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Mrs. Obama's message resonated with women in Africa. "She gives hope not just to women of color, but to women everywhere," said Kiri Maponya, a member of one of Soweto's leading families who now lives in the U.S. The first lady spent Wednesday in Soweto, a black township in Johannesburg that was at the center of the uprisings against apartheid, the now-abolished system of racial separation. Before the youth leadership speech, Mandela's wife, Graca Machel, gave Mrs. Obama a rousing introduction that nearly moved the first lady to tears. "We welcome you as a daughter of African heritage and we can call you the queen of our world," Machel said. Mrs. Obama said she doesn't understand why some things, such as that speech, go really well, and why other things just go OK. "I just want to be useful," she said. There's no question that she is useful and will continue to be because, as she often says, there is much more work to do. For one thing, the presidential campaign season is revving up in the U.S. and her husband wants another four years in office. While
she also shies away from the idea that she's the president's "secret weapon," as she came to be known during the 2008 campaign, Mrs. Obama is helping him raise money this coming week at three fundraisers in Boston and Burlington, Vt.
[Associated
Press;
Darlene Superville covers Michelle Obama for The Associated Press in Washington.
Darlene Superville can be reached at http://twitter.com/dsupervilleap.
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