|
Mahnaz
Malik's office, an annexe to her parents' house, looks very much
like a converted storeroom. There is a visible duality in her office
space. Intimidating leather-bound volumes, specialising in some
aspect of law or the other, are curiously juxtaposed with bright,
colourful posters on the wall, including one advertising Mo's Star,
and mementos of her travels.
In
case neither of the names Mahnaz Malik and Mo's Star ring a bell,
the former is a lawyer by profession and the latter, her creation.
Mo is the protagonist of a children's picture book. Profusely illustrated
with colourful drawings, Mo's Star is more than just a wholesome
bedtime story. The entire revenue generated from the sales of this
Oxford University Press (OUP) publication, will go towards the Reaching
for the Stars foundation, which, in turn, helps educate children
studying in The Citizen's Foundation (TCF) schools.
Mahnaz
Malik is not just an award-winning lawyer, she is a writer, filmmaker
and a philanthropist, who has to her young name many foundations
that she has helped conceive. Among these is Advocate, an organisation
that provides free legal aid to children in detention. Attracting
lawyers to take on pro bono cases, Advocate has benefited lawyers
and detainees alike. Just a couple of years old, Advocate has already
helped several children who had been languishing in jails for years,
awaiting trial.
Only
28 years old, Malik seems to have accomplished a lot in her professional
career. But is this dynamic woman, who oscillates between Pakistan
and the UK, quite content with her achievements? "I wanted
to read literature," says Mahnaz. "Law I studied for my
parents." After completing her A-levels from Karachi Grammar
School, she went on to Cambridge University for her undergraduate
studies. She describes her time at the university as the best years
of her life. "I sat in on literature tutorials, wrote for various
university publications. I ended up with a 2.1 (GPA) and it's a
wonder how I got a job," says Malik.
At
21, she joined the London office of Simmons and Simmons, an international
law firm, as a solicitor. In 2001, while still at the firm, Malik
won two prestigious awards presented by the Law Society of England
and Wales, the 'National Trainee Lawyer of the Year 2001' and 'Trainee
Lawyer Most Likely to Succeed on the International Stage.' Apart
from these, she convened the British Pakistan Law Council, an internet-based
organisation that allows for British and Pakistani lawyers to work
in collaboration. A year ago, Malik said goodbye to her first job
to enter into a "loose consortium of partners" that provide
legal consultancy and representation to states, especially developing
countries. On the side, Malik provides pro bono advice to Pakistan.
Recently, the British Prime Minister's wife, Cherie Blair, a lawyer
herself, named her the "next big thing" in law as part
of a Guardian newspaper project that invited celebrities to name
their most promising protégés.
So
how did Malik fit Mo's Star into her hectic professional schedule?
"It just happened," says Malik. After graduating, Malik
worked many months on a book that never really came together. When,
year after year, her agent kept pursuing her to deliver, she sent
in, instead, a short story about a penguin. To her surprise, her
agent replied, asking her if she wanted to write a children's book.
That's how Mo's Star was born. It's the tale of a penguin who perseveres
to reach his friend, a star. After a failed attempt at flying, Mo
finally reaches his star - and without having to attempt any impossible
feats. Mo finds the star's reflection in a pool. Soon, this little
story for toddlers became a book with a cause and everyone involved,
including OUP, waived their royalties. Mo's Star was not Malik's
first attempt at writing. As a teenager, she published two collections
of short stories and won awards for writing. That explains the fat
Tolstoy sitting on her shelf and the beginnings of Mo's Star.
During the course of our chat, I am introduced to Amma, the lady
who brought up Malik, as the "kuree" who wrote for newspapers.
It is rather amusing to hear Malik's anglicised accent as she speaks
in Punjabi. Amma proves to be the ice-breaker: after her entry on
the scene I see a vibrant Malik, less crisp and professional than
before. "You must meet my dogs," says Malik. Three highly
excited pugs bathe my feet with licks. The pugs and I share a common
opinion. They consider the sinister-looking brass rhino from Swaziland,
standing on one of the shelves, as evil. At the end of a grim day,
it is these pugs that help Malik unwind.
After
a long chat, I leave behind a very different Malik than the one
I had met two hours earlier. Her inhibitions are cast aside, her
red lip gloss has worn off, and she comes across as a vulnerable
person, exploring life with all its twists and turns and searching
for happiness like many others of her age. 
|