The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at Roundtable Discussion with High School Students

Brown V. Board of Education Historical Site

Topeka, Kansas

4:22 P.M. CDT

MRS. OBAMA:  I thought it would be really cool to talk to – students who were here.  That’s why we got to –- with all of you.

One of the –- a new initiative that I started just this past month is called Reach Higher.  And one of the things that I’m trying to do to support the President’s North Star goal is to make sure that the United States has the most educated workforce in the world once again –- is to really try to reach out to young people and stress the importance of finishing high school and getting an education beyond high school, whether that’s professional training, four-year college, two-year community college.  It’s just going to be essential for you guys to succeed in an ever-globalizing economy, to have that kind of education.

And I hear that you guys are already way into that.  You’re good.  You’re focused, right?

MS. NILSEN:  Going to college.

MRS. OBAMA:  That’s a good thing.  But I’m really –- what helps me in these initiatives is to really hear from students like you to find out what are your hopes, how do you think about college, what do you think about life there –- and so forth.  What are some of the challenges that you face?  What are some of the questions you have of somebody like me who might be able to do something about something, or talk to a guy that could maybe do something about something?

So I really just want to hear from you.  See what’s on your minds, what’s working for you, what are you afraid of, what are some of the concerns.

 

END                  4:24 P.M. CDT

First Lady Michelle Obama Addresses Senior Appreciation Day in Topeka, Kansas

May 16, 2014 | 20:58 | Public Domain

On the eve of the 60th anniversary of the landmark Brown v Board of Education Supreme Court decision, First Lady Michelle Obama speaks at Senior Appreciation Day in Topeka, Kansas, where the historic civil rights case began.

Download mp4 (1700MB)

West Wing Week 05/16/14 or, “Go Solar!”

This week, the President praised the power of solar, honored this year's TOP COPS, awarded the Medal of Honor and traveled to New York for the opening of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum.

Visiting Topeka with First Lady Michelle Obama

First Lady Michelle Obama is in Topeka, Kansas today to talk education ahead of the 60th anniversary of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case, Brown v. Board of Education.

Topeka is home to the historic case in which the Supreme Court's decision outlawed racial segregation in our nation's schools -- declaring education "must be made available to all on equal terms."

Tonight, the First Lady will celebrate the achievements of seniors from Topeka high schools at "Senior Recognition Day," and they'll be live streamed at 7 p.m. ET.

Watch First Lady Michelle Obama's remarks celebrating the high school seniors of the Topeka Public Schools:

Related Topics: Education, Kansas

West Wing Week 05/16/14 or, “Go Solar!”

May 14, 2014 | 3:13 | Public Domain

This week, the President praised the power of solar, honored this year's TOP COPS, awarded the Medal of Honor and traveled to New York for the opening of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum.

Download mp4 (104.3MB)

A Mother’s Day Tea with the First Lady and Dr. Biden

P051214CK-0103

First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden help children create Mother's Day cards and crafts in the State Dining Room of the White House, May 12, 2014. The cards and crafts were to be presented later during a Joining Forces initiative tea honoring military mothers in the State Dining Room. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

Ed. note: This is cross-posted on The White House Blog. See the original post here.

Yesterday, First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden invited more than 100 military mothers and their families to the White House for a Mother’s Day Tea. The military mothers in attendance included military spouses, active duty and reserve service members, and women veterans.

While the military moms enjoyed tea and refreshments, more than 60 children made special gifts for their mothers including planting beans, decorating ceramic pots, and gift wrapping special White House honey lemon soap. The cards and crafts were presented during the tea ceremony in the State Dining Room.

Before Grammy award-winning artist Norah Jones performed for the crowd, Dr. Biden and Mrs. Obama offered some words of thanks. Dr. Biden spoke of her own experiences as a military mom, and the support her family received during her son Beau’s deployment to Iraq.

While our sons and daughters serve so selflessly, having a community share the burden makes all the difference in the world. And so for Mother’s Day, we wanted to simply say thank you to all the mothers who have loved and supported us. Thank you for all that you do for your selflessness and for your sacrifice on behalf of our country.

