As Free as a Bird - Malala's Memoir PDF
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Khushal School for Girls
Malala
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Summary
This is a memoir about Malala's childhood in Pakistan. She describes her experiences growing up as a girl in a traditional society, and how she defied expectations. The author details her relationship with her family, especially her father, and the challenges of societal norms.
Full Transcript
# As Free as a Bird ## Chapter 1 I am Malala, a girl like any other - although I do have my special talents. I am double-jointed, and I can crack the knuckles on my fingers and my toes at will. And I enjoy watching people squirm as I do it. I can beat someone twice my age at arm wrestling. I lik...
# As Free as a Bird ## Chapter 1 I am Malala, a girl like any other - although I do have my special talents. I am double-jointed, and I can crack the knuckles on my fingers and my toes at will. And I enjoy watching people squirm as I do it. I can beat someone twice my age at arm wrestling. I like cupcakes, but not candy. And I don't think dark chocolate should be called chocolate at all. I hate eggplant and green peppers, but I love pizza. I think Bella from *Twilight* is too fickle, and I don't understand why she would choose that boring Edward. As my girlfriends in Pakistan and I say, he doesn't give her any lift. Now, I don't care much for makeup and jewelry, and I'm not a girly girl. But my favorite color is pink, and I do admit I used to spend a lot of time in front of the mirror playing with my hair. And when I was younger, I tried to lighten my skin with honey, rose water, and buffalo milk. When you put milk on your face, it smells very bad. I say that if you check a boy's backpack, it will always be a mess, and if you check his uniform, it will be dirty. This is not my opinion. This is just a fact. I am a Pashtun, a member of a proud tribe of people spread across Afghanistan and Pakistan. My father, Ziauddin, and my mother, Toor Pekai, are from mountain villages, but after they married, they relocated to Mingora, the largest city in the Swat Valley, which is in northwest Pakistan, where I was born. Swat was known for its beauty, and tourists came from all over to see its tall mountains, lush green hills, and crystal clear rivers. I'm named for the great young Pashtun heroine Malalai, who inspired her countrymen with her courage. But I don't believe in fighting - even though my fourteen-year-old brother, Khushal, annoys me to no end. I don't fight with him. Rather, he fights with me. And I agree with Newton: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. So I guess you could say that when Khushal fights with me, I oblige him. We argue over the TV remote. Over chores. Over who's the better student. Over who ate the last of the Cheesy Wots-its. Over whatever you can think of. My ten-year-old brother, Atal, annoys me less. And he is quite good at chasings down the cricket ball when we kick it out of bounds. But he does make up his own rules sometimes. When I was younger and these brothers started coming along, I had a little talk with God. God, I said, you did not check with me before sending these two. You didn't ask how I felt. They are quite inconvenient sometimes, I told God. When I want to study, they make a terrible racket. And when I brush my teeth in the morning, they bang on the bathroom door. But I have made my peace with these brothers. At least with a pair of them, we can play a cricket match. At home in Pakistan, the three of us ran like a pack of rabbits, in and out of the alleys around our house; we played a chasing game like tag. Another game called *Mango, Mango*, a hopscotch game we called *Chindakh* (meaning "Frog"), and *Thief and Police*. Sometimes we rang the bell at someone else's house, then ran away and hid. Our favorite, though, was cricket. We played cricket day and night in the alley by our house or up on our roof, which was flat. If we couldn't afford a proper cricket ball, we made one out of an old sock stuffed with rubbish; and we drew wickets on the wall in chalk. Because Atal was the youngest, he would be sent to fetch the ball when it sailed off the roof; sometimes he grabbed the neighbors' ball while he was at it. He'd return with a cheeky grin and shrug. What's wrong? he'd say. They took our ball yesterday! But boys are, well, boys. Most of them are not as civilized as girls. And so, if I wasn't in the mood for their boyish ways, I'd go downstairs and knock on the wall between our house and Safina's. Two taps, that was our code. She'd tap in reply. I'd slip aside a brick, opening a hole between our houses, and we'd whisper back and forth. Sometimes we'd go over to one house or the other, where we'd watch our favorite TV show, *Shaka Laka Boom