I am Malala - Pride
Symbols
Pride
Badges
The three badges given to Joe represent his journey over the course of the year between his 20th and 21st birthday. The first badge was given to him by his mother, a simple ‘happy 20th birthday’. A reminder of his place in a legal system, when Steph sees the badge she instructs Joe about the age of consent disparity. The second badge is a pink triangle, as used by the Nazi’s to denote homosexuals, and demonstrates the group’s behaviour of adopting hateful symbols and language in order to dispel the power they would otherwise hold. It also contains the words ‘I am (discreetly) gay’, emblematising Joe’s position between two worlds. Ironically, he is wearing a badge denoting his discretion; he is both public and secretive about his lifestyle. Finally, by way of apology, Mark presents him with a third badge, ‘happy birthday’ with a handwritten word ‘legal’ inserted. The need to insert the word shows the community’s inequality, but the birthday itself grants Joe legal status as a gay ‘adult’ in some sense, signifying his maturity and the completion of his coming out.
Mark brandishes badges that are reminiscent of a military nature. This solidifies his position as the group’s leader, and lends a revolutionary-style tone to the battle for rights the groups are undertaking. Dai is seen with badges supporting the gay community when he fulfills his promise to join with them in their fight for rights in London.
Banner
The Dulais Valley miners’ banner is first mentioned by Dai when touring the castle near Onllwyn. He explains to Mark that the banner may be over 100 years old and depicts two hands grasping each other. Dai’s interpretation is that it shows solidarity, friendship and reciprocal service. That while the miners are struggling, the LGSM group has come to their aid and, in turn, when the gay community is fighting, the miners will come to their aid. True to his word, buses full of miners arrive at the parade in London, and carried among them, in the closing moments of the film, the banner in seen.
Bus
The two groups are reliant on small van-style buses. The LGSM group arrive in Dulais in a colourful bus declaring that they are ‘out and loud’. The bus itself is covered in revolutionary-style posters and various stickers showing the ongoing struggles of the community and their similarity to revolutions. The contrast of the bus with the bleak exterior of the building in Ollwyn is a reminder of the seemingly different lifestyles. The miners also have a bus but it is, allegorically, out of commission, as it is in need of repair and the town cannot afford to replace it. It is replaced by the generous donations raised by LGSM. When the new bus is in service, the miners must swallow their pride and ride in the bus with the ‘donated by gay and lesbians’ paintwork on the exterior. It is this bus which delivers the committee to the pride match in reciprocity of the kindness of the LGSM.
I am Malala
School books
Malala has a strong attachment to her school books and prays for their protection before having to leave them behind when her family become internally displaced persons, which represents her love for education and the further education she hopes to receive as she grows older. The books are also symbolic, along with pens, as weapons in the fight to make education accessible to all girls. This is noted in Malala’s speech before the UN, and in the form of propaganda as can be seen in the textbooks that were rewritten to portray Pakistan as an Islamic state and those distributed to children in refugee camps that taught arithmetic using fighting metaphors.
School Books Quotes
‘I know the importance of education because my pens and books were taken from me by force.’ (excerpt from speech at Pakistani education gala) Chapter 17
‘Let us pick up our books and our pens,’ I said. ‘They are our most powerful weapons. One child, one teacher, one book and one pen can change the world.’ (Malala to the UN) Epilogue
Burqa
The burqa is a full-body garment, also covering the head, which symbolises the oppression of women. As a girl, Malala has fun playing dress-ups with the burqa but as she matures, she comes to recognise the connection between the burqa and female repression in Pakistan, where females are unable to leave the home without a male relative, even if that male is only five years old. Malala rejects the notion of being forced to wear a burqa making her identity clearly visible to the young Taliban soldier who singles her out on the bus and shoots her. The wearing of a burqa does not symbolise devotion to Islam since both Malala and her mother, devout followers and students of the Quran, follow the Pashto custom of wearing a head covering only.
Burqa Quotes
Wearing a burqa is like walking inside big fabric shuttlecock with only a grille to see through and on hot days it’s like an oven. At least I didn’t have to wear one. Chapter 4
When you’re very young, you love the burqa because it’s great for dressing up. But when you are made to wear it, that’s a different matter. Chapter 13
School Bus
The school bus on which Malala and her two friends were shot was initially a symbol of safety, in that it transported Malala to and from home and school, a precaution Malala’s mother felt would be safer than Malala walking the five minutes home. However, by the end of the book, as illustrated by the photo Malala includes in her memoir where the bloodstains remain on the interior walls of the bus, it has become a place of tragedy; ironically, it was in the safe confines of the school bus that Malala was shot by a Taliban soldier.
School Bus Quote
After the threats against me my mother didn’t like me walking anywhere and insisted I get a rickshaw to school and take the bus home even though it was only a five-minute walk. Chapter 19