A Mother’s Day Tea with the First Lady and Dr. Biden

P051214CK-0103

First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden help children create Mother's Day cards and crafts in the State Dining Room of the White House, May 12, 2014. The cards and crafts were to be presented later during a Joining Forces initiative tea honoring military mothers in the State Dining Room. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

Yesterday, First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden invited more than 100 military mothers and their families to the White House for a Mother’s Day Tea. The military mothers in attendance included military spouses, active duty and reserve service members, and women veterans.

While the military moms enjoyed tea and refreshments, more than 60 children made special gifts for their mothers including planting beans, decorating ceramic pots, and gift wrapping special White House honey lemon soap. The cards and crafts were presented during the tea ceremony in the State Dining Room.

Before Grammy award-winning artist Norah Jones performed for the crowd, Dr. Biden and Mrs. Obama offered some words of thanks. Dr. Biden spoke of her own experiences as a military mom, and the support her family received during her son Beau’s deployment to Iraq.

While our sons and daughters serve so selflessly, having a community share the burden makes all the difference in the world. And so for Mother’s Day, we wanted to simply say thank you to all the mothers who have loved and supported us. Thank you for all that you do for your selflessness and for your sacrifice on behalf of our country.

Commander Cara LaPointe, U.S. Navy, is a White House Fellow in the Office of the First Lady.
Related Topics: Veterans, Women, Working Families

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady and Dr. Jill Biden at Annual Mother's Day Tea

State Dining Room

11:19 A.M. EDT

DR. BIDEN:  Good morning, everyone.  And thank you all for being here.  It’s wonderful to welcome you to the White House.

Many of you know that I’m a proud military mom and grandmom.  And I’m always honored to be in the presence of military families.  My son Beau is a soldier in the Delaware Army National Guard, and he deployed for a year to Iraq.  So while I’m always honored to be in the presence of our military families, I feel a special bond with other military moms. 

I’ll never forget the day that Beau deployed; that feeling of pride and concern that military moms know all too well.  Having Beau overseas was tough.  It was a tough year for our entire family, especially my daughter in law, Hallie, and their two children, Natalie, and my grandson Hunter.  But there were a lot of people who stepped up in different ways to support our family that year.  A neighbor came over and shoveled the driveway in a snowstorm.  The church included Beau’s name in the bulletin.  And at Natalie’s school, her teacher hung a photo outside the door so when the children walked into Natalie’s classroom they always knew that her daddy was at war.

Through the whole experience, those acts of kindness meant so much to them and to us.  While our sons and daughters serve so selflessly, having a community share the burden makes all the difference in the world.

And so for Mother’s Day, we wanted to simply say thank you to all the mother who have loved and supported us.  Thank you for all that you do for your selflessness and for your sacrifice on behalf of our country.

And now, it is my great honor to introduce our country’s great supporter of military moms and families, my friend and partner, First Lady -- and Mom -- of the United States, Michelle Obama.  (Applause.) 

MRS. OBAMA:  Yay to Mother’s Day, to us moms.  (Applause.)  Hello, everyone.  Welcome to the White House.  And for some of you, welcome back to the White House.  (Laughter.)  I spoke to a couple of the kids; they were like, oh, I’ve been here before.  (Laughter.)  Been here, done that.  So it’s good to have you guys back.

Thank you, Jill.  Thank you for your friendship, your partnership, that great introduction.  It’s been just wonderful working with you on Joining Forces.  I also want to recognize all the Cabinet and senior military spouses we have here today. 

And of course, I want to recognize my mom, Marian Robinson, who is here.  (Applause.)  Now, moms, grandmas, the one thing you have to understand about this woman -- first of all, she never comes to anything.  (Laughter.)  She’s like, no, I don’t want to, I’m not going.  But she comes to this event every year, and that is a special statement from her.  But it gives me an opportunity once a year to embarrass her by publicly stating how much my mom has meant to me in this realm of service that we’re doing here at the White House. 

There is no way I would be standing up straight on my feet if it weren’t for my mom, who is always there to look after our girls, to love them and to be mad at me when I’m disciplining them -- (laughter) -- which I still don’t get.  Same rules that we had.  When they work in my house, she’s like, why are you so mean?  (Laughter.)  But that’s what grandmas are for.  That’s what she reminds me -- oh, yeah.  (Laughter.) 

