SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, it’s a great pleasure to welcome all of you to the State Department, to the Benjamin Franklin Room, for the 10
th
anniversary of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council. I look around this room
and I see so many people who have helped to make the council a powerful
engine for change both from Afghanistan and the United States. And I
welcome warmly each and every one of you and applaud your commitment to
supporting the women of Afghanistan as they strive to build better
futures for themselves and their country.
Now, there are many people here who should be and deserve to be
recognized because of your contributions here and in Afghanistan. But I
will take the moment to acknowledge a few people in particular, starting
first and foremost with Laura Bush. Laura Bush did so much to elevate
and strengthen this council. Both in ways public and private, she became
a passionate advocate for the rights and roles of women in Afghanistan,
and she remains one of the strongest advocates today.
We were just talking at the table about some of the perks of being a
first lady. (Laughter.) And one of them I learned from Elaine Chao, the
former Secretary of Labor here, is that cabinet secretaries do take
first ladies’ calls. (Laughter.) And when those calls are about
supporting and finding money for and encouraging the women of
Afghanistan, very often they were made by Mrs. Bush.
I want to thank the council’s U.S. co-chairs Melanne Verveer, our
nation’s first and outstanding Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s
Issues; Jack DeGioia, President of Georgetown University, which has
provided a home for the council since 2008 under the direction of Dr.
Phyllis Magrab, the Director of the Center for Child and Human
Development, who is also here. I wish to thank and acknowledge my
counterpart and colleague, Afghan Foreign Minister Rassoul, and also the
Afghan ambassador to the United States, Ambassador Hakimi. Thank you
all for joining us.
I also wish to recognize Vartan Gregorian, the president of the
Carnegie Corporation, whom you will hear from in a few minutes. He is an
enthusiastic supporter of the council’s work, and I’m very grateful for
his personal support of what the council is doing and so many of the
initiatives on behalf of our country and our foreign policy.
And finally, I would like to recognize two other groups. Members of
Congress who were here early, and I think are still here, let me ask
them to stand so they can be recognized. Congresswomen Sheila Jackson
Lee, Niki Tsongas, Carolyn Maloney, Donna Edwards, and Susan Davis.
(Applause.)
And finally, I want to recognize the 10 Fulbright scholars from
Afghanistan. Let me ask the 10 scholars to please stand. (Applause.)
Thanks to all who have joined us from the across the Obama and Bush
Administrations, from Congress, the private sector, not-for-profit
organizations, and academia: I think the diversity of backgrounds and
experiences represented in this room reflects how committed the people
of the United States are to the well-being and continued progress of the
women of Afghanistan.
We come to this 10
th anniversary from different
perspectives and experiences as political leaders or business people,
security or development experts, Republicans and Democrats, certainly
men and women, but across our differences we wholeheartedly agree that
the women of Afghanistan, like the women anywhere, are critical to their
nation’s future. They deserve to have their human rights protected
regardless of place, religion, culture, or any other circumstance, and
they need and deserve our support.
We are meeting at a significant time of year. As you heard from
Melanne, yesterday was the Persian New Year and the first day of spring.
There is an Afghan proverb: A good year is determined by its spring. I
think that is a worthy proverb to keep in mind, and indeed it is a call
to action for us to be sure that the spring sets the pace for the kind
of good year we hope to see in Afghanistan.
Now, I’m well aware that these past weeks have been especially
challenging, so it is all the more important that we come together as
partners, friends, and colleagues to celebrate the good things we have
accomplished together and to rededicate ourselves to doing more in the
months and years ahead.
For just a moment, think about the remarkable gains of this past
decade. In 2001, life expectancy for women in Afghanistan was just 44
years of age. Now it is 62 years. Back then, almost no girls went to
school. Today, 3 million do. They comprise nearly 40 percent of all
primary school enrollments. Nearly 120,000 Afghan girls have graduated
from high school, 15,000 are enrolled in universities, and nearly 500
women are on university faculties. Maternal mortality, infant mortality,
under-five mortality rates have all declined significantly. More Afghan
children are living past their fifth birthday today than at any time in
their recent past.
