Fifteen-year-old Malala Yousefzai relaxes. The Pakistani girl shot by the...

Fifteen-year-old Malala Yousefzai relaxes. The Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban has made her first video statement since she was nearly killed, released Monday, saying she is recovering. Speaking clearly but with a slight stiffness in her upper lip, Malala said that she was "getting better, day by day." (Feb. 4, 2013) Credit: AP

Somewhere in Pakistan there is a member of the Taliban who fancies himself a holy warrior for shooting an unarmed teen in the head while she was on her way home from school last Oct. 9.

Whatever the gunman's self-image, the rest of the world thinks of him as neither holy nor a warrior but an ignorant, misogynistic thug. As a public-relations gesture -- and spreading fear is the Taliban's idea of public relations -- the shooting backfired spectacularly.

Malala Yousefzai, 15, became an international heroine and a symbol of the lengths to which the Taliban would go to prevent girls from getting an education. Malala had urged other Pakistani girls to get an education, a fatal sign of "Western thinking," in the Taliban's estimation.

She was quickly flown to England, both for medical care -- part of her skull had been blown off, she faced unknown brain damage and impaired hearing -- and for protection against the Taliban, who now realized that rather than eliminating a nuisance they had badly damaged their cause.

On Monday, Malala appeared in a video urging "every girl, every child" to be educated, and making a pitch for the Malala Fund, a girls' education charity.

Doctors at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital successfully rebuilt her skull, restored hearing in her left ear, reported that she would have no lasting cognitive damage and cleared her to return to school.

She will probably stay in England for the time being, both to go to school and for her own safety, but her courage, resilience and adherence to her cause of female education will be a standing rebuke to the Taliban's version of Islam.

Dale McFeatters is a syndicated columnist.

Newsday Logo

ONE-DAYSALEUnlimited Digital Access25¢ for 5 6 months

ACT NOW

SALE ENDS SOON | CANCEL ANYTIME