Michelle Obama's plea for education

138,977 views ・ 2009-05-27

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:18
This is my first trip,
0
18330
2000
00:20
my first foreign trip as a first lady.
1
20330
2000
00:22
Can you believe that?
2
22330
2000
00:24
(Applause)
3
24330
10000
00:34
And while this is not my first visit to the U.K.,
4
34330
3000
00:37
I have to say that I am glad that this is my first official visit.
5
37330
5000
00:42
The special relationship between the United States and the U.K.
6
42330
4000
00:46
is based not only on the relationship between governments,
7
46330
5000
00:51
but the common language and the values that we share,
8
51330
3000
00:54
and I'm reminded of that by watching you all today.
9
54330
4000
00:58
During my visit I've been especially honored
10
58330
4000
01:02
to meet some of Britain's most extraordinary women --
11
62330
3000
01:05
women who are paving the way for all of you.
12
65330
3000
01:08
And I'm honored to meet you,
13
68330
3000
01:11
the future leaders of Great Britain and this world.
14
71330
6000
01:17
And although the circumstances of our lives may seem very distant,
15
77330
5000
01:22
with me standing here as the First Lady of the United States of America,
16
82330
4000
01:26
and you, just getting through school,
17
86330
4000
01:30
I want you to know that we have very much in common.
18
90330
4000
01:34
For nothing in my life's path
19
94330
4000
01:38
would have predicted that I'd be standing here
20
98330
2000
01:40
as the first African-American First Lady
21
100330
3000
01:43
of the United States of America.
22
103330
2000
01:45
There is nothing in my story that would land me here.
23
105330
5000
01:50
I wasn't raised with wealth or resources
24
110330
3000
01:53
or any social standing to speak of.
25
113330
4000
01:57
I was raised on the South Side of Chicago.
26
117330
4000
02:01
That's the real part of Chicago.
27
121330
3000
02:04
And I was the product of a working-class community.
28
124330
3000
02:07
My father was a city worker all of his life,
29
127330
4000
02:11
and my mother was a stay-at-home mom.
30
131330
2000
02:13
And she stayed at home to take care of me and my older brother.
31
133330
5000
02:18
Neither of them attended university.
32
138330
3000
02:21
My dad was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis
33
141330
3000
02:24
in the prime of his life.
34
144330
2000
02:26
But even as it got harder for him to walk
35
146330
3000
02:29
and get dressed in the morning --
36
149330
2000
02:31
I saw him struggle more and more --
37
151330
2000
02:33
my father never complained about his struggle.
38
153330
4000
02:37
He was grateful for what he had.
39
157330
2000
02:39
He just woke up a little earlier and worked a little harder.
40
159330
5000
02:44
And my brother and I were raised with all that you really need:
41
164330
3000
02:47
love, strong values
42
167330
3000
02:50
and a belief that with a good education
43
170330
3000
02:53
and a whole lot of hard work,
44
173330
2000
02:55
that there was nothing that we could not do.
45
175330
3000
02:58
I am an example of what's possible
46
178330
4000
03:02
when girls from the very beginning of their lives
47
182330
4000
03:06
are loved and nurtured by the people around them.
48
186330
5000
03:11
I was surrounded by extraordinary women in my life:
49
191330
4000
03:15
grandmothers, teachers, aunts, cousins, neighbors,
50
195330
5000
03:20
who taught me about quiet strength and dignity.
51
200330
4000
03:24
And my mother, the most important role model in my life,
52
204330
5000
03:29
who lives with us at the White House
53
209330
2000
03:31
and helps to care for our two little daughters,
54
211330
3000
03:34
Malia and Sasha.
55
214330
2000
03:36
She's an active presence in their lives, as well as mine,
56
216330
4000
03:40
and is instilling in them
57
220330
2000
03:42
the same values that she taught me and my brother:
58
222330
3000
03:45
things like compassion, and integrity,
59
225330
3000
03:48
and confidence, and perseverance --
60
228330
4000
03:52
all of that wrapped up in an unconditional love
61
232330
3000
03:55
that only a grandmother can give.
62
235330
3000
03:58
I was also fortunate enough to be cherished and encouraged
63
238330
4000
04:02
by some strong male role models as well,
64
242330
5000
04:07
including my father, my brother, uncles and grandfathers.