Now, these statistics represent hundreds of thousands of individual
success stories and reflect the work of courageous and determined women
across the country. Afghan women helped achieve a constitution that
enshrines women’s rights. They hold office at the national, provincial,
and local levels. They serve on the High Peace Council and in provincial
peace councils. They are opening and running businesses of all kinds.
They are helping to build an effective and vibrant civil society.
In ways that often go unnoticed and certainly uncelebrated, the women
of Afghanistan are hard at work each and every day solving
Afghanistan’s problems and serving her people. Now, for many Afghan
women, the help they have received from this council has made all the
difference. Literacy education, support for women entrepreneurs, basic
health services, job training for women judges and diplomats – you could
go on and on. This council and the projects it has given risen – it has
given rise to have provided concrete and effective support. They’ve
translated our feelings and our rhetoric into action.
So this progress is worth cheering, but it’s also worth protecting.
Now that we have entered into this period of transition, it’s absolutely
critical we protect these gains and expand on them. Not that is not my
view or the view of Laura Bush or any of the Americans who are here;
that is a view expressed loudly and clearly by Afghan citizens, men and
women alike. It is also the view of Afghan leaders, and it is certainly
the view of the international community. The women of Afghanistan are a
valuable and irreplaceable resource, and their rights must be protected,
and their opportunities for them to contribute must be preserved.
Now, of course, that is easy to say and it is much harder to do. I
know that many women in Afghanistan and their supporters around the
world are closely watching what we and the Afghan Government do to
support a potential political reconciliation. Many are worried that in
whatever future negotiations that might occur women, their rights, their
roles, their concerns will be scarified, and the old days will return.
Well, let me say again what I have said before in Kabul, in London, in
Bonn, in Munich, in New York, and Washington: The United States cannot
and will not let that happen.
Our goal is to get Afghans talking with other Afghans about the
future. We’ve said from the start that a reconciliation dialogue must
include women as well as ethnic minorities and civil society. One of our
redlines is that insurgents who want to reconcile in the end must
commit to abide by Afghanistan’s constitution and the rights enshrined
in it, most particularly women’s rights.
There are always going to be those, not only in Afghanistan, who want
to roll back progress for women and impose second-class citizenship on
women, but the Afghan constitution is clear, and the Afghan Government
has clearly affirmed it as the law of the land. So we will not waver on
this point. Any peace that is attempted to be made by excluding more
than half the population is no peace at all. It is a figment that will
not last. (Applause.)
So let there be no doubt that even as the U.S. role in Afghanistan
changes during the next few years of transition, we will continue to
stand with and work closely with Afghan women. And we will be working
closely with the international community as well, because we all need to
be vigilant and disciplined in our support and in our refusal to accept
the erosion of women’s rights and freedoms.
As Mrs. Bush said in her historic radio address in 2001, the fight
against terrorism is also a fight for the rights and dignity of women.
So we must use every available tool to support that commitment. And to
that end, I am pleased to announce that the United States will be
sponsoring the creation of an International Center for Afghan Women’s
Economic Development to be located at the American University of
Afghanistan in Kabul. (Applause.) And after lunch, you can see the
blueprints of the center on display in the Thomas Jefferson Room next
door.
Now, let me hasten to add that I am aware change of the kind that we
are seeking does not come quickly or easily. In fact, it is the work of a
generation or more. Yet even within a smaller time horizon, so much is
possible. Just think, if you get discouraged by the headlines, of what
this council has done in the past 10 years. Just think of all the women
for whom your programs made the critical difference. Just think of all
the families that are healthier, more prosperous, and secure because of
you.
So for the Afghan people, it is the start of a new year and a new
season for many, a time of renewal and recommitment. And I think this
lunch, in our spring, represents our pledge to continue our work
together for the next 10 years and beyond to support the women of
Afghanistan as they do build those better futures for themselves and
their families and for their nation.
I am so pleased to be able to introduce someone who is part of very
small group. (Laughter.) And it’s a group that has made a great
contribution in so many ways during the course of our country’s history.
When we were entertaining at the White House this past week Prime
Minister Cameron, President Obama jokingly referred to the War of 1812
being recognized for the 200
th anniversary. And I reminded my
British colleagues that it was Dolly Madison who saved the treasures of
the White House on the way out the door. (Laughter.) Well, there are
some stories which are well known and other stories which have yet to be
told, and I hope some stories that never see the light of day.
