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Hello everyone. Thank you for being here.
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I'm so honored and humbled to have this opportunity.
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Truthfully when I was asked to speak here I was so nervous,
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and then I thought, the theme of today is 'Start Now',
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so perhaps looking back at my journey
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I can share three lessons that I've learned
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that have been invaluable to how I've lived my life.
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And I hope that these are useful to those of you
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who are starting something now as well.
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The first lesson is that knowledge is best acquired through human connection.
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I was born in Pakistan,
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my parents came from a humble origin,
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my father was orphaned when he was 7-year-old,
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and my mother was married to my father before she ever got to go to college.
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So my parents worked very very hard
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and gave us the best education that we could afford.
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That meant that I had a privileged upbringing.
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But all around me,
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I could sense that something in my society was crumbling.
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There was raising poverty,
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gender imbalance,
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extremism and religious radicalism
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and terrorism.
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I didn't understand it,
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but I thought, perhaps I can go to those who live this truth.
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So at the age of 14, I began volunteering in women's prisons.
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In those prisons where women who had been convicted of crime
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but also their children.
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Children born in captivity who had never seen the outside world.
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They had no one else.
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I understood there
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what it meant to be discarded before you were ever born.
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And the conditions that lead to hatred, violence and resentment.
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When I was 16, my best friend died in an earthquake,
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because the building in which he lived was made from faulty material.
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I dealt with my grief
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by spending the next year volunteering in an earthquake relief camp.
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I was the only female volunteer,
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so that meant that any issue relating to women or girls
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was brought to me.
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For the next year I was taking women to the hospital
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because breast milk had frozen inside them,
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or spending the morning inside a hot tent,
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chatting away with girls, knowing that we cannot go outside
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because their fathers and bothers had told them they could not be visible.
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That's when I understood what it meant to be a woman
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in the hardest circumstances in the world
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feeling that my very existence is a source of shame.
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The lessons that I learned in these places, from these people,
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I could never have found in school or in books,
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and these were the lessons that guided my decision and my character
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for the rest of my life.
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So to those of you who are seeking knowledge,
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I urge you, go to the heart of it.
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Find the people who live that reality everyday
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and approach them with empathy.
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You will learn more than you can ever imagine.
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The second lesson that I learned in life,
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was that you have the power to influence anything
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that you are truly passionate about.
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When I was 18 years old,
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I got a scholarship to go to Stanford University.
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I was thrilled, my world opened up for me.
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My mind brimmed with new ideas and possibilities
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and I finally had a frame of reference with which to understand my own madness.
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My professors told me I was a social entrepreneur,
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and I finally felt like I fit in.
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But on the other side,
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my society was descending into chaos day by day.
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Almost everyday there was news of a terrorist attack.
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Radicalism was seeping through society.
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I didn't know what to do but I felt fearful.
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I would sleep with my phone on full volume,
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waiting that dreaded phone call
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that would tell me that my family had been hurt.
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In my sophomore year, while watching the news,
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I found a video.
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A young girl from the Swat Valley, only 11 years old,
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was speaking out against the violence.
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In her area, the Taliban had banned female education,
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but she didn't want to stop going to school.
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So when no one was speaking, she did,
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and she said, "Save my school.
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This is my request to the world. Save my Swat Valley."
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Her voice haunted me.
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She lived only three hours from where I grew up
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and it could have been me.
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I knew I had to help her but I didn't know how.
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So I reached out to her father,
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I said to him, "What can we do?"
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That summer I returned back to Pakistan with a plan.
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I would host a summer camp,
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and I would bring to that summer camp girls like Malala.
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I would give them access to the world that I knew.
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To the networks, the resources, the people,
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the mentors that could help them be more effective activists.
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And that's what I did.
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It was one of the most profoundly moving experiences of my life.
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And the girl who I arranged all of this for
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was no other than 11-year-old Malala.
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What this taught me was that anything I wanted to change,
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I had the power to affect.
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Sitting in my dorm room at Stanford, sipping my Jamba Juice,
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I had found a way to affect the life of a girl in the Swat Valley.
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This girl would go on to become the most powerful voice for peace
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in the entire world only 5 years later.
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(Applause)
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The truth is, there are no superheroes. There's just us!
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We are the ones that we have been waiting for.
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So the third and final lesson that I'd love to share with you,
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is that there are critical moments in your life
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where you have to make a decision about who you are,
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and in those moments let your heart guide you.
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It was 2012, I had graduated from Stanford,
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I had an offer to join McKinsey & Company,
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which was a dream job for any Stanford graduate.
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So I took the job and I flew to Dubai.
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It was an exciting year, I learnt exponentially,
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and I knew that as long as I stay on track
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my career was secure.
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One year in, I had just landed in Egypt.
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I turned on my phone and I saw a text that would move the Earth.
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It said, "Malala has been shot."
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I remember sitting in that plane and repeating in my head,
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"Oh my god, what have they done!"
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They had stopped her on her way back from school
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and shot her in the head at point-blank range.
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She was critically wounded.
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Everyday we prayed that she would make it through the night.
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But it wasn't just me and others who cared about Malala who were grieving.
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Across the world, people had been shaken by her story.
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There were vigils, protests in all parts of the world.
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And when people weren't praying or hoping, they were angry.
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They were angry that in the 21st century,
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a girl can be shot in the head for going to school.
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I knew then that what Malala had inspired
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was the beginning of a movement that would change the face of our world.
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I left my career and flew to Birmingham to be with Malala
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when she was airlifted there for treatment.
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I arrived the same day as her family.
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She survived, and that to me is the greatest miracle
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that I have ever witnessed or will ever witness.
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It is what I remain grateful for everyday:
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that Malala survived with no brain damage.
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But as I sat with her and told her, "Malala,
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so many people are praying for you and they want to help you.
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What do I tell them?"
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She looked at me and said, "I'm okay.
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Can you ask them to help the other girls?"
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That's when I knew that not only had Malala inspired a movement,
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but she was going to continue her struggle
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no matter what it took against all odds.
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But now she had a greater platform than ever before.
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She was no longer fighting a battle in the Swat Valley,
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she was fighting a battle for girls all over the world.
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And she needed people she could trust to help her.
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I had a decision to make then.
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Would I go back to my job? Or would I stay with Malala
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and try and figure out what this meant?
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Try and help her change the world and get girls in school.
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I wasn't ready, I was terrified,
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but it was now or never and I took the leap.
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And honestly speaking, I've never looked back.
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You see there are moments when we make decisions
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that shape our destiny.
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And in those moments we have to listen to our intuition.
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Our heart already knows where we are meant to go,
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it will never lead us astray.
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I'd like to end my talk with this statement
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that has come to embody this movement that Malala has inspired.
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And I end with it because it holds one,
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well, it holds all of these truths for me.
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It's a statement that people across the world
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have said without us asking.
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And it is, "I am Malala."
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So I end with that saying, I'm Malala,
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not because I am her,
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but because I understand what it means to be a girl who struggles,
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due to that human connection,
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and because I too struggle.
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I am Malala, because I take control of my destiny
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and I decide to change what I believe must be changed.
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And I'm Malala, because I make that decision today,
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and everyday, from the core of my heart.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)