Malala Yousafzai, activist, youngest Nobel Laureate and the most famous person to graduate from Oxford University this year revealed a whole new side to herself aside from being an advocate for girls’ education and women’s equality, when she became the cover star for British Vogue for its 2021 July edition.
British Vogue’s Editor in Chief Edward Enninful took to his social media feeds to share the wonderful news along with stunning shots of Malala in brilliant hue of red, white and blue. When it comes to people I admire, @Malala Yousafzai is right at the top. Sharing the cover, Edward wrote, “At 23, the worldтАЩs most famous university graduate has already lived so many lives. Activist, author, tireless campaigner for girlsтАЩ education, daughter, sister, student and survivor. ItтАЩs hard to believe it was only a decade ago that she was a young teenager with a passion for learning, living in PakistanтАЩs Taliban-controlled Swat Valley, blogging about her experience for the BBC and giving a voice to girls denied the right to learn. A near-fatal attempt on her life in 2012 тАУ or what she calls тАЬthe incidentтАЭ тАУ brought her to Britain for specialist surgery. But she didnтАЩt stop there. “
The information was shared through the Twitter handle of Arab News Pakistan on early Wednesday.
“Pakistani Nobel Peace Prize co-recipient @Malala Yousafzai is @BritishVogue magazine’s July cover star,” tweeted Arab News Pakistan.
Malala in an interview with the British magazine said that she enjoyed ‘each and every moment’ at Oxford University including visiting McDonald’s and playing poker. She completed her philosophy, politics and economics degree at Oxford University last year, reported Daily Mail.
Discussing her time at university, she told the publication: “I was excited about literally anything. Going to McDonald’s or playing poker with my friends or going to a talk or an event.”
“I was enjoying each and every moment because I had not seen that much before.”
She said, she had “never really been in the company of people my own age because I was recovering from the incident, and travelling around the world, publishing a book and doing a documentary, and so many things were happening. At university I finally got some time for myself.”
Yousafzai said her fame affected her schooling in Birmingham, where she was educated after leaving Pakistan, reported Daily Mail.
‘People would ask me things like, “What was it like when you met Emma Watson, or Angelina Jolie or Obama?” she said.
“And I wouldn’t know what to say. It’s awkward, because you want to leave that Malala outside the school building, you want to just be a student and a friend,” she said.
Yousafzai, who was pictured on the British Vogue cover in a red headscarf, also discussed the importance of the garment for her culturally.
‘It’s a cultural symbol for us Pashtuns, so it represents where I come from,’ she said.
“And Muslim girls or Pashtun girls or Pakistani girls, when we follow our traditional dress, we’re considered to be oppressed, or voiceless, or living under patriarchy. I want to tell everyone that you can have your own voice within your culture, and you can have equality in your culture”, said Yousafzai in an interview with Vogue, reported Daily Mail.
Born in Pakistan in 1997, Yousafzai was shot in the head by a Taliban gunman at the age of 15 on her way back to home from school in the Swat District.
She was targeted for speaking out about the plight of girls in her region, who were banned from going to school by the Taliban.