(Laughter.)
But one thing I know for sure, and that is that during a very
difficult time in our nation’s history Laura Bush served with great
distinction and honor, and it wasn’t only about what she did here at
home. It was also about her recognition of the importance of reaching
out beyond our borders, a lesson that is still as relevant today as
ever. And thank you so much, Laura, for everything you did to make this
council a reality. Please join me in welcoming Laura Bush. (Applause.)
MRS. BUSH: Thank you so much. Thank you, all. Thanks,
everybody. Thank you, all. Thank you and thank you very much, Secretary
Clinton. Thank you for your support for the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council.
If we hadn’t – if we didn’t have you right at the very top supporting
it, we wouldn’t be celebrating this 10
th anniversary, so thank you very, very much. I really appreciate it. (Applause.)
I want to also thank Ambassador Verveer. Thank you for everything
you’ve done for this council and for so many other women around the
world. And thank you for representing our country so well. I appreciate
it a lot. Foreign Minister Rassoul, thank you for joining us today.
We’re very happy to see you. And Ambassador and Mrs. Hakimi, thanks so
much. It’s great to see you again. And former Ambassador Jawad and
Shamim, who were also founding members of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s
Council, thank you for joining us. And the members of the United States
Congress who have come today as well, thank you for continuing to work
in your offices for our relationship with Afghanistan and with the women
of Afghanistan. Thank you for all of that.
And then of course to all the members of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s
Council who have joined us today. To Phyllis Magrab and Dr. DeGioia, who
have given the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council a home, thank you all for
that.
I’m very happy to be here at the State Department for the 10
th anniversary of the U.S.–Afghan Women’s Council. After the attacks of September 11
th,
the spotlight of the world turned on Afghanistan. And I had a really
close friend, one of my college friends from Texas, who gave me a phone
call and she said that the whole time we’ve been in Washington, she was
just thinking thank heaven she wasn’t in my shoes.
But then after that, she was jealous. (Laughter.) She said she was
jealous for the first time because I could actually do something. And
she wanted so badly to be able to help the people of Afghanistan and
especially the women of Afghanistan. What she said was true, and as I
learned more about what women in Afghanistan faced, I knew that those of
us in the United States needed to reach out to them and to help.
In November 2001, George asked me to give the weekly presidential
radio address – I think, actually, a woman advisor of his who’s here
suggested it, Karen Hughes – (laughter) – to describe the plight of
Afghan women. Many Americans were learning for the very first time about
the severe repression and brutality against women that was common in
Afghanistan under the Taliban. Girls were forbidden from attending
school, women couldn’t leave their homes alone without a male escort,
and so they were denied access to doctors when they were sick or the
chance to work if they were widows and support their children. And
Afghanistan had the highest infant and maternal mortality rates in the
world.
The stark contrast between our lives and the lives of women in
Afghanistan horrified many American women, and gave birth to strong
friendships between American women and our Afghan sisters. Everywhere I
went, women stopped me and said, “What can I do? Is there anything I can
do?” One woman told me that she would lie in bed at night and try to
figure out ways she could help the women of Afghanistan. American women
wanted to help, and their response demonstrates the deep compassion of
the American people and the desire to support Afghan women help
establish – that helped all of us establish one of the most successful
public-private partnerships in our country: the U.S.-Afghan Women’s
Council.
Since its founding in 2002 by Presidents Bush and Karzai, the Council
has given Americans, American individual citizens and corporations, a
way to partner with Afghan women to help them recover from decades of
oppression. Council initiatives have touched nearly every part of Afghan
civil society, from education and healthcare to business and government
to agriculture.
I joined the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council for my first trip to
Afghanistan in 2005, and several of the people who are in the room today
were with me on that trip. In Kabul, I met with Afghan women who were
just beginning to experience their newfound rights. Their stories
encouraged all of us and gave us hope. I returned to Afghanistan two
more times, and on each visit I saw progress. On my last trip in 2008, I
visited Bamyan Province, the same province where the Taliban had
shocked the world by destroying those two towering sixth century
Buddhas. And I met with their governor, a woman, Dr. Habiba Sarabi. I
visited with a class of women police officers in Bamyan Province,
courageous women who were taking the profession that women – of course,
they would have never guessed they would have been able to have.
