I am Malala: The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and was Shot by the Taliban

BOOK: I am Malala: The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and was Shot by the Taliban
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I AM MALALA

The Girl Who Stood Up for Education
and was Shot by the Taliban

Malala Yousafzai

with Christina Lamb

Weidenfeld & Nicolson
LONDON

To all the girls who have faced injustice and been silenced.
Together we will be heard.

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Dedication

Prologue: The Day my World Changed

PART ONE: BEFORE THE TALIBAN

  
1
  

A Daughter Is Born

  
2
My Father the Falcon
  
3
Growing up in a School
  
4
The Village
  
5
Why I Don’t Wear Earrings and Pashtuns Don’t Say Thank You
  
6
Children of the Rubbish Mountain
  
7
The
Mufti
Who Tried to Close Our School
  
8
The Autumn of the Earthquake

PART TWO: THE VALLEY OF DEATH

  
9

Radio Mullah

10
Toffees, Tennis Balls and the Buddhas of Swat
11
The Clever Class
12
The Bloody Square
13
The Diary of Gul Makai
14
A Funny Kind of Peace
15
Leaving the Valley

PART THREE: THREE BULLETS, THREE GIRLS

16

The Valley of Sorrows

17
Praying to Be Tall
18
The Woman and the Sea
19
A Private Talibanisation
20
Who is Malala?

PART FOUR: BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH

21

‘God, I entrust her to you’

22
Journey into the Unknown

PART FIVE: A SECOND LIFE

23

‘The Girl Shot in the Head, Birmingham’

24
‘They have snatched her smile’

Epilogue: One Child, One Teacher, One Book, One Pen . . .

Glossary

Acknowledgements

Important Events in Pakistan and Swat

A Note on the Malala Fund

Picture Section

Additional Credits and Thanks

Copyright

Prologue: The Day my World Changed

I
COME FROM
a country which was created at midnight. When I almost died it was just after midday.

One year ago I left my home for school and never returned. I was shot by a Taliban bullet and was flown out of Pakistan unconscious. Some people say I will never return home but I believe firmly in my heart that I will. To be torn from the country that you love is not something to wish on anyone.

Now, every morning when I open my eyes, I long to see my old room full of my things, my clothes all over the floor and my school prizes on the shelves. Instead I am in a country which is five hours behind my beloved homeland Pakistan and my home in the Swat Valley. But my country is centuries behind this one. Here there is any convenience you can imagine. Water running from every tap, hot or cold as you wish; lights at the flick of a switch, day and night, no need for oil lamps; ovens to cook on that don’t need anyone to go and fetch gas cylinders from the bazaar. Here everything is so modern one can even find food ready cooked in packets.

When I stand in front of my window and look out, I see tall buildings, long roads full of vehicles moving in orderly lines, neat green hedges and lawns, and tidy pavements to walk on. I close my eyes and for a moment I am back in my valley – the high snow-topped mountains, green waving fields and fresh blue rivers – and my heart smiles when it looks at the people of Swat. My mind transports me
back to my school and there I am reunited with my friends and teachers. I meet my best friend Moniba and we sit together, talking and joking as if I had never left.

Then I remember I am in Birmingham, England.

The day when everything changed was Tuesday, 9 October 2012. It wasn’t the best of days to start with as it was the middle of school exams, though as a bookish girl I didn’t mind them as much as some of my classmates.

That morning we arrived in the narrow mud lane off Haji Baba Road in our usual procession of brightly painted rickshaws, sputtering diesel fumes, each one crammed with five or six girls. Since the time of the Taliban our school has had no sign and the ornamented brass door in a white wall across from the woodcutter’s yard gives no hint of what lies beyond.

For us girls that doorway was like a magical entrance to our own special world. As we skipped through, we cast off our head-scarves like winds puffing away clouds to make way for the sun then ran helter-skelter up the steps. At the top of the steps was an open courtyard with doors to all the classrooms. We dumped our backpacks in our rooms then gathered for morning assembly under the sky, our backs to the mountains as we stood to attention. One girl commanded, ‘
Assaan bash! ’
or ‘Stand at ease!’ and we clicked our heels and responded, ‘
Allah
.’ Then she said, ‘
Hoo she yar!’
or ‘Attention!’ and we clicked our heels again. ‘
Allah
.’

The school was founded by my father before I was born, and on the wall above us
KHUSHAL SCHOOL
was painted proudly in red and white letters. We went to school six mornings a week and as a fifteen-year-old in Year 9 my classes were spent chanting chemical equations or studying Urdu grammar; writing stories in English with morals like ‘Haste makes waste’ or drawing diagrams of blood circulation – most of my classmates wanted to be doctors. It’s hard to imagine that anyone would see that as a threat. Yet, outside the door to the school lay not only the noise and craziness of Mingora,
the main city of Swat, but also those like the Taliban who think girls should not go to school.

That morning had begun like any other, though a little later than usual. It was exam time so school started at nine instead of eight, which was good as I don’t like getting up and can sleep through the crows of the cocks and the prayer calls of the muezzin. First my father would try to rouse me. ‘Time to get up,
Jani mun
,’ he would say. This means ‘soulmate’ in Persian, and he always called me that at the start of the day. ‘A few more minutes,
Aba
, please,’ I’d beg, then burrow deeper under the quilt. Then my mother would come. ‘
Pisho
,’ she would call. This means ‘cat’ and is her name for me. At this point I’d realise the time and shout, ‘
Bhabi
, I’m late!’ In our culture, every man is your ‘brother’ and every woman your ‘sister’. That’s how we think of each other. When my father first brought his wife to school, all the teachers referred to her as ‘my brother’s wife’ or
Bhabi
. That’s how it stayed from then on. We all call her
Bhabi
now.

I slept in the long room at the front of our house, and the only furniture was a bed and a cabinet which I had bought with some of the money I had been given as an award for campaigning for peace in our valley and the right for girls to go to school. On some shelves were all the gold-coloured plastic cups and trophies I had won for coming first in my class. Only twice had I not come top – both times when I was beaten by my class rival Malka e-Noor. I was determined it would not happen again.

The school was not far from my home and I used to walk, but since the start of last year I had been going with other girls in a rickshaw and coming home by bus. It was a journey of just five minutes along the stinky stream, past the giant billboard for Dr Humayun’s Hair Transplant Institute where we joked that one of our bald male teachers must have gone when he suddenly started to sprout hair. I liked the bus because I didn’t get as sweaty as when I walked, and I could chat with my friends and gossip with Usman Ali, the driver, who we called
Bhai Jan
, or ‘Brother’. He made us all laugh with his crazy stories.

I had started taking the bus because my mother was scared of me walking on my own. We had been getting threats all year. Some were in the newspapers, some were notes or messages passed on by people. My mother was worried about me, but the Taliban had never come for a girl and I was more concerned they would target my father as he was always speaking out against them. His close friend and fellow campaigner Zahid Khan had been shot in the face in August on his way to prayers and I knew everyone was telling my father, ‘Take care, you’ll be next.’

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