Malala Yousafzai's interview to British fashion magazine Vogue: Why the heated debate on the statement about marriage and partnership?
Almost every statement made by Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai has become a topic of discussion in Pakistan, but in a recent interview with Vogue magazine, her discussion on marriage and partnership has caused a stir on social media. He did it.
We gave you the news yesterday that Malala Yousafzai will appear on the cover of the July issue of the British fashion magazine Vogue.
However, the statement that users are now talking about on social media is about Malala's reluctance to get married.
"I don't understand why people get married," he told Vogue magazine. If you want your life partner, why do you sign marriage papers, why can't it be a partnership?
Malala's statement drew significant criticism on social media, with users expressing their views on various aspects of the issue. Many users were critical of the conversation because of its unfamiliarity with the background and the real meaning, and the criticism escalated to the point that Malala's father, Ziauddin Yousafzai, had to explain that his daughter's interview was out of context. Being presented without
" Dear Mufti Palpullah is not a matter of such a person. Media and social media have tied their interview quote from the context and tiger with their own. And just a"
Some users even called the statement 'un-Islamic', while others praised Malala for speaking her mind on a complex issue. There were also people who made legal points about living with a partner without marriage and also talked about taking unfair advantage of relationships without a contract.
Consumers were seen talking about the importance of marriage in society and the rights that women get due to it. However, several users were seen explaining that Malala's statement was not understood properly.
The controversy over the statement can be gauged from the fact that Mufti Popalzai, the Khatib of Qasim Ali Khan Mosque in Peshawar, also sought clarification from Malala's father Ziauddin Yousafzai in a tweet.
He wrote: A news has been circulating on social media since yesterday that your daughter Malala Yousafzai has categorically rejected the marriage and said that it is better to have a partnership and not marriage than to get married.
In response, Malala's father wrote, Dear Mufti Po Palzai, there is no such thing. Media and social media have shared excerpts from his interview with their own interpretations. And that's it.
What did Malala say in the interview?
So first of all we know what Malala said in this interview which has become so controversial.
Of course, you may have read Malala's 'controversial statement' in an interview on social media, but you may not have noticed what she said before and after. That's why we first tell you about Malala's romantic relationship.
In an interview with Vogue magazine's Siren Kyle, Malala was embarrassed by the initial questions about the romantic relationship and, according to Kell, she did not want to hurt him any more, so she turned the conversation around. Given
However, at the end of the interview, Malala started talking to herself about love and relationships. "All her friends are finding partners but they are reluctant to do so," she said.
Malala calls her parents 'wedding "arranged love", meaning they loved each other, but the marriage took place according to their parents' wishes.
"I don't understand why people get married now. If you want your life partner, why do you have to sign marriage papers? Why can't it be a partnership?
Malala also said that her mother did not agree with her and said, "You will never say such a thing again. You have to get married. Marriage is a very beautiful relationship."
Meanwhile, boys from Pakistan offer her father to marry Malala via email.
"Until the second year of university, I thought I would never get married, have no children, just work," says Malala. I will be happy and live with my family forever but I did not know that you are not always the same person. You change and your thinking changes.
Tweet:- @sabizak
"Good on you @malala for prodding congealed minds that can't think beyond whatever has been stuffed into them by society. Relationships & what they should look like is a fascinating subject & it's great to hear your refreshing throught on it. All good marriages ARE partnerships."
'The best marriage is actually a partnership'
Journalist Sabahat Zakaria, while supporting Malala on the subject, said, "Malala has managed to shake the frozen minds of those who accept everything that this society tells them."
Shahbaz Taseer wrote that you cannot curse the slogan of 'liberate Palestine' on the one hand and the girl who was injured by the Taliban on the other hand.
"It is a beautiful thing for Malala to question her young marriage and to say that she did not want to leave her family," he said.