Since then, since returning to Dallas, George and I have hosted
Afghan educators and entrepreneurs at the Bush Institute for two
conferences on empowering the women and girls of Afghanistan. These
women’s – now, Afghanistan is home to more than 200 women-owned
businesses, and women constitute 35 percent of the work force. These
women’s enterprises range from traditional handicraft and artisan
production, to engineering and construction, to financial services and
consulting. While the challenges to their success are considerable, a
growing number of women are starting their own businesses, supporting
their families, and creating jobs for their neighbors. Studies indicate
that women reinvest their earnings in their children’s education, in
healthcare for their families, and in necessities like food and
clothing.
While these signs of progress are encouraging, serious challenges
remain. Women’s involvement in Afghanistan’s peace process has been
limited. Recent statements made by the Mullahs would severely limit
women’s ability to work outside the home. And there are some who still
seek to silence women through intimidation and violence. The failure to
protect women’s rights and to ensure their security could undermine the
significant gains Afghan women have achieved. No one wants to see
Afghanistan’s progress reversed or its people returned to the perilous
circumstances that marked the Taliban’s rule.
Promoting women’s freedoms is crucial to Afghanistan’s future. To the
extent that women are empowered to fully participate in their country,
they’ll contribute to the stability and the prosperity of their nation.
And that’s why the work of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council is so
important today and in the years ahead.
I want to thank all of the council members and all of our partners
for all you’ve done over the last 10 years to empower Afghan women and
to help them build better lives for themselves and their families, and
thereby build a better and prosperous and stable Afghanistan. We want to
see that country’s hard work and their progress sustained. And we want
to ensure that women are empowered so Afghanistan can succeed.
So thanks to each and every one of you here today as we mark 10 years
of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council. Congratulations and thanks to
everybody who’s done so much over the last 10 years, and best wishes for
the next 10. I’ll be right there with you. Thank you so much.
(Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you so very much. Now it is my
pleasure to introduce my colleague, Afghan Foreign Minister Rassoul, who
has been a very strong voice and supporter of the rights of women and
the roles that they can and should play in the future of Afghanistan. He
traveled here from Kabul to represent the Afghan Government at this
celebration.
Foreign Minister. (Applause.)
FOREIGN MINISTER RASSOUL: Honorable Madam Secretary Clinton,
Honorable Mrs. Laura Bush, Ambassador Verveer, distinguished member of
the U.S.-Afghan Women Council, ladies and gentlemen: Madam Secretary,
thank you so much for those gracious words. I am truly delighted to be
here once again among good friends, especially from the U.S.-Afghan
Women Council. Please allow me to express my gratitude to you, Honorable
Madam Secretary and the council, for inviting me to be part of today’s
event. I would like also to especially acknowledge you, Honorable Mrs.
Bush, for your commitment to the cause of Afghan women and their rights.
I am honored to be with all of you as we celebrate the council 10
th anniversary.
As always, I am grateful for the continued effort made by U.S.-Afghan
Women Council in developing and implementing projects in the field of
health, education, illiteracy, entrepreneurship, and political
leadership with the aim of improving the lives of Afghan women and
children. What you do makes a real difference, and I want to convey the
heartfelt appreciation and gratitude of the Afghan people and government
who have directly benefited from your assistance and support.
Ladies and gentlemen, I’d like to make three quick points in my brief
remarks today. First, I want to touch upon some example of the historic
– I repeat historic – achievement you have made in Afghanistan in
helping Afghan women realize their God-given rights and access
opportunities in all walk of lives. As, Madam Secretary, you mentioned,
Afghan women make up 28 percent of legislator in Afghan parliament. They
occupy one-fourth of the government jobs, including 9 percent of
decision-making level ministers, deputy ministers, directors, one
governor, a mayor, an ambassador, and other senior diplomats.
Girls make about 40 percent of the nearly 8 million children going to
school in Afghanistan today – a figure that was fewer – that was 10
fewer than 1 million in 2,000 girl, no girls at that time. Thirty
percent of schoolteachers and 15 percent of university teachers are
women.
