Malala Yusafzai
October 11, 2013 is the day marking one year and two days since I
first heard the name Malala Yusafzai. Before
that date last year, I had no clue and no need to know Malala. It reflects
poorly on me since BBC Urdu, for which Malala wrote her diary under the
pseudonym ‘Gul Makaee’, is the home page for my laptop but I use it for
headlines and more than often, bypass the opinion pages. October 11, 2013 is also the day when Malala
Yusafzai did not win the Nobel Prize for Peace and AFP reported that TTP
(Tehreek-e- Taliban Pakistan) is "delighted over Malala's Nobel
missing".
Malala Yusafzai did not win the Nobel Prize for Peace. Good for
her! As it is, these are not the best times to be associated with (arguably)
this most esteemed and coveted honor, primarily because of the controversial
nature of its two previous winners. US president Barack Obama and the European
Union will certainly go down in history as the worst decisions ever made by the
Nobel Peace Prize Committee.
Just a day before the announcement by the NPC, Dhiya Kuriakose in
her article for The Guardian, wrote “...the Nobel is a prize, and prizes should
be handed out at the finish line... 1
I almost agree. If only Kuriakose would adjust the
finality of her statement by replacing ‘at the finish line’ with ‘for achievements’ she'll have my vote because surviving an assassination attempt with the help of
good quality modern medicine and after care is perhaps similar to reaching a finish line but not an achievement; neither is
having a will strong as steel to survive. The latter however, is certainly an extremely
worthy trait which can be employed very usefully for achieving greater goals
but an achievement on its own it is not.
The fact is that from the day Malala started writing Gul Makaee’s
Diary for BBC Urdu Online until she received a bullet in her head, she
was a ‘nobody’. For most Pakistanis she was just another eleven years old in
terror stricken Sawat of 2009. Incidentally,
until that time the terror stricken Sawat of 2009 was also just another city in
the Taliban ravaged North West Frontier of Pakistan. In other words, before the bullets entered Malala, Pakistani public and media did not find her
interesting enough to mention in their conversations, their
publications or in their heated social media statuses. The public specially was
oblivious of BBC’s eleven years old reporter and the severed heads hanging in
public squares in Sawat Valley.
But lo and behold; as soon as the "western media" picked the story
about Taliban targeting a teenage girl, all hell broke loose and
opinions, criticism, analyses and mysterious background revelations found
their way to the forefront turning Malala into a heroine overnight… at least for
a few days.
I do not like to judge or rush to conclusions but humans in general and Pakistanis in particular have a history of honoring the dead and ridiculing the living. Had she succumbed to the attack, Malala would have stayed a heroine, BUT she survived; and her glory became controversial. During the first four days in which she went through a decompressive craniectomy at CMH Peshawar, was shifted to AFIC/NIHD Rawalpindi and transported to Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, the media overflowed with real time updates and reports. Parallel to that was another kind of overflow; or something more like a race on social media to prove the following:
I do not like to judge or rush to conclusions but humans in general and Pakistanis in particular have a history of honoring the dead and ridiculing the living. Had she succumbed to the attack, Malala would have stayed a heroine, BUT she survived; and her glory became controversial. During the first four days in which she went through a decompressive craniectomy at CMH Peshawar, was shifted to AFIC/NIHD Rawalpindi and transported to Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, the media overflowed with real time updates and reports. Parallel to that was another kind of overflow; or something more like a race on social media to prove the following:
- The attempt on Malala’s life is a set up.
- It is the doing of an ‘outside hand’ with a ‘hidden agenda’.
- Her father is a CIA agent.
- Malala is a CIA agent.
- The shots were not real.
- The bullets were not real.
- The Taliban were not real.
- The girl who got shot was not Malala.
- The girl who was flown to Birmingham was not Malala.
Malala recovered. Not only
did she recover she started voicing her thoughts through interviews. BUT the
Pakistanis/Pakistani media had once again receded into their shells. Why would you allow airtime and print space to someone/something which was simple but not intriguing,
which was sensible but unceremonious and which was relevant but not sensational?
And then somebody's mad, semantically challenged idea of recommending Malala for the
Nobel Peace Prize sent everyone amuck again. Once again the media and the sociopolitical glitterati
in Pakistan rattled with a multi-speaker x ∞ debates. The
points of concern this time were:
- Western media is using Malala to forward their own agenda.
- Her speech in the UN was rehearsed.
- Malala's interview with Jon Stewart was scripted.
- Why doesn’t she talk about the ‘drones’?
- If Malala is Peace Prize worthy then what about the children who have been a casualty of the same terrorist war?
Malala responded to some of these ‘points’ to Abdul Hai Kakar in an
interview for The Atlantic(2) but here is what I have to say.
- If one is able to look beyond black, white, pink AND west, east, left, right, top and bottom, one would discover that all media has some agenda and it comes forth in all they do. Accusing the ‘west’ of using Malala is simply venting out the regret that the ‘east’ (??) failed to use her first.
- Even the mightiest of the mightiest rehearse before opening their mouths in the UN.
- Jon Stewart is a delightfully mean host and it just makes sense for a sixteen years old to write down her thoughts specially when she’d be speaking in a foreign language.
- She doesn’t talk about drones because her subject of choice is female education.
- And last but not least; being a casualty is certainly different from being a target. Many die in wars with causes and their sacrifice is by no means trivial but only those are honored who contribute a little extra and have a slight edge. Malala was and remains a contributor and that gives her that ‘slight’ edge.
For more on Malala Yusafzai and Sawat From 2007 to 2009:
Diary of a Pakistani School Girl (english)Diary of a Pakistani School Girl (urdu)
Malala Yusafzai
Sawat 2007
Sawat 2009
Interest argument. Wish others saw it ina similar manner
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