Jim McMahon/Mapman ®
October 9, 2012, was an ordinary afternoon in the Swat Valley in northern Pakistan. Malala Yousafzai [yoo-suf-ZEYE], 15, was on a school bus waiting to go home. Suddenly, two gunmen in masks appeared.
“Who is Malala?” one of them yelled.
A feeling of terror filled the bus. Then the gunmen opened fire. One bullet hit Malala’s head. Two of Malala’s friends were struck in their arms. Then the gunmen ran off, leaving Malala to die.
It might be difficult to understand why anyone would try to murder an innocent girl on her way home from school. But some people in Pakistan did not view Malala for what she was: a bright and kind teenager. They saw her as a dangerous threat to their way of life.
Malala had been fighting for the right for all girls to go to school—work that made her famous around the world.
It also made her a target of an evil group of terrorists called the Taliban.
It was October 9, 2012. Malala Yousafzai [yoo-suf-ZEYE] was on a school bus. She was 15 years old. She lived in the Swat Valley in northern Pakistan. Suddenly, two men got on the bus. They had guns.
“Who is Malala?” one of them yelled.
The gunmen began shooting. A bullet hit Malala in the head. Two of her friends were hit in their arms. Then the gunmen ran away.
Why would anyone try to kill Malala? She was bright and kind. But some people in Pakistan did not see her that way. She was trying to change things in Pakistan. So they thought she was dangerous. They saw her as a threat to their way of life.
Malala had been fighting for girls. She wanted all girls to be able to go to school. She became famous for this work.
A group called the Taliban wanted to stop her. The Taliban are an evil group of terrorists.
At first, October 9, 2012, seemed like an ordinary day in the Swat Valley in northern Pakistan. Malala Yousafzai [yoo-suf-ZEYE], 15, was on a school bus waiting to go home. Suddenly, two masked gunmen stormed the bus.
One of them yelled out, “Who is Malala?”
Terror immediately filled the bus. Then the gunmen opened fire. Malala was hit in the head with a bullet, and two of her friends were struck in their arms. Then the gunmen fled, leaving Malala to die.
It seems inconceivable that anyone would attempt to murder an innocent girl on her way home from school. But some people in Pakistan did not view Malala as the bright, kind teenager she was. Instead, they perceived her as a dangerous threat to their way of life.
Malala had been strongly advocating for all girls to have the opportunity to go to school. Her activism had made her famous around the world.
It also made her a target of the Taliban, an evil group of terrorists in Pakistan.