Introducing
Your new presentation assistant.
Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.
Trending searches
Malala and her family value and have a desire for more knowledge. This symbolizes a huge family value.
Books are a huge symbol for what Malala stands for. She values and treasures her school textbooks because she realizes how precious an education is.
The longing for peace is clear throughout the novel. Malala states, "Once again I wished for peace in our valley" (Yousafzai 185).
The dyna is the school van/truck that Malala was shot in. This is symbolic because this vehicle is where the big incident happened.
Malala is the main character in the novel. She wants to be remembered as the girl who fought for education, not the girl who was shot by the Taliban.
Malala's shooter is symbolic because he brought so much more attention to what she was fighting for. Everyone deserves education and he helped make it more known.
Malala and her family focus alot of their lives on religion. They are muslims and this is evident throughout the story. "I prayed to God every night to give me strength" (Yousafzai 142).
Malala's dad, Ziauddin Yousafzai, is her biggest supporter. He supported school for everyone, including girls. Ziauddin stands brave for what he believes in.
The Swat Valley is where Malala and her family are from. "... Swat is beautiful and we cannot bear to be away from it for long" (Yousafzai 193).
Malala and her father are great examples of bravery. Malala talks about her father saying he, "...wasn't afraid to criticize the authorities, even the army..." (Yousafzai 84).