By Ross Kaminsky
Malala Yousafzai can't speak for herself, and it remains to be seen whether
she ever will again. For the crime of going to school -- and blogging about it
-- she was shot in the head by a Taliban assassin while in her school bus.
Yousafzai, now 14, knew the risk she was taking when at the age of 11 and
under a pen name ("Gul Makai") she began posting an online diary
which then appeared on the BBC's website under the banner "Diary of a Pakistani schoolgirl." This followed the
Taliban's 2007 overrunning of the Swat Valley where she lives, including the
destruction of hundreds of schools for girls.
On Monday, Malala was flown to England for care, perhaps as much to protect
her from another near-certainassassination
attempt as to get better medical treatment than is available in Pakistan.
Malala's closest friend, Shazia Ramzan, was also shot by the Taliban
assassin. Fortunately, her wounds, in her shoulder and hand, were not
life-threatening. Shazia is giving voice to the millions of girls like herself
and Malala, taking on a similarly brave mantle. In a weekend interview with the UK's Daily
Mail newspaper, Shazia said "[Malala] will recover and we will go
back to school and study together again."





.jpg)