65
247330
3000
04:10
The men in my life taught me some important things, as well.
66
250330
5000
04:15
They taught me about what a respectful relationship
67
255330
3000
04:18
should look like between men and women.
68
258330
4000
04:22
They taught me about what a strong marriage feels like:
69
262330
4000
04:26
that it's built on faith and commitment
70
266330
3000
04:29
and an admiration for each other's unique gifts.
71
269330
4000
04:33
They taught me about what it means
72
273330
2000
04:35
to be a father
73
275330
2000
04:37
and to raise a family.
74
277330
2000
04:39
And not only to invest in your own home
75
279330
2000
04:41
but to reach out and help raise kids
76
281330
5000
04:46
in the broader community.
77
286330
2000
04:48
And these were the same qualities
78
288330
2000
04:50
that I looked for in my own husband,
79
290330
3000
04:53
Barack Obama.
80
293330
2000
04:56
And when we first met,
81
296330
3000
04:59
one of the things that I remember is that he took me out on a date.
82
299330
4000
05:03
And his date was to go with him to a community meeting.
83
303330
3000
05:06
(Laughter)
84
306330
2000
05:08
I know, how romantic.
85
308330
2000
05:10
(Laughter)
86
310330
3000
05:13
But when we met, Barack was a community organizer.
87
313330
2000
05:15
He worked, helping people to find jobs
88
315330
4000
05:19
and to try to bring resources into struggling neighborhoods.
89
319330
4000
05:23
As he talked to the residents in that community center,
90
323330
2000
05:25
he talked about two concepts.
91
325330
2000
05:27
He talked about "the world as it is" and "the world as it should be."
92
327330
6000
05:33
And I talked about this throughout the entire campaign.
93
333330
4000
05:37
What he said, that all too often,
94
337330
2000
05:39
is that we accept the distance between those two ideas.
95
339330
5000
05:44
And sometimes we settle for the world as it is,
96
344330
4000
05:48
even when it doesn't reflect our values and aspirations.
97
348330
4000
05:52
But Barack reminded us on that day,
98
352330
3000
05:55
all of us in that room, that we all know
99
355330
3000
05:58
what our world should look like.
100
358330
4000
06:02
We know what fairness and justice and opportunity look like.
101
362330
3000
06:05
We all know.
102
365330
2000
06:07
And he urged the people in that meeting,
103
367330
2000
06:09
in that community,
104
369330
2000
06:11
to devote themselves to closing the gap
105
371330
3000
06:14
between those two ideas,
106
374330
2000
06:16
to work together to try to make the world as it is
107
376330
4000
06:20
and the world as it should be, one and the same.
108
380330
4000
06:24
And I think about that today because I am
109
384330
3000
06:27
reminded and convinced that all of you in this school
110
387330
4000
06:31
are very important parts of closing that gap.
111
391330
5000
06:36
You are the women who will build the world as it should be.
112
396330
5000
06:41
You're going to write the next chapter in history.
113
401330
2000
06:43
Not just for yourselves, but for your generation
114
403330
4000
06:47
and generations to come.
115
407330
3000
06:50
And that's why getting a good education
116
410330
2000
06:52
is so important.
117
412330
2000
06:54
That's why all of this that you're going through --
118
414330
3000
06:57
the ups and the downs, the teachers that you love and the teachers that you don't --
119
417330
4000
07:01
why it's so important.
120
421330
3000
07:04
Because communities and countries and ultimately the world
121
424330
3000
07:07
are only as strong as the health of their women.
122
427330
5000
07:12
And that's important to keep in mind.
123
432330
2000
07:14
Part of that health includes an outstanding education.
124
434330
6000
07:20
The difference between a struggling family and a healthy one
125
440330
5000
07:25
is often the presence of an empowered woman
126
445330
3000
07:28
or women at the center of that family.
127
448330
3000
07:31
The difference between a broken community and a thriving one
128
451330
3000
07:34
is often the healthy respect between men and women
129
454330
4000
07:38
who appreciate the contributions each other makes to society.
130
458330
5000
07:43
The difference between a languishing nation
131
463330
3000
07:46
and one that will flourish
132
466330
2000
07:48
is the recognition that we need equal access to education
133
468330
4000
07:52
for both boys and girls.
