The competition for the mark of shame is hard fought, but the title goes to the men who approached a van carrying girls home from school in Pakistan on Tuesday and asked for one very special 14-year-old. Then shot her in the head.
The world's worst cowards
are the members of the Pakistani Taliban. Perhaps they believe their
thick dark beards, dangerous weapons and fanatical religious
pronouncement make them fierce warriors. But their actions tell the true
story: The Pakistani Taliban are terrified of a 14-year-old girl named
Malala Yousufzai.
And why are they so afraid of Malala? Mostly, because she is not afraid of them.
Frida Ghitis
And because Malala is a relentless advocate of education for girls, something the Taliban find very threatening.
The Taliban, with all their bravado, seem to fear women most of all.
Taliban gunmen shot teen activist
The cravenness that has
come to define the group -- also known as the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan,
or TTP -- is easily matched by Malala's stunning bravery. The fearless
activist for girls' education now lies in a hospital bed trying to
recover from serious injuries to her head and neck. Overnight doctors
performed emergency surgery to remove a bullet near her spinal cord and
to relieve swelling in her brain.
Malala knew she was on a TTP hit list,
but she did not back down. The Taliban, whose religious, social and
political views are founded on a brutally anti-woman ideology, cannot
countenance even a young girl challenging their ideas on a blog.
Shortly after Tuesday's
assassination attempt, which also left two of Malala's school friends
wounded, TTP spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan acknowledged the group tried to
kill her and vowed they will try to do it again
if she survives. As is common, he couched the threats in extreme
interpretations of Islam and on repression and intimidation of women.
"Any female that, by any means, plays a role in the war against the
mujahedeen," Ehsan declared, "should be killed."
The TTP spokesman called
Malala's advocacy for education "a new chapter of obscenity," adding,
"We have to finish this chapter." He also accused her of being pro-West
and admiring President Barack Obama.
Malala started to become a problem for the TTP when she was just 11.
The Pakistani Taliban, who hold the same ideology but are not directly
affiliated with the Afghan Taliban, had taken over Pakistan's Swat
Valley. Pakistani politicians were turning a blind eye to what had
become an increasingly brutal regime. They executed their critics,
ordered all men to grow beards and whipped women in public as punishment
for real, imagined or fabricated offenses.
It was all about
imposing their will, their version of Islamic law, and subjugating the
entire population, but women in particular.
The Taliban reportedly
had destroyed more than 200 schools and ordered all girls' schools shut
down when Malala slowly emerged from obscurity. In 2009, she started
writing a blog for the BBC
under a pseudonym, talking about her dreams for the future and how the
Taliban were pushing those aspirations further and further out of reach.
Her story helped bring
attention to the disaster befalling the population of the storied Swat
Valley. At about the same time, the videotaped beating of a 17-year-old girl by a group of Taliban went viral in Pakistan, adding chilling images to a girl's lament.
Until then, Pakistan had
treated the fight against the Taliban as an American problem, something
going on across the border in Afghanistan. Malala helped Pakistanis
realize their own country, their own way of life were threatened by the
TTP. The government fought back and regained control of the region. She
continued to speak out and was the first recipient of her country's
National Peace Award last year. She and her cause became celebrated
throughout the country, and increasingly despised by extremists and
their supporters.
Rural areas of Pakistan
and the districts near the Afghanistan border include deeply traditional
regions from where the Taliban took much of their social views. Many
practices, particularly regarding women, are horrifying to more modern
Pakistanis living in places such as the capital, Islamabad.
The country has become a
dangerous incubator of fanatically enforced prejudice. A prominent
politician who opposed Pakistan's controversial blasphemy laws was killed last year. Just last month a Christian girl was sent to prison after her neighbors concocted blasphemy charges against her.
The country has become
one of the front lines of the struggle between modernity and the deeply
intolerant, misogynistic practices dating back centuries. Malala,
despite her young age, stands at the battle line of the push for
equality.
The rule of the Taliban in Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001 showed just how the outcome in Pakistan could affect everyone, but especially women's lives.
The TTP aims to impose precisely the kind of rules the Taliban forced
on Afghans. Afghan women were barred from working, studying, leaving
their homes without a male companion. Even laughing out loud was
prohibited. They became nonentities, stoned and beheaded at the local
stadium, banned from showing their faces, speaking their voices or
earning a living.
In 2002, just after the regime was toppled, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study of mental health in the country found a vast majority of Afghan women suffering from depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder.
A decade later, in
bordering Pakistan, in the aftermath of the assassination attempt
against Malala, many question if the threat has receded to the extent
the authorities claim.
By trying to kill a
bright and admired young girl in cold blood, the Taliban have revealed
not only their own moral makeup. They have also reawakened the Pakistani
people to the threat posed by extremists and the choices the country
faces.
Pakistanis are pressuring their populist politicians to speak out against the crime, to take sides.
Pakistan is home to the
world's worst cowards. But it's also Malalai's home. Let's hope she
makes it, and inspires many to follow in her small but indelible
footsteps. There's something -- and someone -- for the Nobel committee
to consider.
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