Behind the scenes and very quietly wheels began to turn. Kainat and Shazia were obviously at risk; and the government of Pakistan was no more likely to protect them effectively than it had Malala when she was merely moderately famous locally rather than the global icon she has become. With little fuss and fanfare, both girls received an offer of a full scholarship from a prestigious school in the UK, The Atlantic College. Malala received the same offer but probably because of her proximity to her ongoing treatment and rehabilitation resources in Birmingham, she decided to decline it.
Thus, it is that Kainat and Shazia are now settling into an educational environment unlike any they have experienced before. The Atlantic College is regarded as liberal and progressive, radical even by some, and places student participation in community service at the core of its ethos. It could not be much more different from Mingora and the Swat Valley if it tried.
There have been no million-dollar book deals for Kainat and Shazia, no nominations for anything remotely prestigious prize-wise and they do not find their every word hung on and analysed — neither do they find themselves at the heart of a concerted campaign of vilification and hate-mongering in Pakistan for which they are doubtless quietly grateful. They were just two ordinary schoolgirls who were in the wrong place at the wrong time but got caught up in the ‘Malala Effect’.
Recently, the three young women were reunited when Malala was at Edinburgh University to receive an honorary Masters degree. This is the first time that the ‘other two’ have been closely identified in public with Malala’s campaign of global education for all. They were in Edinburgh to support the Carnegie UK Trust to launch a Global Citizenship Commission which is tasked with no lesser burden than how best to update the UN 1948 Declaration of Human Rights to bring it into line with 21st century realities. Not quite a regular day out for three teenagers ... anywhere.
So were Kainat and Shazia part of the conspiracy as well? Was the plan that they would just be lightly wounded and then follow Malala to the West where they could be footsoldiers for her? And their places at the Atlantic College were arranged in some secrecy were they not? Very suspicious.
Clearly, it is time to get those critical pens dipped in vitriol and begin the process of shredding the characters and motivations of Kainat and Shazia. After all, they are beneficiaries of the Malala Effect. Attending an upscale school where liberal values and attitudes are actively promoted, likewise secularism. They will spend their days in a co-educational environment, possibly go swimming and may even enjoy some minor celebrity of their own.
Obviously, all this runs counter to their culture of birth. Utterly condemnable, of course, and they must be exposed for the CIA agents that they undoubtedly are. The two are an absolute disgrace and the sooner we see a jolly good table-thumping oration to that effect delivered by some cranky misogynist on an evening chat show the better. And make sure you get on to Twitter as well, and Facebook. The more vile the comment, the better.
I sometimes wonder to myself if Malala cries into her pillow at night after another day reading of and seeing herself presented as a villainess. Would your daughter cry if vilified thus? Think about it, Dear Reader.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 24th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (14)
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@Sophya Khan: Drones kill innocents. The TTP kill innocents. These innocents are victims. We live in cruel uncaring world where the suffering of innocent victims is of little consequence. If Malala had also ended up as an innocent victim, she too would have been promptly forgotten. What makes Malala so very special is that she refused to become a victim. Her unimaginably courageous stand so profoundly unnerved and alarmed the TTP that they shot her in the head at point blank range and left her for dead. But Malala rose again like Phoenix, not shattered, her spirit broken, haunted by nightmares, but with with even more resolute determination, indefatigable spirit and courage. And with the same eloquence, grace and poise. It is these extraordinary qualities that have made Malala an icon of enlightenment, justice and progress, all over the world, not only in the West. Those that seek to undermine and malign Malala are in denial. There's none so blind as those who refuse to see.
very informative and I love malala </p
Love your wicked sarcasm towards the end.
@Sam Hyat: hmmm with that logic, have you or your dear ones hit by a drone? first walk in "their" shoes before talking about courage...
Her father worked for bbc she also used to write blogs she is a talented kid she was shot spare her for god sakes
@Zayyad: Have you ever been shot in the face at point blank range ?well malala has, first walk in her shoes before criticizing her.
@Zayyad: And the first comment proves the writer's point.
@nhk: Small minority?You should see the figures on the polls conducted by this very newspaper.
This fact is that a large majority of Pakistani's appreciate the courage Malala has shown in supporting girls education. This is based on my personal interactions but more so on how the vast electronic media portrays her positively. Its incredible how the feelings of a very small minority who criticize her forays in the West is presented as the norm.
The sarcastic undertone of this article is well placed for the underlying hysteria that surrounds the mindset of so many Pakistanis these days. Pakistan has become renowned in the world for its strong preference for ridiculous conspiracy theories, all the woes and misfortunes are attributed to Westerners, Jews or Hindus/India. The only losers here are the Pakistanis themselves. None of the supposed perpetrators face the problems Pakistanis do; even India a developing country with 400 million poor people has advanced in some fields and leaps over Pakistan socially in many aspects.
In the West we hear the Malala story on the news and are somewhat moved by it, but then we get on with our lives in our well organised societies. Pakistanis on the other hand end up declaring yet another alarm bell void, which could have otherwise slowed down their descent into further disorder and misery. Sometimes it feels, that the 'tiny, retrospective, and vicious minority' everyone insist is accountable for the pressing condition Pakistan is facing, is actually increasingly turning into a clueless majority.
It seems that on ET...if there is nothing to write about, then write something on Imran Khan(make a devil out of) or Malala (make an angel out of).