
Propagandists floated this falsely captioned photo, trying to link Malala with Salman Rushdie (it’s actually EU President Martin Schulz) and Taslima Nasreen (who complained later in her blog about how religious Malala is, and how Taslima was not being granted a meeting with her)
I was invited to speak at an event in the Boston area recently titled “Celebrating Malala”. I talked about the hostile propaganda against her in her home country Pakistan, and the need to support her regardless of misgivings about how ‘the west’ or others are ‘using’ her. Scroll down to see the slides I shared with my presentation. Below, the report I sent to The News, reproduced below with additional links:
BOSTON: Several Pakistani professional and community organisations based in New England hosted an event on Saturday night titled βCelebrate Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzaiβ.
It was thanks to Malala that these organisations joined hands for the first time to organise an event, noted Dr Khalil Khatri, a Sindh Medical College graduate and Rotarian who conducted the event wearing a natty ajrak bow-tie.
The Association of Pakistani Physicians of New England (APPNE), the Pakistani Association of Greater Boston (PAGB), Organization of Pakistani Entrepreneurs (OPEN), New England Pakhtoon Association, and Pakistani American Association of New Hampshire subsidised the event allowing for low-cost tickets.
Indian origin American Dr Kumble Rajesh who runs the Lowell Community Health Center where APPNE doctors volunteer had also sent a donation.
The organisers showed a video of Malalaβs inspiring speech after learning that she had won the Nobel Peace Prize.
Dr Rajeshβs daughter Ritu, a high school senior, told the gathering that her family was proud to support APPNE and Malala. βWe are glad that APPNE, which has supported so many good causes has chosen to honor such a hero amongst us.β
βMalalaβs story is inspirational to everyone, especially all young women in the world,β said Ritu. βHer courage in the face of such terrible adversity is humbling. She has stood tall in this very violent world and spoken to us about the power of education. Her story does not know any boundaries nor any religion. Even if a small number of us share the same passion she does about education, the world would be a different place.β
APPNE President Dr Muhammad Ramzan said that as a neurologist it hurts to see the facial nerve palsy on the face of a beautiful young girl, a permanent reminder of the attack Malala survived. He urged Pakistani Americans to do what they could for education back in their home communities in Pakistan.
Dr Jamila Khalil, a dentist and President of the New England Pakhtoon Association, said that as a Pakhtoon, a Pakistani and a woman, she was proud of Malala. She herself was born in a village in Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa where there are no schools for girls beyond grade five.
βI would have been taken out of school if we were still living there,β she said. βI was put in a burqa at the age of nine. My mother never went to school. Today, I see girls going through the same struggle there. I have lots of love for my home country and I miss it. But these are things we have to change.β
Dr Salman Malik who heads Pakistani American Association of New Hampshire, also a dentist, said that as the Pakistani community in the USA was maturing, it was good to see so many different organisations come together.
He said it was surprising to learn that there are 75 Pakistani organisations in America representing 450,000 Pakistanis. βWe need to communicate more. Malala has given us a good way to start the conversationβ.
OPEN President Kewan Khwaja listed the key elements of entrepreneurship that Malalaβs achievements and personality embody: vision, consistency, passion, executing her vision and taking a moment of adversity and converting it into an opportunity.
Isra Hussain, a Pakistani American studying at Boston College, said that Malala has inspired her to take forward her own passion for developing acceptance and respect for individuals with learning or mental disabilities in Muslim societies, particularly Pakistan.
Rotarian Rachel Williams shared details of one of the causes she is raising money for, to complete a girlsβ school in Jamrud Agency.
PAGB President Tina Khan, honorary Consul General of Pakistan Shahid Khan, and Ethan Casey, author of βAlive and Well in Pakistanβ, and others also addressed the gathering before dinner was served, followed by live Pushto music
Slides used for my presentation on the propaganda against Malala:
Still from a 2009 documentary film by NYT reporter Adam Ellick. And look what they did to him:
(Thanks to Muneeb ur Rehman of ‘Laal’)
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tagged: APPNE, Dr Khatri, Malala, Malik Siraj Akbar, OPEN, PAGB, Pakhtoon Association |
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