But especially, she’s been that shoulder for me to lean on. I can always go up to her room and cry, complain, argue, and she just says, go on back down there and do what you’re supposed to do.  (Laughter.)  So if my mom reflects the love and support that the moms here have given to their families, then we’re in good space here.  So, Mom, I love you.  And thank you.  I’m going to stop now, because I’ve got to get through the rest of this. 

But as I look around the room, I see all the women who are pouring so much love and support -- that same kind of love into their families.  We have an extraordinary group here today.  We’ve got moms who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan.  We’ve got military wives and partners who have moved across the country again and again.  We have grandmothers who have helped to care for their grandkids while mom or dad or both are deployed.  So we have some really phenomenal representation of what mothering can mean in the lives of so many families, in particular our military families.

Just to embarrass a couple of people, we’ve got Judith Chedville here.  Where’s Judith?  There Judith is, in the back.  Oh, I met that little precious one in the back.  (Laughter.)  Well, Judith served our country in Iraq and Kuwait, and left the service in 2004 because, she said, she could no longer serve in good conscience under “don’t ask, don’t tell.”  When my husband repealed the policy in 2011, Judith -- yes -- (applause) -- reenlisted.  And today, she is a first lieutenant in the Texas Army National Guard.  She is here this morning with her spouse, Alicia Butler, and their beautiful one-year-old daughter, Jordan.  You saw her.  So we are proud of you both, proud of you all.  And thank you for being here. 

We also have Karen Ruedisueli -- where is Karen?  There you are.  We’re going to embarrass you, too.  (Laughter.)  Now, Karen’s husband Kurt is an army major who served for years in Iraq and Afghanistan.  And Karen is here with her eight-year-old daughter Kate, and her seven-year-old son John.  (Laughter.)  They’re not shy.  (Laughter.)  But the thing that always strikes me about military kids is how much they sacrifice. 

See, in their short lifetime, Kate and John have lived in 10 different houses.  They have gone to three different elementary schools.  And with all those moves, Karen was forced to put her 15-year career in marketing and development on hold.  But she has been so determined to use her skills and her talents to give back, so over the past few years she’s been a volunteer for Blue Star families.  She has led the Family Readiness Group when her husband’s unit deployed to Afghanistan.  And today, she is working full-time with the National Military Family Association to advocate for other families like hers.  So she has found a way to keep it going.  (Applause.)

We’ve got women like Karen all in this room -- all of you.  I could go on and tell story after story.  But you all are perfect examples of why this event is so special and why we want to bring you all here today, because as military moms you’re doing so much not just for your families, but you’re doing so much for your communities and for our country.  And most people don’t know it.  They don’t know what you do.  You’re the ones, even with husbands deployed and things going on, you’re still driving the carpool, volunteering, leading the neighborhood organizations and working with your congregations to do care packages for other people.  You’re the ones who answer the phone call late at night when a neighbor needs your help.  And no matter what your country asks of you and your family, you’re the ones who step up and serve.  And you do it with grace, with dignity, and without complaint.

So today, we just wanted to give you a little something back for the years of service and sacrifice that you make.  As a token of our gratitude, we’d like to bring you here today.  And all of your kids have been busy in the State Dining Room making wonderful surprises for you, and they were all very diligent.  And I don’t think anyone got dirty that I saw.  (Laughter.)  We made sure they were dirt-free activities.  (Laughter.)  We have a hand up.  Do you have something you want to state, sweetie?  Yes.

CHILD:  I didn’t get to do any crafts with you.  Could I do them --

MRS. OBAMA:  You know what?  There are -- sweetie, there are still crafts to do.  And when we get through, we’re going to make sure you get to do all the crafts, okay?  (Laughter.)  All right? (Applause.)  I’m going to assign -- who do we have -- Rory, I’m going to put you in charge of this.  I saw you first.  (Laughter.)  What’s your name, sweetie?

CHILD:  (Inaudible.)

MRS. OBAMA:  What? 

CHILD:  (Inaudible.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Denny?

MOTHER:  Nettie.  

