Remarks
by
Mrs. Bush
Back-to-School Project for Afghan Girls
Samuel W. Tucker Elementary School
March 20, 2002
Thank you,
Kamila (Benzina)
for that wonderful introduction. You deserve a round of applause.
Since
September 11th,
Americans and our allies have united to support the children of
Afghanistan,
especially now, as Afghan children prepare for the new school year.
One
extraordinary global
effort is a back-to-school project - that will help Afghan women earn
money
for
their families
by sewing
school uniforms for Afghan girls.
This
back-to-school project
began last month when Afghan Minister for Women's Affairs Sima Simar
asked
for help to send girls back to school and to send women back to work.
She
requested:
-
200 manual
sewing machines;
-
450,000
yards of fabric for
150,000 uniforms;
-
shoes,
-
socks, and
-
a way to
help Afghan women
go back to work while contributing to society and schools by sewing the
uniforms.
I am proud that
a global
partnership united to exceed Sima's request. By working together, a
partnership
of government agencies, individuals, and corporations will help more
women
support their families and send more children to school in uniforms.
This uniform
is considered
a luxury that few Afghan families can afford.
Children who
don't have
uniforms like this one must attend school in their house clothes, they
feel the shame of being different from their more fortunate classmates
who have uniforms to wear to school.
When you
give a child
a uniform, you're giving her family another incentive to send her to
school.
These
uniforms are
gifts that
represent one less financial burden for families.
The goal is
to make uniforms
for more than 3 million girls and boys. By sewing these uniforms, Afghan
seamstresses -
many of
whom are widows - will be providing for their families…some for the
first
time in
years. These
women are
contributing to the re-organization of Afghan schools that are
rebuilding
literally from the ground up.
Every stitch
contributes
to the great patchwork of support and stabilization for the people of
Afghanistan.
An Afghan
woman I met
named Farida said that when she was a child living in a refugee camp in
Pakistan, she and her five sisters received uniforms through a relief
organization.
She
said: "We were
so joyous and so happy to receive the clothes; we wore one dress for 4
to 5 years. We didn't feel like we were poor; we felt like we were seen
in an equal light, and we knew our family would not have to worry about
paying for our uniforms."
She thanked
me for helping
support this back-to-school project, and I am proud to share her thanks
with:
Vital
Voices, for organizing
this project at Sima's request and soliciting all the partners. This is
a
global
partnership that
has truly been a vital voice for Afghan women and children. Labor
Secretary Elaine Chao, for the Labor Department's "jobs creation" role
in this project; Liz Claiborne, for providing a half-million yards of
fabric
- gathered throughout Asia; Spring Industries, for providing fabric; LL
Bean, Inc., for providing shoes, jackets and blankets; Bass and
Company,
New Balance, Sabago, and Timberland, for providing shoes;
Sarah Lee
Corporation
for providing socks; General Motors and Wal-Mart for their financial
support;
and
J.R. United of
Miami,
for providing sewing machines and fabrics through their commercial
partners
in
Pakistan.
Would the
representatives
from these organizations please stand so we can recognize you?
These people
are giving
children thousands of miles away something greater than uniforms;
they're
giving them hope for a brighter day…and hope for a better life.
Students,
thank you for
contributing to a project that has only just begun. You are part
of an ongoing effort that deserves our support.
There is
much to do, and
Americans will be watching as the Back-to-School Project for Afghan
Girls
continues to
help women
and children throughout the year.
When we
educate children,
we give them the ability to imagine a future of opportunity, equality
and
justice. Education is the single most important long-term
investment
we can make in the future of any nation.
In his State
of the Union
address to the United States Congress, President Bush said:
"All fathers
and mothers,
in all societies, want their children to be educated, and live free
from
poverty and violence… No nation owns these aspirations, and no nation
is
exempt from them."
When
President Bush speaks
of education, he speaks passionately, from his heart. Ladies and
gentlemen
-- and students -- I am proud to introduce President George W. Bush.
from: www.whitehouse.gov
