Malala was born in 1997. At the time, the Swat Valley was a popular tourist spot, known for its thick forests and rushing rivers. But life in the region changed after the Taliban came to power.
The group eliminated many basic freedoms, including listening to music and watching TV. The Taliban threatened or punished anyone who disobeyed them, even destroying hundreds of schools and attacking teachers and students.
Despite the risks, Malala’s father didn’t close the school he had founded. Many parents stopped sending their kids to the school. But Malala and some of her classmates continued to attend—in secret. They no longer wore their uniforms and hid their books under their clothes as they walked to school.
In 2009, Malala started writing a blog called Diary of a Pakistani Schoolgirl. She described the dangers she and other girls faced from the Taliban. The blog became popular in Pakistan and beyond. Malala was also interviewed on TV about the power of school.
“Girls’ education is really important,” she told Scholastic News years later. “That’s why the terrorists are afraid of it. They do not want women to be empowered.”