MRS. OBAMA:  Nettie.  All right, Rory and Nettie, you guys are going to hook up after this and you’re going to do every single craft that we have.  (Laughter.)  Did anyone else miss out on crafts?  Did you?  Did you get to do your craft?  You have been trying to shush him for the entire time.  (Laughter.)  Did you get a chance to do a craft or you just want to talk?  (Laughter.)

See, this is how much your kids love you.  (Laughter.)  They don’t want to miss out on the crafts, and we will make sure that -- but, first, before we do that, Nettie, we’ve got a special guest. 

We have someone here today who is a new mother herself.  She came all the way here from New York, even though she just had a three-month old, and she’s here for the same reason we’re all here -- because she is proud of you, she is grateful for your service and sacrifice.  She knows just a little bit about what it means to be a busy mom juggling a lot of things.  She’s an extraordinarily talented singer, songwriter, a nine-time Grammy winner.  And listening to her music is the perfect way to kick back, relax, and enjoy yourselves for a little while. 

So we are so grateful that she is here.  She is here with her mom and her family as well.  Please join me in welcoming the one and only Norah Jones.  (Applause.)

(Norah Jones performs.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, I hope you all have had a good time here at the White House.  You had some treats; you hung out for a little bit.  But Jill and I are going to meet you in the Blue Room so that we can say hello to everyone.  Enjoy the rest of your day.  Make sure to take time out for yourselves.  That’s the one thing I’ve learned from my mom, is to treat yourself well.  Do that every single day. 

We love you.  We respect you.  We admire you.  And we will see you again, so be good.  (Laughter.)  And to all the kids here, eat your vegetables!  (Laughter.) 

Oh, we have another hand.  Yes?

CHILD:  What about chicken?

MRS. OBAMA:  Chicken?  Chicken is good.  (Laughter.)  Okay, eat your vegetables and some chicken.  (Laughter.)  All right, you guys, thanks so much for coming.  We will see you in there soon.  (Applause.)

END
11:36 A.M. EDT

The First Lady: "One of the Greatest Lessons I Learned from My Mom"

In honor of Mother's Day, First Lady Michelle Obama shared a message about one of the greatest lessons she learned from her mom: the importance of education. Through the First Lady’s Reach Higher initiative, she’s reaching out directly to young people to encourage them to take charge of their futures and complete their education past high school. You can read the First Lady’s Mother’s Day message below, or at MomsRising.org.


One of the greatest lessons I learned from my mom was about the importance of education. Neither she nor my father had gone to college, but they were determined to see me and my brother get a good education. So starting when I was young, my mom volunteered at my school, helping out in the front office and making sure my teachers were doing their jobs and my school was running like it should be.

My mom wasn't a teacher, or principal, or school board member, but she believed that our education was very much her business. And while I was occasionally mortified by her presence at my school, in retrospect, I have no doubt that my classmates and I got a better education because she was there, keeping an eye on things.

Related Topics: Education

World War II Museum

New Orleans, Louisiana

12:04 P.M. CDT

     MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you so much.  It’s my privilege to be here.  As Mary said, I came initially to do the commencement for Dillard University, but when we found out we could have some time in the schedule to come and sit down and talk to our military families and veterans and to hear more about what’s going on in your lives, I jumped at the chance to stay.

     These kind of gatherings, these small groups are so helpful for me -- as well as Jill Biden, who is my partner in Joining Forces -- because we’re all up in Washington doing a lot of interesting things hoping that what we’re doing is impacting you all on the ground, but we don’t really know until we hear from you.  So these conversations really help us shape what we do. 

     And many of the initiatives that we’ve taken on under Joining Forces have come from conversations like these, you guys telling us your stories.  And it gives us a better sense of what’s working, what’s not, where we need to push harder.

     So I just want to say thank you.  You all keep me going, and I say this every time I meet you all -- I know I haven’t met you, but I know so many of your stories.  And there are so few people who understand what it means to do the kind of service that you all are doing.  And whenever I’m feeling sorry for myself, you know, I really do think of what you all are sacrificing every day and how you do it with such courage and with poise, and with gratitude and strength.  So I say, get over it, Michelle; stop complaining, get up, go to work, do something to help this country.  (Laughter.) 

     So my time here I want to spend really listening to you guys. 

                             END                12:06 P.M. CDT

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