Boom* - about a boy with a magic pencil. Or we'd work on the little shoebox dolls we were making out of matchsticks and bits of fabric. Safina was my playmate from the time I was about eight. She's a couple of years younger than me, but we were very close. We sometimes copied each other, but one time I thought she had gone too far, when my favourite possession - my only toy, a pink plastic cell phone my father had given me - went missing. That afternoon, when I went to play with Safina, she had an identical phone! She said it was hers; she said she'd bought it at the bazaar. Well, I didn't believe her, and I was too angry to think straight. So when she wasn't looking, I took a pair of her earrings. The next day, a necklace. I didn't even like these trinkets, but I couldn't stop myself. A few days later I came home to find my mother so upset she wouldn't look at me. She had found the stolen trinkets in my small cupboard and had returned them. Safina stole from me first! I cried. But my mother was unmoved. You are older, Malala, You should have set a good example. I went to my room, drenched in shame. But it was the long wait for my father to come home that was worse. He was my hero - brave and principled - and I was his *jani.* He would be so disappointed in me. But he didn't raise his voice or scold me. He knew I was being so hard on myself already that he had no need to reprimand me. Instead, he consoled me by telling me about the mistakes great heroes had made when they were children. Heroes like Mahatma Gandhi, the great pacifist, and Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan. He relayed a saying from a story his father used to tell him. *A child is child when he's a child, even if he's a prophet.* I thought of our Pashunwali code, which governs how we Pashtuns live. One part of that code is *badala* - a tradition of revenge - where one insult must be answered by another, one death by another, and on and on it goes. I had had my taste of exacting revenge. And it was bitter. I vowed then that I would never partake in *badal*. I apologized to Safina and her parents. I hoped Safina would apologize, too, and return my phone. But she didn't say a thing. And, as difficult as it was to keep my new vow, I didn't mention my suspicion concerning the whereabouts of my phone. Safina and I quickly got back to being friends, and we and all the neighborhood children were back at out running and chasing games. At that time, we lived in a part of town far from the city center. Behind out house was a grassy lot scattered with mysterious ruins - statues of lions, broken columns of an old *stupa*, and hundreds of enormous stones that looked like giant umbrellas, where, in the summer, we played *parpartuni,* a game of hide-and-seek. In the winter, we made snowmen until our mothers called us in for a cup of hot milky tea and cardamom. For as long as I can remember, our house had been full of people: neighbors, relatives, and friends of my father's - and a never-ending stream of cousins, male and female. They came from the mountains where my parents grew up or they came from the next town over. Even when we moved from our tiny first house and I got my "own" bedroom, it was rarely my own. There always seemed to be a cousin sleeping on the floor. That's because one of the most important parts of the Pashtunwali code is hospitality. As a Pashtun, you always open your door to a visitor. My mother and the women would gather on our veranda at the back of the house and cook and laugh and talk about new clothes, jewelry, and other ladies in the neighbourhood, while my father and the men would sit in the men's guestroom and drink tea and talk politics. I would often wander away from the children's games, tiptoe through the women's quarters, and join the men. That, it seemed to me, was where something exciting and important was happening. I didn't know what it was, exactly, and I certainly didn't understand the politics, but I felt a pull to the weighty world of the men. I would sit at my father's feel and drink in the conversation. I loved to hear the men debate politics. But mostly I loved sitting among them - hypnotized by this talk of the big world beyond our valley. Eventually I'd leave the room and linger awhile among the women. The sights and sounds in their world were different. There were gentle, confiding whispers. Tinkling laughter sometimes. Raucous, uproarious laughter sometimes. But most stunning of all - The women's headscarves and veils were *gone.* Their long dark hair and pretty faces - made up with lipstick and henna - were lovely to see. I had seen these women nearly every day of my life observing the code of *purdah,* where they cover themselves in public. Some, like my mother, simply draped scarves over their faces; this is called *niqab.