Pace Nobel: Malala returns to the city for the first time after being hit

Pace Nobel: Malala returns to the city for the first time after being hit


Malala Yousafzai is a young Pakistani who defends the right of women to study. For this reason, he was the victim of a Taliban attack in 2012 and became the youngest person in history to receive a Nobel Peace Prize

The activist Malala Yousafzai He returned, for the first time, in his hometown of his family in Pakistan Friday (7). “After 13 years, I was finally able to visit Shangla again this week. The river, the mountains and pines were as beautiful as I remembered – and I was grateful to spend time with the relatives that I had not seen for so long. But some members of my family are dead, including my dear grandmother, who died in 2020. Even if I miss me every day, walking through the hills that loved me and visited me. Malala said.




Malala remembered visiting all the holidays when she was a child and the interactions with her family. “I remember having escaped from the crowded bus and to have gone straight to my grandmother Abi’s house, eager to tell her all the news of the elementary school. In the spring, my cousins ​​and I collected green plums from the trees and we ate near the river. It seemed a world different from the crowded city in which I lived.”He remembered the activist on social networks.

Who is Malala?

Malala is the youngest person to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for his struggle in defense of women’s education. Initially, he wrote a diary that reported his struggle for the right to teaching. Then he became known in the world after suffering the attack in 2012, when he was only 15 years old. He was hit in the head by the Taliban in the north -est of Pakistan, where the Islamic fundamentalist group prevented girls from attending school.

Therefore, the murder attempt has given strength to a national and international support movement. In addition, the United Nations released a petition with the slogan I’m Malala (“I Am Malala”), asking for all the children of the world to be recorded in schools until the end of 2015.

Source: Terra

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