pakistni and good human being through education?,Not, really. Our values are being hijacked through so called education. Malal's dream, of course ,was education, peace,but the people those used her during Sawat operation, do they have the same dream?. Its state responsibility to provide education each and every Pakistani, all Pakistni pay indirect taxes. State cannot deny her obligation. Entire focus on MALA'S, with due appology, has been devided this society again--- between Islam- secularism-liberalism. We have failed to draw our edcuational policies badly.Its Government's failure, the govt could not provide enough security or bullet proof vehicle, Malala desreved for,if she did for the governement and she did, as Hinna Rabbani Khar mentioned in her interview with Amanpur, " she had talk with MALAL regularly for half an hour. So whom you would blame?
100% agreed! Howeer, I would appreciate if you can write few sentences on the importance of 'quality education' instead of current form of education.
Wonderful support for Malala. When will Pakistanis show the same concern and support for non-Muslim citizens that are killed and discriminated against by the majority? We shouldn't have to dream of equality, tolerance and rights for everyone?
Yes Sir, 101% agree. Now is the time to make education COMPULSORY for all citizens in the real sense. Not just in 18th amendment on papers to look good and fancy. A girl in Kharan, Lasbela, Makran or KHuzdar has the same right to education as that living in Islamabad. Retired bureaucrates who has ruled this country from the last 65 years, civil society members and writers and teachers like you, who served this country throughout their life in teaching needs to equally raise their voice and compel the Govermment to take concrete steps in promoting education for all.
Brilliant.