I Am Malala

I Am Malala 歌词

歌曲 I Am Malala
歌手 英语听力
专辑 VOA慢速英语:教育报道
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[00:00.10] From VOA Learning English,
[00:03.08] this is the Education Report.
[00:06.36] Private schools in Pakistan
[00:08.93] have banned a book written by Malala Yousafzai
[00:12.45] from school libraries.
[00:14.46] The school's officials say parts of the book dishonour Islam,
[00:20.32] and they accuse the young education activist
[00:23.99] of acting as what they call a "propaganda tool of the West"
[00:29.70] to insult her country of birth.
[00:32.71] Malala Yousafzai shared her memories in the book "I Am Malala".
[00:39.70] "I Am Malala" is one of the best selling books in the world.
[00:44.87] But some groups in Pakistan have criticized it.
[00:49.13] Private schools in the country have decided
[00:52.28] to prevent their students from reading it.
[00:55.16] Adeeb Javedani is president of the All
[00:59.38] Pakistan Private Schools Management Association,
[01:04.36] the group represents more than 40,000 institutions
[01:08.99] across the country.
[01:10.59] He defends the decision to ban the book.
[01:14.61] Mr Javedani says it is unimaginable
[01:18.52] that a girl of Malala's age could write parts of the book.
[01:23.66] For example, he says she wrote
[01:27.59] that Ahmadis, a religious minority,
[01:30.50] have been declared infidels - unbelievers in Pakistan.
[01:35.58] Mr Javedani says these is no such movement taking place.
[01:41.40] The Ahmadi community was declared non-Muslims in the early 1970s.
[01:48.40] The book notes that Ahmadis say they are Muslims,
[01:52.43] but Pakistani laws prevent them from publicly stating that.
[01:57.59] Mr Javedani says someone representing Europe,
[02:02.43] a common term for the west,
[02:05.14] had written the book under the name of Malala Yousafzai.
[02:09.28] He also says Pakistani education officials
[02:14.32] have told his group that they do not plan
[02:18.20] to use the book in government and private schools.
[02:22.35] Professor Pervez Hoodbhoy works
[02:26.18] at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad.
[02:29.95] He and other rights activists defend Malala.
[02:34.61] They say pro-Taliban elements within the society
[02:39.20] are purposely misrepresenting the book.
[02:42.74] "She does not in her book say that Ahmadis are Muslims.
[02:47.47] She simply says that these are people who are being persecuted,
[02:51.58] and that is a fact of life.
[02:53.34] Nobody can dispute that Ahmadis today
[02:56.66] are the most persecuted of minorities,
[03:00.45] all of which are persecuted in Pakistan today," said Hoodboy. "
[03:03.62] The Professor also says that Malala is being wrongly
[03:08.40] accused of defending British writer Salman Rushdie,
[03:12.80] his book "The Satanic Verses" made many Muslims angry.
[03:18.12] Professor Hoodbhoy says the fact that Salman Rushdie
[03:23.25] is an unwelcome man in Pakistan shows the extreme lack of tolerance
[03:28.08] that has come to characterize Pakistani culture.
[03:32.23] Malala campaigned against Taliban attempts
[03:35.98] to blow up schools for girls in 2009
[03:39.70] in the Swat district which she was born.
[03:42.60] A military offensive later chased the Islamists from the district.
[03:48.53] And that's the VOA Learning English Education Report.
[03:53.34] I'm June Simms.
I Am Malala 歌词
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