Etsi alta kutakin ISOLLA KIRJOITETTUA sanaa vastaava selitys. Kirjoita oikean selityksen NUMERO laatikkoon (ei pistettä).
[Viemällä kursorin/nuolen kysymysmerkin kohdalle saatat nähdä suomenkielisen vinkin!]
Part 1
1. able to read and write
2. not connected with religious or spiritual matters
3. became greater, more serious, or more extreme
4. murdering (a usually prominent person) by sudden or secret attack, often for political reasons
5. set up or established on a firm basis, brought to existence
6. officially or legally prohibit, forbid, refuse to allow
7. publicly recommending or supporting
8. a list or outline of things to be considered or done
9. clear or obvious without needing any proof or explanation
10. to get or be given something
11. a fictitious name, especially one used by an author
12. proposed as a candidate for an honour or award
13. made (previously unknown or secret information) known to others
Malala Yousafzai was born on the 12th of July, 1997, in Mingora, Pakistan. Malala's father, Ziauddin Yousafzai, was a supporter of education and
? FOUNDED a school close to their home, which is not
? SELF-EVIDENT in a country where almost 30% of children did not finish primary school in 2008-2011 and only about 55% of adults are
? LITERATE.
The Taliban's military hold of northwest Pakistan
? INTENSIFIED when Malala was in primary school. Their
? AGENDA was to
? BAN television and music, stop girls from going to school and limit education all around. By the end of 2008, the Taliban had destroyed up to 400 schools. Despite this, Malala not only kept attending school, but also started writing a blog for the BBC in 2009
? ADVOCATING her own and other girls' right to an education. She wrote the blog under a
? PSEUDONYM, but after her identity was
? REVEALED, she and her father started
? RECEIVING death threats for promoting
? SECULAR education.
In 2011 Malala was
? NOMINATED for the International Children's Peace Prize and received the first National Youth Peace Prize in Pakistan for her activism. The Taliban's reaction to her growing influence was to get rid of her by
? ASSASSINATING her.
Part 2
14. continuing always or for a long time
15. a hard, strenuous fight against difficulties or opposition
16. doing physical harm or damage to (someone)
17. moved from one place to another
18. special rights or advantages granted or available only to a particular person or group
19. came or went into (a place)
20. the act of ending something by force
21. needed or demanded something
22. given or presented (an honour, right, or gift)
23. make possible (by creating the necessary conditions)
24. operation, medical procedure
When 15-year-old Malala was coming home from school in October 2012, a Taliban gunman
? ENTERED the school bus,shooting Malala in the head and
? INJURING two other girls. As Malala obviously
? REQUIRED specialist care, she was flown to a Pakistani military hospital for
? SURGERY, and later
? TRANSFERRED to Birmingham, England. Despite needing several operations, there was luck involved, as the bullet left no
? PERMANENT brain damage. In 2013, Malala was able to start going to school again in Birmingham.
Malala and her father co-founded The Malala Fund in 2013 to raise awareness and resources to
? ENABLE all girls to complete 12 years of free, safe, quality education.
In October 2014, Malala and Indian children's rights activist Kailash Satyarthi received the Nobel Peace Prize "for their
? STRUGGLE against the
? SUPPRESSION of children and young people and for the right of all children to education." Malala became the youngest person ever to receive the award.
In addition to the Nobel Peace Prize, Malala was
? BESTOWED honorary citizenship by the Canadian government in 2017. She is only the sixth person ever to receive the title. Honorary citizenship is entirely symbolic and does not come with any
? PRIVILEGES, such as being able to vote in elections in Canada. Malala continues her work as an education activist in the Malala Fund and still lives in the UK.