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Summary Of The Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

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Back in October of 2012, a young woman was shot in the head multiple times by Taliban Gunmen. After weeks of treatment in intensive care, the world remained in shock, and happy to learn the young girl, Malala, survived. The Taliban shot her because she was protesting for women’s education and the Taliban is against women’s rights. After Malala fully recovered, her story was released to the public. It started off at school with all of her classmates talking about what they wanted to become after school. For Malala’s brothers it was easy to think about the future. Mala thinks about how they can be anything they want. But for Malala it was hard and for that reason Malala wanted to “Become educated and empower myself with knowledge” (Husain). At …show more content…

How could they stop them from going to school? One day a journalist from BBC asked Malala’s father if he knew about young people who might be willing to give their perspective on life under the Taliban, he suggested Malala. After that Taliban quickly found out about her diary and shot her after school. In Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, Atwood tells the story of the Handmaid's which are women with no rights and have become vessels for delivering children. In this eerie book, Atwood illustrates the ways in which women have an insufficient amount of rights and because of this they are not allowed to do as much things as a average male. Atwood creates a society where women have little rights which directly correlates to today with women around the world. Women in Middle Eastern countries like Yemen and Saudi Arabia face similar hardships as the …show more content…

In the Handmaid's tale Handmaid’s have little to no education and whenever Offred finds a magazine she is afraid of opening it up and reading it because the consequences could be very harsh. This directly correlates to almost every single women in the Middle East. Just like the Handmaid’s these women in the Middle East also have very harsh consequences, on October 9th of 2012 a young Middle Eastern women named Malala who wanted all women to have an education was shot in the head multiple times by a Taliban Gunmen. Thankfully she survived. Malala said “I didn't want my future to be imprisoned in my four walls and just cooking and giving birth” (Husain). Just like the Middle Eastern women the Handmaid’s are also just seen as a birth vessel or for what they can do, not who they truly are. Malala displayed bravery and was sick and tired of being treated poorly by men. She decided she wouldn’t care what other people thought about her and her actions. Malala is just like Offred because Offred said “It occurs to me that she may be a spy, a plant, set to trap me; such is the soil in which we grow. But I can't believe it; hope is rising in me, like sap in a tree. Blood in a wound. We have made an opening.” (27.46). Offred’s desire for freedom and escape is so visible that it makes her careless. Offred talks about she use to have the freedom

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