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DENVER - When the hundreds of students filed into the auditorium at South High School, they had no idea that they were about to meet a teenager regarded as one of the most influential people in the world.

"I'm here just to meet you and to speak to you and to hear from you," Malala Yousafzai said.

Commonly called Malala, the 19-year-old fought against the Taliban in Pakistan over the rights of girls to go to school.

"I was one of the students who were banned from education," Malala told the crowd.

She started a movement through a blog on a social media page of the BBC. Her father owned a school and they fought to educate girls instead of just leaving them for the sole duties of mother and wife.

In 2012, two masked gunmen boarded her school bus and tried to kill her by shooting her in the face.

"The terrorists, they tried all their best," Malala said to the assembly. "All their best they could do and they still have not stopped me. So, it means I am on the right path."

In 2014, Malala won the Nobel Peace Prize along with another children's rights activist. She was the youngest person to ever be named as a Nobel Laureate.

"They stopped this whole idea of women having freedom." Malala said. "It is women who need to decide what she wants to do and achieve in her life."

After the assembly, Malala met privately with refugee students from South High School. Senior Jeneba Belety fled Sierra Leone during a civil war. She says meeting Malala is life changing for her.


"Can you name any other big activist than Malala now?" Belety said. "And, the fact that she's around our age is inspiring."

Malala even joked with the students about being nervous about her college applications for next year. The students all insisted she had nothing to worry about considering what she's done so far.

"Whether it's standing up in a classroom and sharing your views; whether it's standing up in the gathering and showing your views," Malala said to the small group. "Sharing your views and understanding yourself, it's very important."

When Malala asked the assembly if they had any questions, Junior Viola Konneh ran up to the stage to ask if she would sign her book.

"She is showing us that girls can do anything that they want," Konneh said. "No one can stop them."

The civil rights leader from Pakistan is here with her non-profit, The Malala Foundation. She says she appreciates the warm greeting. She came to South High School because of its diverse population.

"This school is different in many ways and this is special in many ways," Malala said. "They give me so much love and like give standing ovation. Their clapping, their cheers in the crowd like that is inspiring and that gives you so much energy."

Copyright 2016 KUSA
Next they'll be wanting to drive or demanding to vote.
Yeah, she is a very special lady in many, many ways... but the Nobel... well up to 2008... was supposed to recognize a lifetime work... not a match... and not a beauty contest or viral video sort of thing...

Maybe just sour grapes...
I would imagine Malala despises liberals. I'm sure she knows how they undermined the progress that made her education possible. They're probably the reason she was shot in the head.
Originally Posted by AcesNeights
Next they'll be wanting to drive or demanding to vote.


PC or not that mad me laugh.

Al Gore in 2007 and Obama in 2009 did much to diminish the cache' of the Nobel peace prize.
When Yassar Arafat was given a Nobel Peace Prize for being a terrorist and Hussein was given one for things he "might" do (and surely never did), that prize lost all meaning.
Great young lady. Undeserving of the prize at this point in life.
Originally Posted by ironbender

Al Gore in 2007 and Obama in 2009 did much to diminish the cache' of the Nobel peace prize.


Yup!
Originally Posted by 4ager
When Yassar Arafat was given a Nobel Peace Prize for being a terrorist and Hussein was given one for things he "might" do (and surely never did), that prize lost all meaning.


For the chilluns!
An example of taking an extraordinary event and making it into a business. Almost everything now is run by handlers in the background for their own gain.
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