(CNN) -- For the first time since the Taliban shot her five
months ago, Pakistani teenager Malala Yousafzai has done what made her a target
of the would-be assassins: She's gone to school.
The 15-year-old on Tuesday attended Edgbaston High School in
Birmingham, England, the city in which doctors treated her after she received
initial care in Pakistan, a public relations agency working with her announced.
It was her first day at school since the Taliban shot her in
the head in October for campaigning for girls' education.
"I am excited that today I have achieved my dream of
going back to school," Malala said, according to a release from her
representatives. "I want all girls in the world to have this basic
opportunity.
"I miss my classmates from Pakistan very much, but I am
looking forward to meeting my teachers and making new friends here in
Birmingham."
On October 9, the teenager was riding home in a school van
in the Swat Valley, a Taliban stronghold in Pakistan, when masked men stopped
the vehicle. They demanded that the other girls identify Malala, and when they
did, the men shot Malala in the head and neck. The gunmen also shot another
girl, wounding her.
Malala improved through numerous surgeries, including two to
repair her shattered skull and restore her hearing. She was walking by the time
she was released from the Birmingham hospital in February.
She is continuing rehabilitation at her family's temporary
home in Birmingham and is to visit the hospital occasionally for outpatient
appointments.
Her story moved Pakistan to vow that it would more
vigorously fight for girls' rights and against the Taliban.
Malala gained international attention three years before she
was shot, as a campaigner for girls' education in Pakistan. In 2009, she wrote
a blog published by the BBC about how she wanted to go to school but was
afraid.
"The Taliban have repeatedly targeted schools in
Swat," she wrote.
About that time, the Taliban issued a formal edict, which
covered her home in the Swat Valley, banning all girls from schools. On the
blog, Malala praised her father, who was operating one of the few schools that
would go on to defy that order. She started giving interviews with news
outlets, including CNN.
"I have the right of education," she said in a
2011 interview with CNN. "I have the right to play. I have the right to
sing. I have the right to talk. I have the right to go to market. I have the
right to speak up."
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