Afghan women and girls today make 24 percent of doctors and medical
workers across the country. Women made up 40 percent of voters in our
last presidential elections. We have female pilots, army and police
officers, and professional martial artists. Afghan women are at the
least 50 percent force behind Afghanistan’s vibrant independent media
and active civil society groups, both of which are among the most
visible and concrete achievements of the past decade. In fact, there are
millions of other Afghan girls and women throughout Afghanistan today
who are no longer the oppressed, isolated, hopeless existence they were
subjected to during the war and even more brutally under the Taliban
regime throughout the 1990s.
Women’s right today are enriched in to democratically adopted
constitution of the country and codified into various laws enacted by
the Afghan Government in accordance with our constitution and our
international obligations.
I am making this last point to underline President Karzai and the
Afghanistan commitment, government commitment to the rights of Afghan
women under the Afghan Constitutions and Afghanistan’s relevant
international obligations.
Where not specified, these numbers and percent that I just referenced
by the example were all a big zero in 2001 and there were no legal
guarantees for women rights in Afghanistan. So ladies and gentlemen,
these gains and the collective change they represent are historic and
source of real and genuine pride for all Afghans.
A key question here is what – and more importantly who – made this
possible. That’s my second brief point. There is no doubt that we have
had these achievement chiefly because the Afghan people want it, support
them, and because courageous Afghan women have fought for them.
Honorable Madam Secretary, I want to thank you for most recently
acknowledging one of the model of exemplary character and steely courage
in the person of Maryam Durani, an elected member of the Kandahar
Provincial Council.
But these achievement were also made possible – were also made
possible – they were helped and facilitated by the principled and
generous support of the international community, people such as you. The
leaders in this panel, the countless activists working on the ground in
Afghanistan, in your governments of the cause of human rights in
Afghanistan. So I want to take this opportunity once again as there are
Afghan committed to the rights of Afghan women and their full
participation in the social, political, and economic life of my country
to say to you, thank you very much for standing with Afghanistan and for
standing with the women of Afghanistan.
Ladies and gentlemen, the support and commitment from the world
community, especially emanating from the Long-Term Strategic Partnership
Dialogue between Afghanistan and the United States, has given new hope
to the Afghan women. Our country has made significant progress, and
Afghan women now realize that they are achieving a deserving place in
society – in society, but our shared job in helping the women of
Afghanistan realize their rights is not yet done.
This is my third brief point. Afghan women continue to suffer
terrible violence, something our First Lady has forcefully spoken
against. There are still far too many Afghan girls who never got the
chance to go to school. Maternity mortality is still unacceptable –
unacceptably high. Afghan women and Afghan children continue to be among
the innocent victim on the ongoing war, something we all need to put an
end to.
And of course, there are other challenges that both men and women
face in today’s Afghanistan, chief among them the lack of confidence
inspiring security. So our gains are fragile and depend upon a smooth
and successful transition up to and well beyond 2014. Let me assure you
that we will forge ahead with our struggle for peace, security,
development, and justice for our citizen, especially our mother and
sisters. So as we move forward in our remarkable commitment to protect
and further promote the right of Afghan women now and beyond 2014, we
will continue to require and count on your tangible, long-term moral and
practical support and assistance. Thank you very much for the kind
attention. (Applause.)
AMBASSADOR VERVEER: Thank you very much, Foreign Minister
Rassoul. And now we come to a part of the program that we’ve tried to
keep a secret from Mrs. Bush and Secretary Clinton. And that is not
easy. (Laughter.) But hopefully they don’t know about this. So Mrs.
Bush, if I could ask you to join us up here in the middle.
Many of us can still recall your historic radio address in 2001 in
which you called on all Americans to ensure that dignity and opportunity
will be secured for all the women and children of Afghanistan. And you
have led by example. You helped inspire the formation of the U.S.-Afghan
Women’s Council, you’ve worked to mobilize resources to ensure that
Afghan women and girls gain skills, opportunities, and particularly the
education that they were denied under the years of Taliban repression.
I know a little bit about this firsthand, because back in early 2002
when I was involved with Vital Voices, it was Mrs. Bush who helped
support a program that involved providing jobs to Afghan widows to make
uniforms for the girls to go back to school. Your commitment took you to
Afghanistan several times, occasions in which you launched were the
programs and supported America’s continuing engagement. And now, as
former First Lady, you continue to write op-eds, sponsor programs
through the Bush Institute, and support the initiatives of this council.
