Malala Yousafzai Calls on World Leaders to Invest in Books, Not
Bullets
Jul 7, 2015
By Teri Whitcraft
Education activist Malala Yousafzai is calling on world leaders to invest in
books, not bullets.
Speaking at the Oslo
Education Summit in Oslo , Norway, the
17-year-old Nobel Laureate declared that every child deserves access to 12 years
of free education. “The poorest girls get just three years of schooling
because of a lack of will and vision by our governments,” Malala said ahead of
her Tuesday speech. “This is unacceptable.”
In a paper published by
the Malala Fund called Beyond Basics, Malala calls on low- and middle-income
countries to commit a minimum of 20 percent of their national budgets to
education, compared to the current average of 15 percent. A new report
published by theUNESCO and Education
for All shows that the number of out of school children and young adolescents
between the ages of 6 and 15 years is on the rise – up to 124 million in 2013,
compared to 122 million in 2011.
“Leaders of the 21st
century must deliver on their promises to invest in the future and start
investing in books, education and hope, rather than in weapons, war and
conflicts,” Malala said. “We will not stop. We will continue to speak out and
raise our voices until we see every child in school.”
During the World
Education Forum in May, 100 countries committed to providing free primary and
secondary education to all children by 2030. According to the UNESCO report,
the cost of providing 12 years of free education to every child is an estimated
$340 billion per year through 2030 – or $39 billion more than current
commitments. But Malala says that shortfall is a pittance compared to global military spending.
“The shocking truth is
that world leaders have the money to fully fund global education - but they are
choosing to spend it on other things, like their military budgets,” Malala
wrote in a post on the Malala Fund blog. “In fact, if the whole world stopped
spending money on the military for just 8 days, we could have the $39 billion
needed to provide 12 years of free, quality education to every child on the
planet.”
When not speaking to
world leaders and advocating for education, Malala is making plans for her 18th
birthday on July 12. Instead of presents, she is asking supporters to send a
message to world leaders: "Post a photo of yourself holding up your
favorite book and share why you choose #BooksNotBullets," she wrote.
"Tell world leaders to fund the real weapon for change, education!"
Structure of the Lead:
WHO- Malala Yousafzai
WHEN -not
given
WHAT- declared that every child deserves access to 12
years of free education.
WHY -command world leaders
should spend more money on education.
WHERE- Oslo Education Summit in Oslo , Norway
HOW- make a speech
Keywords:
1. Summit:召回
2. Laureate:違法的
3. unacceptable:盡全力去…
4. commit:承認
5. UNESCO:聯合國教科文組織
6. Forum:座談會
7.commitment:承諾
8. shortfall:缺口
9. pittance:微薄
10. advocate:提倡
Education is very important, education can let the poor get out of poverty, and education can let people know many things. The terrorists want to control the people that don't have any knowledge and they can exploit them.
回覆刪除I think those countries who attaching importance to the military affairs should turn attention to education!!!
Malala is really a brave girl. If I live in no education, I think I am confused and do not how to solve it. I admire Malala can fight for everyone education. I rejoice that I can go to school and learning.
回覆刪除