Michelle Obama on Saturday criticized the kidnapping of scores of Nigerian
schoolgirls as an “unconscionable act” carried out by a terrorist group she
said is determined to keep them from getting an education—”or grown men
attempting to snuff out the aspirations of young girls.”
Taking over the President’s weekly
radio and Internet address on the eve of Mother’s Day, the first lady said
that, like millions of people around the world, she and President Barack Obama are “outraged and heartbroken”
over the April 15 abduction of the girls from their dormitory.
“In these girls, Barack and I see
our own daughters,” Mrs. Obama said, referring to Malia, 15, and Sasha, 12. “We
see their hopes, their dreams and we can only imagine the anguish their parents
are feeling right now.”
What happened in Nigeria is not an
isolated incident, the first lady said, but is “a story we see every day as
girls around the world risk their lives to pursue their ambitions.”
Mrs. Obama mentioned the case of
Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teenager who survived being shot in the
head as she traveled to school in 2012. Malala has become an outspoken advocate
for the rights of all girls to get an education, the same message Mrs. Obama
delivered in her first solo address to the nation.
Mrs. Obama noted that more than 65
million girls world-wide don’t attend school even though educated women earn
more money and have healthier families.
“When more girls attend secondary
school, that boosts their country’s entire economy,” she said. “So education is
truly a girl’s best chance for a bright future, not just for herself, but for
her family and her nation.”
That is also true in the U.S., the
first lady said. She expressed hope that what happened in Nigeria will inspire
boys and girls across the U.S. to be serious about getting an education.
“I hope that any young people in
America who take school for granted, any young people who are slacking off or
thinking of dropping out, I hope they will learn the story of these girls and
recommit themselves to their education,” she said.
In Saturday’s address, the first
lady asked the nation to pray for the Nigerian girls’ safe return.
“This unconscionable act was
committed by a terrorist group determined to keep these girls from getting an
education—grown men attempting to snuff out the aspirations of young girls,”
she said. “Let us hold their families in our hearts during this very difficult
time, and let us show just a fraction of their courage in fighting to give
every girl on this planet the education that is her birthright.”
Source Associated Press
through Washington Wire
Michelle Obama: ‘Outraged And Heartbroken’ Over Nigerian Kidnappings
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Saturday, May 10, 2014
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