134
472330
2000
07:54
And this school, named after the U.K.'s first female doctor,
135
474330
5000
07:59
and the surrounding buildings named for Mexican artist Frida Kahlo,
136
479330
6000
08:05
Mary Seacole,
137
485330
2000
08:07
the Jamaican nurse known as the "black Florence Nightingale,"
138
487330
4000
08:11
and the English author, Emily Bronte,
139
491330
3000
08:14
honor women who fought sexism, racism and ignorance,
140
494330
4000
08:18
to pursue their passions to feed their own souls.
141
498330
5000
08:23
They allowed for no obstacles.
142
503330
3000
08:26
As the sign said back there, "without limitations."
143
506330
4000
08:30
They knew no other way to live
144
510330
2000
08:32
than to follow their dreams.
145
512330
3000
08:35
And having done so, these women
146
515330
5000
08:40
moved many obstacles.
147
520330
2000
08:42
And they opened many new doors
148
522330
2000
08:44
for millions of female doctors and nurses
149
524330
3000
08:47
and artists and authors,
150
527330
3000
08:50
all of whom have followed them.
151
530330
2000
08:52
And by getting a good education,
152
532330
3000
08:55
you too can control your own destiny.
153
535330
4000
08:59
Please remember that.
154
539330
3000
09:02
If you want to know the reason why I'm standing here,
155
542330
4000
09:06
it's because of education.
156
546330
3000
09:09
I never cut class. Sorry, I don't know if anybody is cutting class.
157
549330
4000
09:13
I never did it.
158
553330
2000
09:15
I loved getting As.
159
555330
2000
09:17
I liked being smart.
160
557330
2000
09:19
I liked being on time. I liked getting my work done.
161
559330
4000
09:23
I thought being smart was cooler than anything in the world.
162
563330
5000
09:28
And you too, with these same values,
163
568330
2000
09:30
can control your own destiny.
164
570330
2000
09:32
You too can pave the way.
165
572330
3000
09:35
You too can realize your dreams,
166
575330
2000
09:37
and then your job is to reach back
167
577330
4000
09:41
and to help someone just like you do the same thing.
168
581330
4000
09:45
History proves that it doesn't matter
169
585330
3000
09:48
whether you come from a council estate
170
588330
2000
09:50
or a country estate.
171
590330
2000
09:52
Your success will be determined
172
592330
2000
09:54
by your own fortitude,
173
594330
3000
09:57
your own confidence, your own individual hard work.
174
597330
4000
10:01
That is true. That is the reality of the world that we live in.
175
601330
4000
10:05
You now have control over your own destiny.
176
605330
3000
10:08
And it won't be easy -- that's for sure.
177
608330
5000
10:13
But you have everything you need.
178
613330
2000
10:15
Everything you need to succeed,
179
615330
3000
10:18
you already have, right here.
180
618330
3000
10:21
My husband works in this big office.
181
621330
4000
10:25
They call it the Oval Office.
182
625330
3000
10:28
In the White House, there's the desk that he sits at --
183
628330
2000
10:30
it's called the Resolute desk.
184
630330
3000
10:33
It was built by the timber of Her Majesty's Ship Resolute
185
633330
4000
10:37
and given by Queen Victoria.
186
637330
3000
10:40
It's an enduring symbol of the friendship between our two nations.
187
640330
5000
10:45
And its name, Resolute,
188
645330
2000
10:47
is a reminder of the strength of character that's required
189
647330
4000
10:51
not only to lead a country,
190
651330
2000
10:53
but to live a life of purpose, as well.
191
653330
5000
10:58
And I hope in pursuing your dreams, you all remain resolute,
192
658330
4000
11:02
that you go forward without limits,
193
662330
3000
11:05
and that you use your talents -- because there are many; we've seen them;
194
665330
5000
11:10
it's there --
195
670330
2000
11:12
that you use them to create the world as it should be.
196
672330
4000
11:16
Because we are counting on you.
197
676330
3000
11:19
We are counting on every single one of you
198
679330
2000
11:21
to be the very best that you can be.
199
681330
3000
11:24
Because the world is big.
200
684330
2000
11:26
And it's full of challenges.
201
686330
2000
11:28
And we need strong, smart, confident young women
202
688330
4000
11:32
to stand up and take the reins.
203
692330
2000
11:34
We know you can do it. We love you. Thank you so much.
204
694330
4000
11:38
(Applause)
205
698330
7000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7