She claps a hand to her mouth and giggles, while later a
camera shot of her computer shows her perusing pictures of
Pakistani cricketer Shahid Afridi, tennis pro Roger Federer and
actor Brad Pitt.
But the young Pakistani woman who on Friday opens a summit of
world leaders at the United Nations otherwise comes across in
"He Named Me Malala" as a formidable proponent of exactly what
prompted the Taliban to try to kill her in her native Swat
Valley: education for everyone, but particularly for girls.
"I am those 66 million girls who are deprived of education," she
says in the film. "I'm not a lone voice, I'm many and our voices
are our most powerful weapons. One child, one teacher, one book
and one pen -- they can change the world."
The 2012 attack on Yousafzai by a Taliban fighter who stopped
her school bus and shot her left her with head injuries she was
not expected to survive.
The film shows intimate details of the long process of
rehabilitation after she was airlifted to England for medical
care, undergoing therapy that included learning how to catch a
ball again and recovering her power of speech.
She still has no hearing in her left ear and her motor control
of the left side of her face is impaired, but the film shows she
hasn't lost a jot of the bravery that made her a target for the
Taliban.
Following a meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama, an interviewer
asks if she had spoken to Obama about her concern that drone attacks
"are fuelling terrorism", to which she responds, "Yes, of course."
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The film opens with a tale explaining that she is named for an
Afghani heroine who rallied retreating Pashtun fighters to fight
against British invaders at the 1880 Battle of Maiwand, and was
killed during the fighting.
Asked by Guggenheim if he knew that giving his only daughter that
name would make her different from other women in Swat, her father,
Ziauddin Yousafzai, says: "You're right."
The film is effective at teasing out the strong bond between father
and daughter, and also shows some of the difficulties the family has
had adjusting to life in Britain.
Malala says she would give anything to see her home in Swat again,
despite Taliban vows to kill her if she returns.
"When I think of home I miss the dirty streets, I miss the river, I
miss my friends. I just want to see that house just once," she says.
But for all that her life has been turned upside down, when asked if
she has ever been angry about what happened, she says: "Never."
The film is released in the United States on Oct 2.
(Michael Roddy is the Entertainment Editor for Reuters in Europe.
The views expressed are his own)
(Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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