* But others wore *burgas*, long, flowing black robes that covered the head and face, so people could not even see their eyes. Some went so far as to wear black gloves and socks so that not a bit of skin was showing. I'd seen the wives be required to walk a few paces behind their husbands. I'd seen the women be forced to lower their gaze when they encountered a man. And I'd seen the older girls who'd been our playmates disappear behind veils as soon as they became teenagers. But to see these women chatting casually - their faces radiant with freedom - was to see a whole new world. I was never much of a hand around the kitchen - I'll admit that I tried to get out of chopping vegetables or cleaning dishes whenever I could - so I didn't linger there long. But as I ran off, I'd always wonder how it felt to live in hiding. Living under wraps seemed so unfair - and uncomfortable. From an early age, I told my parents that no matter what other girls did, I would never cover my face like that. My face was my identity. My mother, who is quite devout and traditional, was shocked. Our relatives thought I was very bold. (Some said rude.) But my father said I could do as I wished. *Malala will live as free as a bird,* he told everyone So I would run to rejoin the children. Especially when it was time for the kite-flying contests - where the boys would skillfully try to cut their competitors' kite strings. It was an exciting game, full of unpredictable escapes and plunges. It was beautiful, and also a ground I could see a future that would be cut down just like those kites - simply because I was a girl. Despite what my father said, I knew that as Safina and I got older, we'd be expected to cook and clean for our brothers. We could become doctors because *female doctors* were needed to care for *female patients.* But we couldn't be lawyers or engineers, fashion designers or artists - or anything else we dreamed of. And we wouldn't be allowed to go outside our homes without a male relative to accompany us. As I watched my brothers run up to the roof to launch their kites, I wondered how free I could ever really be. But I knew, even then, that I was the apple of my father's eye. A rare thing for a Pakistani girl. When a boy is born in Pakistan, *it's cause for celebration*. Guns are fired in the air. Gifts are placed in the baby's cot. And the boy's name is inscribed on the family tree. But when a girl is born, no one visits the parents, and women have only sympathy for the mother. My father paid no mind to these customs. I've seen my name - in bright blue ink - right there among the male names of our family tree. Mine was the first female name in three hundred years. Throughout my childhood, he sang me a song about my famous Pashtun namesake. *“O Malalai of Maiwand,”* he'd sing. “*Rise once more to make Pashtuns understand the song of honor. Your poetic words turn worlds around. I beg you, rise again.”* When I was young, I didn't understand what any of this meant. But as I grew up, I understood that Malalai was a *hero* and a *role model,* and I wanted to learn something from her. And when I started learning to read at age five, my father would brag to his friends. *“Look at this girl,”* he'd say. *“She is destined for the skies!”* I pretended to be embarrassed, but my father's words of praise have always been the most precious thing in the world to me. I was far luckier than most girls in one other way, too: My father ran a school. It was a humble place with nothing more than blackboards and chalk - and it was right next to a smelly river. But to me it was a *paradise.* My parents tell me that even before I could talk, I would toddle into the empty classrooms and lecture. I delivered lessons in my own baby talk. Sometimes I'd get to sit in on classes with the older children, in awe as I listened to everything they were being taught. As I grew, I longed to wear the uniforms I saw the big girls wearing when they arrived each day: *shalwar kamiz* - a long deep blue tunic and loose white pants - and white headscarf. My father started the school three years before I was born, and he was teacher, accountant, and principal - as well as janitor, handyman, and chief mechanic. He climbed up the ladder to change the lightbulbs and down the well when the pump broke. When I saw him disappear down that well, I wept, thinking he would never come back. Although I didn't understand it at the time, I know now that there was never enough money. After paying the rent and salaries, there was not much left for food, so we often had little for dinner. But the school had been my father's dream, and we were all happy to be living it. When it was finally time for me to go to classes, I was so excited I could hardly contain myself. You could say I grew up in a school. The school was my world, and my world was the school.