Iqbal Masih: Difference between revisions
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==Early life and labour== |
==Early life and labour== |
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Iqbal Masih was born in Muridke, a very small, [[rural]] village outside of Lahore in Pakistan. Shortly after Iqbal's birth, his father, Saif Masih, abandoned the family. Iqbal's mother, Inayat, worked as a housecleaner, but found it difficult to make enough money to feed all her children from her small income. |
Iqbal Masih was born in Muridke, a very small, [[rural]] village outside of Lahore in Pakistan. Shortly after Iqbal's birth, his father, Saif Masih, abandoned the family. Iqbal's mother, Inayat, worked as a housecleaner, but found it difficult to make enough money to feed all her children from her small income. |
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[[File:http://baenir.blogcentral.is/AlbumImage.ashx?id=934943|thumb|Iqbal Masih]] |
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==Escape and activism== |
==Escape and activism== |
Revision as of 18:04, 3 December 2011
Iqbal Masih (Urdu: اقبال مسیح) (b. 1982 - April 16, 1995), was a young Pakistan Islamic boy who was forced into bonded labour in a carpet factory at the age of four, became an international figurehead for the Bonded Labour Liberation Front at the age of 10 after he escape from servitude, and was assassinated at the age of 13.
Early life and labour
Iqbal Masih was born in Muridke, a very small, rural village outside of Lahore in Pakistan. Shortly after Iqbal's birth, his father, Saif Masih, abandoned the family. Iqbal's mother, Inayat, worked as a housecleaner, but found it difficult to make enough money to feed all her children from her small income.
Escape and activism
At the age of 10, he escaped the brutal slavery and later joined the BLLF (Bonded Labor Liberation Front of Pakistan) to help stop child labor around the world. Iqbal helped over 3,000 Pakistani children that were in bonded labour escape to freedom, and made speeches about child labour all around the world. Iqbal became a book and is about this boys story.[citation needed]
He was fatally shot in the back with a twelve gauge shotgun on Easter Sunday 1995 in Muridke in the middle of a busy road on his way back from church.[1] Some locals were accused of the crime but it is assumed by many that he was assassinated by members of the "Carpet Mafia"[citation needed] because of his famous fight against the child labour industry.[citation needed]. Pakistan's leading human rights groups have stated that there is no evidence implicating the industry. [2]
In 1994, Iqbal was awarded the Reebok Human Rights Award. In 2000, he was posthumously awarded The World's Children's Prize for the Rights of the Child.[citation needed]
Legacy
In January 2009, the United States Congress established the annual Iqbal Masih Award for the Elimination of Child Labor.
Iqbal visited Broad Meadows Middle School in Quincy, Massachusetts and spoke to 7th graders about his life. When the students learned of his death, they decided to raise money and built a school in his honor in Pakistan.
Iqbal's work and subsequent death inspired a 12 year old Canadian boy, Craig Kielburger to devote his life to Iqbal's cause and organize Free The Children.
References
External links
- "Who Was Iqbal Masih?" mirrorimage.com. accessed October 3, 2011.
- Gannon, Kathy (31 May 1995). "LA Times on Iqbal Masih". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 27 2011.
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