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NEWS ARCHIVE - 2006
REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY IN A U.S. AFGHAN WOMEN'S
COUNCIL ROUNDTABLE
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the First Lady
For Immediate Release
July 5, 2006
11:01 A.M. EDT
MRS. BUSH: Thanks so much. Thank you very much, Secretary Dobriansky.
And Mr. Minister, welcome. It's very nice to have this chance
to get to meet you and be with you today. And Ambassador, thanks
so much, again.
I've had a really very enjoyable and interesting time in my relationship
with the Afghan American Women's Council. I've met the Afghan
women who are part of it. I've had two trips to Afghanistan --
one with the President and one with the Women's Council, actually,
I partnered with them when they visited there.
I've also been able to welcome to the White House a number of
Afghan women, both teachers who are training here at the University
of Nebraska, each one of those classes, or Afghan women who are
here working in partnership with the Afghan Women's Council, Afghan
American Women's Council.
I just got to give the commencement address at Roger Williams
University, where we had the very first graduating class. Four
Afghan girls who had started four years ago to Roger Williams
University graduated, and that was also a program that I learned
about through the Afghan American Women's Council.
One of the major projects that I've been the most involved in
and the most interested in is the Women's Teacher Training Institute
in Kabul, which I did visit when I was there. After September
11th, when American women especially looked at Afghanistan, American
women were really, I'll have to say, shocked that women were not
allowed to be educated, that girls were not allowed to be educated.
It was something that none of us really could imagine. And immediately,
women, American women, stood up to stand with the women of Afghanistan.
I saw it everywhere. When I gave the radio address about Afghanistan,
women who sell cosmetics at the department store that I went to
right after that thanked me, and I could tell they were standing
with the women of Afghanistan, and really felt a sisterhood with
them and wanted them to be able to succeed.
The other thing we also know, because women in the U.S. didn't
get the right to vote, either, until the last part of the -- early
part of the last century, but we know that societies can succeed
and democracies can succeed and economies can succeed if everyone
is involved. And if half the people are left out, then it's very
difficult for societies to succeed.
So all of us knew, and this is what we were already interested
in anyway, in my office, it's what we were working on, and that's
education in the United States, education here. So it seemed,
really, a natural step to talk about education in Afghanistan
and education specifically for women, but for boys, too, for girls
and boys, we need, really, excellent education.
So we've started with the idea of the Teacher Training Institute,
which would give -- a dorm which would give women a safe place
to live when they were in -- at Kabul University in the Teacher
Training program, and would also have the effect of educating
as many women as possible -- and men -- educating as many teachers
as possible so when they went back to their provinces they could,
in a cascading effect, educate more teachers so we could educate
as many teachers as possible.
This fall, I'm going to be convening, in New York, along the
time of the United Nations General Assembly, with United States
Department of Education and the U.S. State Department, USAID and
UNESCO, a conference on global literacy. And we're going to --
it will be during the time of the UNGA when world leaders will
be there from around the world. And it's a way for us to meet,
really, every country to come together, every U.N. country to
come together and talk about what we can all do to make sure --
what each government can do to make sure that children and adults
are literate in their countries.
So I have this opportunity to invite you all and to invite people
from Afghanistan then, to come then, and I hope you'll be there
with me.
We look forward to many, many years of friendship and work with
the country of Afghanistan. The people of the United States are
invested in Afghanistan, and we really want Afghanistan to succeed.
And I hope the people of Afghanistan know that.
So, welcome. Good to see you.
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