Why Laura Bush Can't Forget a Shoeless Afghan Boy – and What She Wants the next President to Do About It - People Exclusive
Laura Bush remembers the 6th-grade report she wrote on Afghanistan – "in my best handwriting, of course" – because it was then the most exotic, faraway country she could imagine. And all these decades later, she remembers the horrible day in 2001 when Afghanistan became her life's passion.
"I've been committed, really, to Afghanistan and Afghan women since September 11th," the former First Lady tells PEOPLE. "Starting that day, I felt a special relationship with Afghan women and do still today."
Once those 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States introduced Americans to the brutality of the Taliban in Afghanistan, Mrs. Bush used her White House platform to champion the Afghan women and girls violently persecuted, barred from schools and denied basic human rights by the Taliban. Their cause remained Mrs. Bush's passion project after she moved home to Texas in 2009 and, this week, and, this week, culminates in the release of her new book, We Are Afghan Women: Voices of Hope
Mrs. Bush invited PEOPLE to tag along Tuesday evening on her private tour of a Smithsonian museum exhibit of Afghan art and it was there that she reflected on the stories of Afghan women included in her book:
Mrs. Bush delighted in a display of jewelry, remarked on her own purchases supporting Afghan artisans (she said she outfitted the White House, George W. Bush Presidential Library and her own Texas ranch with Afghan rugs) and snagged right off the exhibit wall a turquoise glazed bowl from the Turquoise Mountain-supported potters of Istalif to take home with her.
And, while refusing to get drawn into talk of the 2016 presidential debates, she voiced hope that the United States would remain committed to helping Afghans – starting with keeping U.S. troops over there.
"I want people to know, 15-some odd years later, what it was like for Afghan women after September 11th and that now it's good, but it's not perfect, by any means," Mrs. Bush said.
"My book is about women and I hope that whoever our next president is is somebody that will pay attention to women's issues and to women in Afghanistan. I know people are tired and they think we have our own problems here – and we do. But it's really important for us to make a real commitment to stay with Afghanistan for a long time." - Read More at the Laura Bush
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