The earnest confidence and sincerity with which she addressed the UN assembly — and which we have come to associate with Yousufzai, whether she speaks in English, Urdu, or Pashto — is the only part of the speech that we can be sure of as belonging to her. Its content is quite another matter since a speech for such a momentous occasion is likely to be crafted and vetted by multiple individuals. Though immensely moving, the address was not without contradictions.
A prominent part of the speech was the personalities Yousufzai named as the guiding lights of her struggle. It was an interesting hodgepodge of global and local heroes, but the logic behind the contextualisation of their influence was not always clear. While Gandhi Ji, Bacha Khan and Mother Teresa (incidentally a nun, rather than a political leader) are conceivably plausible enough candidates for imparting the “philosophy of non-violence”, one is left rather confused as to what Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s “legacy of change” was — the exact opposite of Martin Luther King’s and Nelson Mandela’s, alongside whom he was referenced?
The speech-writers’ basic desire, it seems, was to team certain national heroes with some more prominent, globally-revered personalities, who have incidentally been either Nobel Peace Prize winners or nominees, much like the speaker herself. Even for those not bowled over by this aspect of the speech, the compulsions and temptations of writing for a diverse, global audience where the need to be coherent and convincing can sometimes be sacrificed to that of being representative, can be understood. The Punjab chief minister is quite right when he tweets that Malala’s speech “seemed to be written for global consumption”. It is another matter that learning to please, or at least, resisting the urge to deliberately offend, a wider audience, instead of a narrow and parochial clutch of traditional supporters, is an art that the new government might do well to cultivate in its speeches.
It was in relation to the Taliban and the issue of terrorism that Yousufzai made some of her clearest statements. She unequivocally condemned the Taliban as a terrorist group, the kind of categorical rejection that should not so significantly have become her responsibility had her elders shown greater willingness to shoulder it. And perhaps, the most critical statement of the entire speech, at a time when world leaders are debating terms for a peace with the Taliban, was: “A deal that goes against the rights of women is unacceptable”. Let that fundamental demand register loud and clear.
That she publicly acknowledged the gift of the late Benazir Bhutto’s shawl while making these statements was not without irony for many of Yousufzai’s supporters, who called to mind the former prime minister’s second term in office when she consciously supported the Afghan Taliban’s creation and empowerment as a strategic asset. Yousufzai, who is reaping the legacy, would not have been born at the time. Today, her sentiments of compassion and forgiveness and disavowal of a desire to seek revenge against the Taliban who shot her do her honour as a Muslim and a human being. Yet, given her clear stance on terrorism, doesn’t her rhetoric about non-violence (assuming that it is rhetoric), while no doubt establishing her own compassionate principles, only serve once again to muddy the waters about what tactics to use against the Taliban? Few Pakistanis evince a desire to let the Taliban run riot in their villages and cities, but we suffer from a lack of consensus about how aggressively to effectively counter their threat. Is a strategy of non-violence truly what is being recommended to us in this regard? Some years ago, a younger Malala spoke on television about what she would like to do if a Taliban accosted her. She visualised taking off her slipper and hitting him on the face with it, and telling him that what he was doing was very wrong. When the anticipated encounter did occur, there was no opportunity to act out this fantasy. The attack failed to take her life, but it did effectively ensure that their home would indefinitely be lost to a family who had so far resisted all pressures to move away from “my Swat”.
Now, with her increased stature as an international symbol of resistance, Yousufzai will have a chance to make the kind of difference which other activists can only dream of. Being forced to live away from her country, though, she may also have to deal with the burden of legitimacy. Her lifestyle will come under even greater scrutiny and her organisational affiliations will be analysed from all angles. She will also face greater pressure from compatriots demanding that she openly take an independent line against the West on certain issues. Many of her supporters would have been far happier if she had also referred to American brutalities in Muslim countries in her speech and said “thousands of people have been killed in this war”, instead of “…thousands of people have been killed by the terrorists”.
