Syria's First Lady Wants New Conversation With West
Educated Assad Works With Charities, Takes Children to School
Feb. 6, 2007 — - Her husband, the president of Syria, is crazy about her. Asma
Akhras Al-Assad is the first lady of Syria.
Her Syrian title is "al akilatu al rais" -- simply translated to "the
president's wife." But make no mistake, this beautiful, athletic woman is a
force for her country's future.
"Good Morning America" anchor Diane Sawyer first saw her at one of her charity
projects called Basma, which means "smile" in Arabic. The charity supports a
cancer center.
She sent word she was not ready to give on-camera interviews, but greeted the
crew warmly and in her perfect British English ventured a statement about the
cause.
"A real example of the way that Syrians from all walks of life have come
together and taken responsibility and making a real difference in their
communities," Assad said.
Later, Sawyer met her at one of her private offices overlooking Damascus at
sunset, where the pair sat for two hours, talking about Assad's country in the
new century and her life.
She grew up very much part of two worlds. Born in Britain, she is the daughter
of a Syrian cardiologist and speaks perfect Arabic, French and Spanish.
After college she says she loved working on Wall Street in New York and in Paris
and London as a banker with J.P. Morgan. She was contemplating an MBA at
Harvard.
In 2000, she decided to marry a family acquaintance -- a tall quiet man who
happened to be Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
After the private wedding, she spent three months out of view, traveling
quietly, sometimes anonymously in jeans and a T-shirt, to meet the people of her
country, take note of hopes and needs, sit among the farmers to ask about their
crops and devise plans for microloans she passionately tries to promote today.
Her official introduction to the world came when she and her husband returned to
England to meet the queen.
The couple famously lives in a modest home with three children that they drive
to school themselves. They still protect family dinners and even bike through
villages. She has already begun programs to excite Syria's children about
business and challenge them to compete in a global world.
"She's an amazing woman. Ever since she got here she got deep into things in
every single sector," said Thala Khair, founder of a Syrian private school. "As
much as she's working for women's rights, she's working on children's rights and
culture."
The cancer center where we first met her is breaking ground in Syria -- the
private and public sector working together. The children show her pictures they
drew in therapy -- drawings with names like "magic."
So while the world debates the intentions of her husband on the world's stage,
the two of them remain symbols of a new generation in the Middle East. The
former doctor and the former banker were schooled in England, are steeped in
Syria and, she might say, are asking the West for a new conversation about a new
day.
Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures
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