The innocent victims of senseless acts It is unfortunate that in the war of ideology and the evil quest for power,
children fall victim to the crossfire of needless violence
Remember Malala Yousufzai, the Pakistani girl from the province of Swat who
gained international fame when the Taliban shot her in the head in an attempt to
silence her? Malala grew up in a popular tourist venue famous for its natural
beauty and its summer festivals.
When the Taliban gained a foothold in the province, such festivities began to
disappear along with most of the tourists. The Taliban carried over their
doctrine of intolerance towards the education of girls. Malala, who was enrolled
in a school her father had started reacted by giving a speech back in 2008
titled “How dare the Taliban take away my basic right to education?”
She also started blogging for a major newssite under an assumed name, and as
her support grew, she began to go public about the right of all women to an
education. For her tireless activism at such a tender age, she was nominated for
the International Children’s Peace Prize in 2011. In the same year, she was also
awarded Pakistan’s National Youth Peace Prize.
Once her identity became public, the Taliban issued a death threat against
her, and they carried out their vile intentions on an attack in October 2012
against this 14-year-old girl when she was riding a bus home from school.
According to published accounts, a gunman boarded the bus and demanded to know
who Malala was. “Which one of you is Malala? Speak up, otherwise I will shoot
you all” he threatened and guessing correctly by the frightened look of other
school children towards Malala, he then approached her and fired his gun point
blank at her head, and injured two other school girls in the process.
She remained unconscious and in critical condition for weeks following the
attack. A military hospital in Peshawar removed a portion of her skull to treat
her swelling brain. Once her condition showed signs of improvement, she was
flown to the UK, where she remained under treatment for the next few months.
Less than six months after the attack, Malala began attending a school in
Birmingham, fortunate that her injuries did not damage her brain.
Preventing dastardly act
The international outrage that followed the shooting prompted a wave of
action in Pakistan and elsewhere. The Pakistanis, fed up with the doctrine of
Talibanism on their soil, demanded that their government weed out these
miscreants off their soil. The then president of the country called the act as a
heinous attack on ‘civilised people.’
Malala went on to garner international accolades and was even nominated for
the Nobel Peace Prize. She stood before the United Nations on her 16th birthday
in 2013 and gave a speech about the rights of children to education to a
standing ovation. In her oratory she said, “The terrorists thought they would
change my aims and stop my ambitions, but nothing changed in my life except
this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born
... I’m here to speak up for the right of education for every child.” She has
also written her autobiography, I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education
and Was Shot by the Taliban, that was released in October 2013.
Malala was a fortunate 15-year-old. Another 15-year-old Pakistani was not so
fortunate. Aitzaz Hassan died last week in a selfless act that has yet to
command the international attention that followed Malala’s shooting. This brave
boy intervened at the price of his own life to prevent a suicide bomber from
carrying out his dastardly mission.
According to media reports, the incident which took place last week happened
in a region in north-western Pakistan known for the proliferation of Taliban
activity and a beehive of fundamentalism and extremism. Hassan, was outside the
school grounds with some friends when they noticed a man with a suspicious gait
and a vest seemingly loaded with explosives walking purposefully towards the
school which had almost 2,000 students in attendance at the time of the
attack
Hassan and his friends immediately guessed the man’s motives, but it was
Hassan who went forward against the pleadings of his mates to prevent the man
from causing harm to his friends and school. He told them he had to stop him. He
had to do it. ‘He is going to school to kill my friends’. As he wrested with the
bomber outside the school gates, the coward released the detonators and the
explosion killed both of them, but mercifully there were no other reported
serious injuries.
Although his sacrifice has been noted by some international and regional
media, his ultimate sacrifice has yet to gain an international foothold. It may
come in time. As one writer noted, “It is sad and encouraging at the same time
to hear such a story about a Pakistani young boy. It is sad because he was young
and had not yet lived his life. His mother and father, his sisters and brother
will miss him; he was a child who had dreams and plans and talents which now
will never be explored, which cannot come true. But still, his life was not
wasted. It was sacrificed for the lives of so many other children, whose dreams
and plans can now come true.”
It is unfortunate that in the war of ideology and the evil quest for power,
children fall victim to the crossfire of needless violence. Many die without
knowing it is coming. A few are brave enough to prevent more deaths without
consideration to their own personal safety. Hassan was one such 15-year-old who
for the sake of others paid the ultimate price. Let his name be heralded by all
peace-loving people and rank high among our heroes. I salute you Aitzaz, and may
God have mercy on your soul.
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