Iqbal Masih

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Iqbal Masih
Enlarge
Iqbal Masih

Iqbal Masih (Urdu: اقبال مسیح) (b. 1982 - April 16, 1995), was a Pakistani boy who was sold(for 15$ U.S. to the carpet industry as a child slave at the age of 4 for the equivalent of 12 USD.

Iqbal was held by a chain to a carpet loom in a small town called Muridke near Lahore. He was made to work sixteen hours per day. Due to long hours of hard work and insufficient food and care, Iqbal was undersized. At twelve years of age, Iqbal was the size of a six-year old.

At the age of 10, he escaped the slavery and henceforth put effort into the liberation of other child slaves, and the struggle for freedom and rights for children in Pakistan.

He was murdered on Easter Sunday 1995. It is assumed by many that he was assassinated by members of the "carpet mafia" because of the publicity he brought towards the child labor industry. Five years later, when The World's Children's Prize for the Rights of the Child was formed, he was posthumously awarded this prize as one of the first laureates.

Masih's work and subsequent death inspired the then 12 year old Canadian boy, Craig Kielburger to devote his life to the boy's cause and organized Free the Children.

[edit] Sources

Gay, Kathlyn and Martin K. Gay. Heroes of Conscience: A Biographical Dictionary. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO inc. , 1996

D'Adamo, Francesco. Iqbal: A Novel. Trans. Ann Leonori. New York: Aladdin Books, 2003

[edit] External link