Your commitment has not waned.
And so for your leadership, dedication, and generosity on behalf of
the women and girls of Afghanistan, for continuing to be a driving force
for the work of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council, and for showing us the
value of collaboration, the council presents you with this award of
appreciation. (Applause.)
MR. DEGIOIA: Well, it’s been an honor to be here today as we celebrate the 10
th
anniversary of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council and the enduring
contribution of two extraordinary leaders, Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton and honorary advisor of the council Mrs. Laura Bush. We
are inspired by the depth of your commitment to the empowerment and
success of women and children in Afghanistan and around the world. We’re
grateful for the actions you have taken, both during your time in the
White House as our First Ladies and in your current work to ensure
significant progress and ever-expanding impact.
And I also wish to thank our partners at the United States State
Department for their continued commitment and collaboration, as well as
Abbott Laboratories and Goldman Sachs for their dedicated efforts to
enable our work. Georgetown University has been deeply engaged in the
U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council from the time of its founding, participating
in the critical work of partnering with the U.S. and Afghan
Governments, the private sector, and NGOs to develop and implement
initiatives in support of Afghan women and children.
Since 2008, we’ve had the privilege of giving the U.S.-Afghan Women’s
Council a home at Georgetown University’s Center for Child and Human
Development under the leadership of Dr. Phyllis Magrab. As we mark the
10
th year anniversary of the council, we will continue to
expand on this decade of dedicated work, deepening our commitment to
creating broader opportunities for Afghan women and children. And the
council will have a special role to play in the areas of humanitarian
support and local capacity building, especially during this period of
transition.
At Georgetown, we look forward to drawing on the diverse resources of
our community to ensure the continued growth and success of the
U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council, especially in these critical areas.
We also had the opportunity in December to host Secretary Clinton as
she announced the U.S. National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and
Security at Georgetown and to discuss our efforts to establish an
initiative for Women, Peace, Security, and Development within our School
of Foreign Service under the direction of our dean, Carol Lancaster.
Now it’s a pleasure for me at this moment to now be a part of presenting
another award, and that is to invite Phyllis Magrab, our vice chair of
the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council and director of the Center for Child and
Human Development to join me in presenting the Caring for Children
Lifetime Achievement Award.
Now, the Caring for Children Award is given by Georgetown University
through its Center for Child and Human Development to honor an
individual who’s made a distinguished contribution to improving the
quality of life for vulnerable children and their families. And today it
is our pleasure to honor Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton for her deep
and enduring commitment to this end.
Secretary Clinton has been making significant contributions through
her work for decades, beginning with her important scholarly article in
the 1973 edition of the Harvard Education Review on Children and the
Law. Since that time, she has been dedicated to creating policies and
programs to benefit the most vulnerable children and their families. Her
accomplishments have been wide-ranging, but for a special reason I wish
to highlight the Arkansas home instruction program for preschool youth
that she championed when she was First Lady of Arkansas.
This program sent teachers into the homes of underserved families to
train parents in school-preparedness and literacy. And through the
program, parents learned the importance of talking to and reading to
their children. In highlighting this work and recognizing Secretary
Clinton’s commitment to the mothers and children of Afghanistan, the
U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council has just launched the Mothers As First
Teachers initiative, originated and led by council member Jill Iscol and
supported by a group of generous donors and implemented by the early
learning team at Georgetown’s Center for Child and Human Development.
The initiative will develop materials to support mothers as the first
teachers of their children, which will be used in the women’s resource
centers and the women’s gardens of Afghanistan. It’s in this context,
that with great pleasure, we offer this award to an ever more dedicated
friend of women and children across the globe, Secretary Hillary Rodham
Clinton. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, it is so wonderful and surprising –
(laughter) – to thank you all for that very meaningful award, but more
than that, for launching this program, Mothers As First Teachers, in
Afghanistan. And I thank Jill Iscol and all who have made this possible.
It’s an absolutely fabulous initiative, and I’ll look forward to
hearing how the implementation goes.
