Malalai
Afghan heroine of Maiwand(welcome to the most widely copied article on this
website!
While in Britain, no one has heard of her, in Afghanstan
Malalai (or Malala) is a legend. Smaller facts in the story vary slightly, but
although it is Ayub Khan who became known as the Victor of Maiwand, it is said
that it was Malalai who actually saved the day.
She was a native of Khig, a tiny village on the edge of the
Maiwand battlefield, and the daughter of a shepard. Both her father and fiancée
joined with Ayub's army in the attack on the British on July 27th 1880 (which
some say was also her wedding day), and like many women, Malalai was there to
help tend to the wounded and provide water and spare weapons. Eventually there
came a point in the battle where the Afghan army, despite their superior
numbers, started to lose morale and the tide seemed to be turning in favour of
the British. Seeing this, Malalai took off her veil and shouted
out:
"Young love! If you do not fall in the
battle of Maiwand,By God, someone is saving you as
a symbol of shame!"
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This gave many of the Afghan fighters and ghazis a new resolve and they
redoubled their efforts. At that moment one of the leading flag-bearers fell
from a British bullet, and Malalai went forward and held up the flag (some
versions say she made a flag out of her veil), singing a landai:
"With a drop of my sweetheart's
blood, Shed in defense of the Motherland, Will I put a beauty spot on my
forehead, Such as would put to shame the rose in the
garden,"
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But then Malalai was herself struck down and killed.
However, her words had spurred on her countrymen and soon the British lines gave
way, broke and turned, leading to a disastrous retreat back to Kandahar and the
biggest defeat for the Anglo-Indian army in the Second Afghan War. Ayub Khan
afterwards gave a special honour to Malalai and she was buried at her village,
where her grave can still be found.
British sources, unsurprisingly, do not mention Malalai. Her
actions may not have been noticed by any of the British, or they may not have
seemed as consequential as they were to the Afghans. Afghan women are very
rarely mentioned at all in the reports and narratives of the war (Hensman
mentions that one woman was found among the dead at Ahmed Khel). Interestingly,
it is the Afghans who provide some of the evidence for one of the other legends
born at the battle of Maiwand, as it is from one of Ayub's artillery colonels
that we learn some of the details of the famous last stand of the 66th,
clutching to their company colours, in a Khig garden, where indeed the fallen
bodies were later found to be lying.
As well as Malalai, there were many other factors in
the Afgan's favour on that day, including preferential terrain and positioning,
superior numbers, skilled use of outnumbering artillery, and perhaps some bad
decisions on the British side of things. But certainly her actions were enough
to turn her into a national hero where she is still revered today. Schools,
hospitals and even a women's magazine have been named after her. It is also a
popular girl's name, with Malalai Joya a rare female voice in post-Taliban
Afghan politics.
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