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Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls

Malala Yousafzai Read By Zainab Salbi

Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls

Rebel Girls

Kids & Family, Stories For Kids, Education For Kids

4.57K Ratings

🗓️ 10 September 2024

⏱️ 21 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Education and peace activist Malala Yousafzai became a household name because of her vocal activism around the education of girls in her hometown in Pakistan. In 2012, at only 15 years old, she was shot by members of the Taliban for her work. Malala survived the attack and has since become an internationally known advocate and the youngest person ever to receive a Nobel Peace Prize. Today, Malala continues raising her voice at every turn to draw attention to the plight of girls around the world and to advocate for peace “in every home, every street, every village, every country.” [This episode originally aired March 2021.] About the Narrator Zainab Salbi is best known as an international humanitarian, journalist and author. After decades of working in the shadow of violent conflict, Salbi has emerged as a leading advocate for unity at a time of deepening divides. She is the author of Between Two Worlds - Escape from Tyranny: Growing Up in the Shadow of Saddam, The Other Side of War: Women’s Stories of Survival and Hope, If you Knew Me You Would Care, and her latest, Freedom Is an Inside Job: Owning Our Darkness and Our Light to Heal Ourselves and the World. She is also the founder of Women For Women International. Credits This podcast is a production of Rebel Girls, Inc. It’s based on the book series Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls. Executive Producer is Katie Sprenger. This episode was produced, sound designed, and mixed by Isaac Kaplan-Woolner, written by Alexis Stratton and proofread by Ariana Rosas. Original theme music was composed and performed by Elettra Bargiacchi. Special thanks to the whole Rebel Girls team who make this podcast possible. For more, visit www.rebelgirls.com.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Once upon a time there was a girl who thought every child should have the chance to learn.

0:11.0

Her name is Malala.

0:16.0

Malala's family lived in a small house in the Swat Valley in Northern Pakistan,

0:22.0

where rivers flowed crystal clear and mountains jotted up along the horizon.

0:30.0

Malala's father's Yaudin was a school principal in the city of Mangora.

0:36.0

As a little girl, Malala often stood in front of empty classrooms,

0:41.4

pretending to teach. When she was old enough, she proudly put on a white and blue

0:47.4

uniform and headed to school herself. But in the 2000s, a new strict political group called the Taliban

1:00.9

started to take over Malala's city. They said many things were wrong, like

1:07.3

music, movies, dancing, and girls' schools.

1:13.0

Malala was worried that they would close her school.

1:18.0

So each night when she went to bed, she prayed,

1:22.0

please God, tell me what to do. I'm a small girl, but maybe you have a small

1:29.0

job for me. Little did Malala know, her small voice would grow loud and strong, and would one day echo

1:40.7

around the world.

1:55.9

I'm Zainab Selby, and is Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls, a fairy tale podcast about the Rebel Woman who Inspire Us. On this episode, the Education Activists and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate,

2:05.8

Malala YusebZI.

2:10.0

When Malala was growing up, she loved Pizza, the color pink, and her two younger brothers,

2:17.6

even though they fought all the time.

2:22.1

More than anything, though, Malala loved school.

2:25.8

She read stacks of books. She gave speeches in class and scribbled out answers to math problems.

2:35.0

Her bedroom wall was lined with glimmering trophies celebrating her achievements.

...

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