Let me now introduce someone who’s been a great leader for so many
years in the world of academia and philanthropy, someone who has really
seen over the horizon and understands the long-term challenges that we
all face in trying to make change in the world that is sustainable.
Please join me in welcoming Dr. Vartan Gregorian. (Applause.)
DR. GREGORIAN: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Mrs. Laura
Bush, your Excellency Zalmai Rassoul – foreign minister of Afghanistan,
distinguished diplomats, Ambassador Melanne Verveer, members of the
U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council, esteemed guests, ladies and gentlemen,
today is first day of spring, hence first day of new year,
Nowruz, New Year’s Day in Afghanistan, Iran, and Tajikistan. I wish all of you happy new year. (In Farsi.)
From my childhood days in Iran, I still remember the poetic expression, (in Farsi). May every day of yours be a
nowruz, and your
nowruz
be a glorious one. I am always honored to be in the presence of two
great friends, former First Ladies, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
and Laura Bush, a fellow librarian and educator. (Laughter.)
I am great admirer of theirs. With vigor and passion, tenacity and
conviction, they have done so much for so long to advance the cause of
education, of women’s rights and opportunities. They are invested in
hope. They have invested in human potential to expand human
opportunities without racial, ethnic, and political borders, boundaries.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton continues to work tirelessly to
advance peace and human rights in general, and women rights in
particular, not only here but throughout the world. In their fight on
behalf of women, Hillary Clinton has a formidable secret weapon:
Ambassador Melanne Verveer. (Laughter.) She is an amazing force, free
spirit, free nature, master tactician, manager, and naturally tireless
on behalf of women. I’m delighted to be here. (Applause.)
As an historian who is very familiar with Afghanistan, I’m well
acquainted with the efforts of the Afghans to modernize their country
while maintaining its independence and sovereignty. I’m also aware of
the quest of Afghan women to receive education, secure opportunities,
become equal citizens, and thus contribute to their country’s
advancement. Mr. Towdy, a noted expert on Islam, in his comments here on
the Qu’ran, has reminded us – he is Tunisian great scholar – that God
created a couple, did not create men first, women second. He created a
couple at the same time. So there’s no way half of the couple can be
inferior to the other entire couple. (Laughter.) (Applause.)
I’m also here in my capacity as president of Carnegie Corporation to
tell you that we have supported the cause of secure, peaceful, and
economically vibrant Afghanistan where the talent of its people and its
rich multiethnic society can prosper. Beginning with a grant in 2003 to
the United Nations Assistance Mission to Afghanistan for support for the
Kabul Public Library and the repatriation of Afghan memory in the form
of books and archival materials from libraries and universities abroad,
we have invested in a wide range of projects in Afghanistan.
From the work of organizations such as the Center for International
Cooperation at New York University to help the UN build sustainable
peace, to the Institute of State Effectiveness on the ground effort to
complement the achievements of National Solidarity Program, to
Lichtenstein Institute for Self Determination at Princeton University
track two dialogue that have engaged the leaders of experts to
Afghanistan and the region, to the work of West Virginia-based Future
Generations to link grassroots development with national and
international assistance efforts, our grantees have been committed to
advancing solutions by, for, and with Afghans and for Afghanistan.
Most recently, we support the International Task Force of Afghanistan
organized by Century Foundation and chaired by former Under Secretary
of State of Political Affairs, a Carnegie Corporation trustee, Tom
Pickering, and former UN Special Representative for Afghanistan and
Foreign Minister of Algeria Lakhdar Brahimi to map out with Afghan
leaders and others the requirements for a negotiated settlement to the
conflict in Afghanistan that also engages its neighbors.
Building of this legacy, and not to belabor more – Kumalaya, remind
me, that time is now of the essence – (laughter) – I’d like to announce
today the Carnegie Corporation has decided in honor of our first two
ladies but also especially in honor of work that council is doing, to
grant $1 million scholarship for Afghan women who study in Afghan
universities. Thank you very much. (Applause.)
Furthermore, I am delighted to tell you that my colleague and friend,
Allan Goodman, head of Institute of International Education – again,
founded by Carnegie Corporation 1919 – has decided that they will
administer the grant in order not to impose any difficulties in
expediting this matter.
So thank you very much for having me here. Delighted. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Oh, Micah, that’s great. That is so great.