Malala Thesis

498 Words2 Pages

Our thoughts and actions are the consequences of our future. We can easily choose one thing or another, based on what we believe, including our morals, ethics, and standards. Malala is persecuted on her rights as a woman and has an aspiration to be an advocate for women's education. She wants to be an advocate, but the conflict between the women in Pakistan and the society seeks to lessen their rights. The Taliban had want to tear down her father’s school. Her father feared that they didn't have enough money to maintain the school. They were in a bad economical situation already with all the kids they took in from the schools (the children who did not have a home or were poor). Malala has to fight against those who criticize her ideology and …show more content…

Ziauddin had influenced Malala in many different ways; he had taught her strategies on how to debate and be an active member in society. The Taliban had shot her, but that didn't keep her from talking out to the public and dealing with these rights that she could not bear with. Out in the Rubbish mountains, she saw children that did not have a home and were not educated at all. Most of the kids that were around her didn't care about the situation, but Malala felt pity for them. She wanted to enroll them in her father’s education system, but most of the kids who were in his school actually had money. They didn't want those kids being involved with the poor kids. So then many of the rich children's parents took their children out. After Malala had been shot, girls were still afraid to go to school and had the constant fear of being killed as well. They fear the Taliban violence, and still have to fight for the constant pressure on women. They face internal conflict, they choose whether to remain quiet, or act upon it and face the consequences. Even then, they are not allowed any freedoms or