Pak Private Schools’
Association launches anti-Malala documentary
'I am not Malala's Day' is observed on July
12 in private schools as lectures and seminars are held to 'expose' Malala's
western agenda.
Pakistan’s Private
Schools’ Association on Monday launched a documentary on Pakistani education
activist Malala Yousafzai for her controversial views on Islam, marriage and
her pursuit of the Western agenda.
Malala, who
turned 24 on Monday, was the co-recipient of the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize for her
struggle against the suppression of children and young people and for the right
of all children to education. Having received the prize at the age of 17,
Malala is the youngest Nobel laureate. She shared the prize with Kailash
Satyarthi, a children’s rights activist from India.
Addressing a
press conference at his office in Gulberg here the All-Pakistan Private Schools
Federation president Kashif Mirza said: “Through this documentary film — I am not Malala, we will tell 20 million students in 200,000 private
schools across the country about her controversial views on Islam, marriage,
pursuing of Western agenda.”
“The idea behind this is we want to expose Malala among the youth as it does
not get impressed by her so-called story of the struggle for women rights,”
Mirza said.
He said Malala
had advocated “partnership” that is adultery in Islam. “Marriage is a sunnah of
the Prophet (PBUH) and partnership is adultery,” he said.
‘I am not
Malala’s Day’ is also observed on July 12 in private schools as lectures and
seminars are held to expose her western agenda to students.
Mirza said
Malala has categorically rejected the institution of marriage and suggested
that ‘partnership’ is better than getting married.
“Malala has attacked
the institution of marriage and family structure by advocating that people
should live in sin. No one can justify Muslims living together without marriage
as it is strongly condemned in Islam,” he said.
Similarly, Mirza
said in her book, I am Malala,
the Nobel Peace winner has highly controversial material in it, which is
contrary to the teachings of Islam, Quranic injunctions, the ideology of Islam
and Pakistan’s founder Mohammad Ali Jinnah and the Pakistan Army.
“This book is
written at the behest of western forces that used Malala for their ulterior
motives. Malala has declared Islam and Pak army as ‘militant’ in her
controversial book. She also criticised Quranic verses about two women’s
testimony to be equal to that of a man and also about the four witnesses in a
rape case,” he said.
Mirza said a
group photo with writer Tasleema Nasreen and strong ties with an Indian for the
Nobel award are enough to explain Malala’s desires.
Mirza alleged
that her blog in BBC under the name “Gul Makai” was written by someone else as
she could not even read or write by then.
“Malala’s father
Ziauddin had admitted in a TV programme that her blog was written by BBC
correspondent Abdul Hai Kakar and the book ‘I am Malala‘ was written by Christina Lamb,” he
said.
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