Malala, the Muslim Feminist

Though she did not win the Nobel Peace Prize this year, the world is still abuzz about Malala Yousafzai – the now-16-year-old who was shot in the head by a Taliban gunman one year ago for standing up for her belief in women’s education in Pakistan. Check out this interesting article featuring Yousafzai and discussing feminism as a cross-cultural movement:

For Muslim girls and women around the world, however, [Malala’s] story is more than just a tale of survival. In Malala’s frank prose is proof that feminism, or the desire for equality through education and empowerment, is not the terrain of any one culture or faith. In the first few pages of the book, we are introduced to Malalai of Maiwand, a Pashtun heroine of old for whom Yousafzai was named. Malalai rallied Pashtun men to fight the invading British, venturing bravely onto the battlefield and dying under fire. Her namesake has done the same and survived. In later pages, we meet Gul Makai, another Pashtun heroine, who used the Quran to teach her elders that war is bad. It was under her name that Yousafzai wrote her first published work, the diary of a schoolgirl banned from school in a Swat controlled by the Taliban. In the legend, Gul Makai is able to convince her elders of the evils of conflict; she marries her love, a schoolmate. The legend of Malala, who no longer uses a pseudonym, has just begun.

Read the full piece here, and watch her wow Jon Stewart of the Daily Show in this fantastic interview below:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjGL6YY6oMs&w=420&h=315]