This is a logical argument; but the question we must ask is whether all battles are this 16-year-old’s alone to fight. Since we are so used to cutting off our nose to spite our face, this might be a difficult proposition; but perhaps now is the time to get out of the vicious ‘we hate them, but we also hate you’ cycle. The irony of Western actions is always appreciable, but we really would do well to also focus on our own backyard, and to summon the will to recognise a convergence of interests where there is one. Let us let Malala Yousufzai put “education first”. Let us reserve our criticism for her proposed educational policies and let other Pakistanis fight for the other causes.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 3rd, 2013.
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The struggle of Malala Yousufzai against the religious fundamentalist forces which is a battle half won with her recovery from the dastardly attack made by the Taliban. This young girl no doubt has to fight her battle alone although she may enjoy popular support nevertheless her initiative and dynamism with regard to promoting education of women in the Taliban infested areas of Pakistan is the challenge she now shall have to meet with along with going ahead with her education. The denial of education to women is a the problem the society in Pakistan needs to take up tooth and nail against those who support such feudal and fundamentalist ideas and why only Pakistan, there are other nations in South Asia where women are still denied education. Malala has acquired an international stature due to the sacrifice she has made by facing the brunt of the fundamentalist Taliban groups and having defeated their nefarious, feudal and fundamentalist ideas. Pakistan must as a nation stand up against the fundamentalist groups and ensure that such fanatic groups get weeded out for good. The need for a greater degree of cohesiveness in society is a must which alone can give women the desired status in society and women's rights get the required weightage. Although the present government in Pakistan too has a role to play in this regard nevertheless society and the people cannot get away from the responsibility as the task is no doubt very demanding and challenging.
Author: You are over analysing the mentions of elders that malala claimed to hold in high esteem. What is Even worse - you needle Malala for having said she'd use her slippers to hit the terrorists.
You must remember when that interview was done? it was about 3yrs back, when she was only 13. Do you even remember formulating an opinion at 13? Her opinion and idea is still evolving. She would have realised the guy who came to shoot her is an illiterate fool, who is a tool in the arms of a more powerful and manipulative men. Thus nothing is served by either hitting him or killing him.
That doesn't mean she supports a non-violent transformation of Taliban. She has been asking governments to enforce security so there can be peace, which is a pre-requisite for education.
Even Gandhi (on whom Martin Luther king, Bradshaw khan etc. based their model on) had justified the world war 2, when nazis started their dastardly campaign of world domination. Do you think Taliban and al-Qaeda have any less intention than Nazis?
When something I read does not make much sense, I start reading in para by para from the bottom up and this works quite well ..................... but not this time.
malala is a victim of jealousy of those who cannot digest the dignity and stature Allah has bestowed on the little girl. no. 2 she is vicyimised by those who are and have confused the whole nation on Taliban and terrorism.
Sorry Miss. writer. Writing reasonable English is not what makes a write-up worth reading. It also needs commonsense, which I haven't seen here.
Malala already got what she wanted or deserved or whatever n now chilling her life abroad. So please stop this whole crap and get back to your own works. so guys, Enjoy the Party.
The problem with the journalists is that they must right something even when they have nothing useful to say. That's how they earn their living. So, Malala's speech is the new thing which will provide them tremendous opportunity to comment on what she should have said or not said and its implications will be analysed with great scrutiny. Try to be serious and do some real useful work.Make a better use of your degree from Columbia.
so far,she seems to be the only last man left standing in the remaining spineless pakistani society figting the deadly taliban.
It is amusing that that the Chief Minister of Punjab felt qualified to issue a critique of Malala's speech, which incidentally he rapidly withdrew, when his own speeches are nothing more than incoherent breathless outbursts of diatribe which metamorphose into farce when he begins to sing the verses of a Lenin Prize holder revolutionary poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz! Of course there were inconsistencies in Malala's speech. How else could it be? Bracketing Jinnah with Nelson Mandela and Dr King was incongruous but she just had to fit him somewhere. Benazir, like any civilian Prime Minster in Pakistan had and still has no choice but to accede to the policies dictated by the deep state in matters of state security and foreign policy. And so was the case with the Taliban. Her reference to Benazir's shawl was a particularly poignant moment because Benazir was shot and tragically killed by the same assassins whose murder attempt Malala survived. Malala ought to have declared her forgiveness to her would be assassin Talib and left it at that. Non violence in the face of a nihilistic and blood thirsty death worshipping cult is insanity.
