“Rise and Rise again, until Lambs become Lions”.
This is a quote from
Ridley Scott’s 2010 film, Robin Hood, a line said by Robin’s father, which was supposedly
the impetus for the Magna Carta. It means trying and trying again, never giving
up on the ideas of liberty and freedom.
I was reminded of this
line when I read a quote from the father of Malala Yousafzai, the fifteen year
old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban for advocating education for everyone.
He said that
“The person who
attacked her wanted to kill her. She
fell temporarily but she will rise again”
Nothing terrifies a fundamentalist group or a totalitarian regime more than an educated population. That’s why the Taliban targeted Malala, because she called for education for everyone. An uneducated population can be cowed and convinced that whatever the regime is doing is right, because they don’t know any better. But an educated population do know better. They know right from wrong and how things should be. That’s why the first thing many totalitarian governments do is ban and burn books.
Nothing terrifies a fundamentalist group or a totalitarian regime more than an educated population. That’s why the Taliban targeted Malala, because she called for education for everyone. An uneducated population can be cowed and convinced that whatever the regime is doing is right, because they don’t know any better. But an educated population do know better. They know right from wrong and how things should be. That’s why the first thing many totalitarian governments do is ban and burn books.
Education, to quote the
West Wing, is “the Silver Bullet”. It is the key to stopping pretty much
anything, disease, war, you name it. Hence the old maxim, “those who do not
learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” Education allows for
self-improvement. Education not only affects one person, it affects an entire
population, benefiting one and all.
And if one thing is
more important than education, it is education for everyone. There are whole
countries where education is the preserve of either the upper classes, the
elites or of men. There are countries where women can’t even write their own
names. All of this, in the 21st Century. We are supposed to be
better than this by now.
That was what Malala was fighting for, and why
she was shot. She wanted everyone, regardless of gender to have the chance of a
full time education, something we should all support, and something we should
all be in favour of.
That is why I encourage
everyone who reads this blog – yes all six of you – to get involved in Gordon
Brown’s “Day for Malala” on November 10th – one month since she was
shot – and send a message to governments and groups, that education is one
thing we will not give up on. By 2015 we will have every child in Primary
School.
We need to send a
message across the world, a message that will be heard loud and clear by
governments, regimes and the Taliban alike. You can shoot one fifteen year old
girl; you can silence whole groups of journalists and activists. But you cannot
shoot; you cannot silence the whole world. No matter what you do, no matter how
many of us you try and kill, more will rise up to take our place and our voice
and our message will ring out all the louder, until the world takes notice. We
will not be silenced.
RISE AND RISE AGAIN. UNTIL LAMBS
BECOME LIONS.