Both are globally recognized icons, yet their areas of expertise are seemingly worlds apart.
One is Tim Cook, the tireless and philanthropic chief executive officer of Apple Inc.; the other is Malala Yousafzai, the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate activist who fights for -- and puts her life on the line for -- girls' education around the world. The unlikely pair came together on a recent January afternoon in downtown Beirut to announce a shared vision.
They were collaborating to make quality education available for girls and young women wherever they live in the world. Together, they say they will significantly expand the work already being done by Malala’s efforts to support girls’ education and advocate for equal opportunity, especially targeting the 130 million girls in the world who have no access to quality education.
They don’t yet know exactly how they will accomplish this enormous feat, but they say they’re dedicated to finding the answer.
"We are committing resources, and we are committing money and technology,” Cook told ABC News. “130 million girls is a lot of folks around the world and so this is a bold ambition. This is exactly what Apple loves to work on and is something that everybody is saying is impossible.”
Hear more from Tim Cook and Malala Yousafzai on "Good Morning America" today.
Apple and Malala Fund announced Monday that they will partner to champion "every girl's right to 12 years of free, safe, quality education." Through the partnership, Apple is hoping to double the number of grants awarded to Malala's Fund and extend programs to India and Latin America.
The goal is to extend secondary education opportunities to more than 100,000 girls.
Apple CEO on why the company is repatriating billions of dollars back to US Malala Yousafzai: 'Death Did Not Want to Kill Me'Cook and Malala met just three months ago while Cook was on a business trip to England, where Malala is a student at the prestigious Oxford University. Yet, that initial encounter provided a spark they both hope will now lead to even greater accomplishments.
“We started talking and it became so clear that the values we share were so aligned. It was then a matter of what to do together not a matter of whether,” Cook told ABC News.
Malala has been advocating for girls' education for years. Before she was even a teenager, Malala began speaking out about life under the Taliban in her native Swat Valley, Pakistan. In retaliation, gunmen tried to murder her with a shot to the head. It was an ordeal that she barely survived but one that taught her to cherish her courage and to stand up for her beliefs.
“That's just the way that I decided to live my life," Malala told ABC News. “When you go through such hardships in your life, you start building up resilience; you start building up this courage.”
When asked to describe Malala, the youngest ever winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Cook’s eyes lit up.
She has a rare trait of courage with a big C.
“She has a rare trait of courage with a big C," he said. “My heroes in life were people with enormous courage, who were willing to do everything, including risk their lives, for their cause and purpose. She has done this at a very young age and it's just amazing."
In parts of the world where the cards are stacked against young girls trying to make a better future for themselves, Malala is viewed with awe. When a small group of Syrian refugee girls came face to face with her that morning in Beirut, more than one of them burst into tears, to be comforted by hugs and soothing words from their hero.
“I don't see myself as a celebrity like a singer or any star,” Malala said. “I am just a campaigner for girls’ education. But I am really grateful and thankful to them for their support; they agree with me that education is their basic human right and they should have this right.”
Sitting down to a roundtable discussion with the group of girls who had fled the war in Syria, Malala said she was encouraged.
“Some say they want to become doctors and teachers and engineers and artists and musicians,” she said. “Once you hear that you say, they deserve this future. And this future is only possible through education.”
Many obstacles stand in the way of the kind of education that can elevate a young girl out of a life of poverty. During their discussion, one of the girls admitted her father demanded she drop out of school.
“He just wants me to stay at home,” she said through an Arabic interpreter. “He believes a woman’s place is in the home.”
For Malala, it’s a story she has heard many times before.
“Girls have pressure from their families, from their societies and so many obstacles in their fight for the kind of education that is taken for granted in many Western countries," Malala said. "And these girls are fighting for it, each and every day.”
Her solution was to offer whatever help she could to smooth things over with the girls’ family.
"I will definitely talk to your father but also you must say no. OK?" she told the girl. "You must always say no and never say yes. Don't be afraid.”
Another girl talked about how she hopes to become an architect, saying she chose this profession on the same day she fled Syria, hoping to return one day and help rebuild. She then broke down in tears.
Malala walked up to her, embraced her and whispered: “Stay strong.”