Malala is the most brave man among all the men in Pakistan. It is not surprising that she has become a legend in the world even as a child. Shame on Taliban apologists who are trying to belittle this child.
I don't want to be rude but this is one of the worst Op Ed that I have ever read in ET or any other paper for that matter. Many rightwing extremists and Taliban apologists write but they do not hide behind a veil of an innocent child. Malala's UN speech was for global audience duh! Should a UN speech be about a village audience only? She talked about those towering personalities of the world, can you find anybody better than those in modern history? Of course she is a born Pakistani and as such she has to appreciate M. A. Jinnah as the founder of Pakistan with other founders of their countries. Who should she include Gen Zia, or rightwing leaders of Pakistan who are in bed with terrorists? Of course Malala's speech was written and approved by the UN officials. Even the most imp speeches of presidents of USA are written by speech writers. It is a standard practice and every educated person knows full well. Can you pleas spare the child and concentrate on those who are killing us by tens of thousands?
Unless this author has gone in front of UN to speak, she has no idea what Malala should be doing.
Very true Malala must be chastised for standing up to Islamist brutes. She should be blamed for bing shot by the pure in the land of pure, getting shelter in land of kafirs and citing Gandhi and Mandela (both kafirs). Very bad girl - this Malala!
@Ahmad Khan Looni: I like how you refer to the "ocean of ignorance" as you label malala as a popular drug (aka "heroin") instead of the word "heroine". Pakistan needs only one thing: education. Period.
Discussions about Malala more than prove how confused a nation Pakistan is.
Agree with @T Khan and @ Khan Looni. Malala is suffering from the jealousy of other Pakistanis who resent that the world is praising her for her courage. That's not new. Pakistanis as a group are never unified, always bickering over petty politics and self interest.
we must ask is whether all battles are this 16-year-old’s alone to fight. sums up the whole idea. But many Pakistanis,most of them men, want her to exactly do that. Another of ET's bloggers sums up the essence of these men:" impotent, emasculated " horde that have shunned their duty to stand up to killers of their neighbors and co-citizens, and are pushing that responsibility on to the shoulders of a girl. And still have the audacity to criticize her when she is doing that.
I find it rather ironic that you accuse Malala of making contradictory statements in her speech while your own article clearly lacks any coherence. You dedicate quite a lot of space in trying to show how Malala didn't have a consistent strategy on how to deal with the Taliban yet conclude by saying that actually, since this speech was meant to address the the education crisis (which it was) we should not expect find within it a concrete strategy on how to combat terrorism (which we shouldn't.) Hence, I don't really see what the point of your article was, unless it was to merely highlight the obvious fact that most people in Pakistan are quite bewildered by the amount of positive attention being thrown at Malala by the world and have not still figured out how to deal with it. If that is the case, then I would say you have succeeded brilliantly in your endeavor.
There is needless, unnecessary concern about Malala and her personality. Malala's stature and her maturity beats many in Pakistan's media and its people. She is going to do just fine, once she completes her education in one of the best British University. After that the whole world will open up for her. In the UK and the US there will me many career choices open to her. Then she can decide what she needs to do. More so Pakistanis need to worry if Pakistan will still be around by then, when Islamabad Airport is today closed facing a threat.
the author is a closeted Jihadi.
It is so sad that many Pakistanis don't think that she is a real heroin. This mentality is making Pakistan submerged into an ocean of ignorance.
She gained legitimacy for life on the day she stood up to the Taliban, when all the brave men of the country were doing their best chicken impersonations.
For goodness sake she is a 16 year old CHILD; and still made much more sense than the rubbish I just read.
Author failed to do her research for this article. She should have researched about precedence to Malala named Nayirah from Kuwait invasion.