BFF-19 Michelle Obama on book tour encourages girls at London school

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Michelle Obama on book tour encourages girls at London school

LONDON, Dec 4, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Michelle Obama on Monday returned to a
London school she had visited as US first lady encouraging students to
“practice sisterhood” as she presented a new memoir of her life.

Obama is in the British capital to promote her hotly anticipated book,
“Becoming”, which has already sold more copies than any other book published
in the United States this year.

She told some 300 students — mostly girls aged between 11 and 18 — at a
north London school that her past visit there as first lady in 2009 had
inspired her to work for better education.

“I was moved, touched and inspired as I always am by young people I meet
around the world,” said the 54-year-old mother of two and first African
American first lady.

“You reminded me of me, all the fears, the challenges you face. You guys
gave me a sense of comfort.”

Obama confessed to facing numerous hurdles and confronting teachers who
“underestimated me at every step”.

“I was told: ‘I don’t think you are Princeton material’. My dreams were too
high.”

But Obama graduated from the select Ivy League university and went on to
Harvard Law School before joining a Chicago law firm where she met her future
husband and president Barack Obama.

She urged the London students to find strength in each other as they
overcome their own doubters and naysayers.

“Practice that kind of sisterhood,” Michelle Obama said. “There are enough
obstacles around.”

The students seemed amazed that such a famous speaker came to their school.

“It did not really sink in that it was her,” 11-year-old Emma said.

Michelle Obama has however cancelled book tour stops in Paris and Berlin to
attend the funeral of former US president George H.W. Bush, who died Friday
aged 94.

Later at the capital’s Southbank Centre, where she discussed her book with
author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, she was asked what message she wanted to
give to young black women.

“What happens to black women, you become a caricature … the size of her
hips, her style… We are demonised,” she said.

“We are angry, too loud, too everything. My advice: start by getting those
demons out of your head and tell yourself ‘I’m good enough’.”

BSS/AFP/MSY/1002 hrs