Swat Valley, Pakistan (CNN) — After the Pakistani Taliban shot her along with Malala Yousufzai, Kainat Ahmad couldn’t sleep for two days.
By now, millions around the world know how 14-year-old Malala and her classmates were attacked in their school van in the Swat Valley, a bastion of traditional Muslim practices in Pakistan.Malala: A global symbol, but still just a kid
Her attackers have vowed to kill Malala for demanding education for girls. Now she’s fighting for her life at an English hospital, listed in stable condition Wednesday and unable to speak.
But lesser-known Kainat can, and she shared her story in an exclusive interview.
The history of the Pakistani Taliban Malala’s recovery after Taliban attack Pakistanis outraged by Taliban attack
Speaking from her hospital room in Mingora, the 16-year-old described her startled reaction and lingering fears over the attack.Kainat, who was shot in the upper right arm, displayed a thoughtful demeanor as she chatted with CNN journalists
She vocalized what her friend Malala long preached: Girls, go to school and study, an idea violently opposed by the Taliban.“I want to tell all the girls to continue their mission to get an education,” Kainat said Tuesday.
“Girls’ education here is more important than boys’ because boys can do any sort of work. However, girls can’t just do any sort of job. Girls must have respectful jobs so that they can feel secure.”
The 10th-grader toughed out the ordeal. She said she has no regrets about defying a group that wants to stop girls from learning.
“God willing, I will continue my education,” she said.
The attack occurred on October 9. Attention has focused on Malala because the Taliban targeted her over activism.
The shooting prompted an unusually strong and united reaction of disgust and anger in Pakistan and other countries. Rallies supporting Malala have spread nationwide.
Anger has been directed toward the Pakistani Taliban, the extremist group that has claimed responsibility for the shooting and said it will seek to kill Malala if she recovers from her injuries.
Attack on Pakistani schoolgirl galvanizes anti-Taliban feeling
The group, which operates in northwestern Pakistan along the border with Afghanistan, has fallen out of favor for such attacks. A 2009 video that emerged of the flogging of a teenage girl in the Swat Valley enraged Pakistanis.
Kainat appreciated attention from hospital visitors — from reporters to government officials — and was gratified to emphasize the need for girls’ education.
“I can’t believe what’s happened, but I am happy everyone is here to see me,” she said.She can remember just a snippet of the attack. She said she was talking to her friend about an Urdu-language exam when a male approached.
“He asked, ‘Who is Malala?’ When someone told him, he started firing. Sir, because of this, Malala suddenly fell,” she said.
Kainat, who fainted during the attack, couldn’t describe the shooter.
Millions of children face Malala’s fight for education
“I didn’t see anything,” she said. “I just heard the gunshots. I don’t know what happened. I just passed out.”
She woke up in an emergency room. It has since dawned on her that the incident has gone viral, with people across the world viewing defiant female Pakistani students like her and Malala as heroic.So far, the terror hasn’t worn off as she recovers from her wound.
“I want to tell you that when I think about what happened, it’s still in my head and sometimes it’s terrifying,” she said. The attackers shot a third girl, who also survived.
Kainat’s remarks focus on Malala and her classmates. She hopes other girls “stay ambitious in their studies.”
A spokesman for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham said Wednesday that Malala “continued to impress doctors by responding well to her care.”
Kainat wants Malala to recover.“She was good friends with everyone,” Kainat said. “I hope Malala gets better as soon as possible and comes back to her country and joins us at school again.”
Perhaps fearing for her safety, she refuses to comment on who attacked her, but admits the incident has badly affected her life.
LET US NOT FORGET: As Malala stated in her talk, this day is not about me, it is for ‘all children’.
Almost half a year after the Taliban attack, the two girls injured alongside Malala struggle to deal with the not-so-pleasant notoriety that came with being associated with the young female education activist.
Kainat Riaz, 16a, and Shazia Ramzan, 14, were squeezed on either side of Malala on the bench of the school bus when a Taliban gunman boarded the bus and shot the teenage activist. Malala was shot in the head and neck. Kainat was shot through her upper right arm and required four stitches. Shazia was injured in her left hand and shoulder.
The attack made Malala an international symbol of the many lives claimed by the violent extremism that plagues Pakistan and highlighted the country’s education crisis.
Thanks to CNN News
Where are Kainat and Malala’s friends today?
July 12, 2013 by Team Celebration
Filed Under: CA-- USES, CONTRIBUTORS, Uncategorized, WORLD EVENTS, YOUTH of ACTION™ Tagged With: 14, 16, A Celebration of Women, children's education, educate a girl, girls being shot by Taliban, Kainat Riaz, Pakistan, Pakistani girls, Pakistani Taliban, Pakistani women, Shazia Ramzan, shootings, Take Action, Taliban, Where are Kainat and Malala's friends today?, Where is Kainat today?, woman, women taking action, women.
About Team Celebration
Team Celebration is a devoted group of women dedicated to sharing information that will better the lives of all women making this space a truly convenient Resource for Women globally. Speak Your Mind: You are invited to leave comments and questions below.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You simply type a KEY WORD into our SEARCH BOX at TOP RIGHT of Homepage and a list of associated topic articles offering truly educational and informative features will be at your fingertips.