Noel Hentschel Remembers Her Friend Benazir Bhutto as an Instrument for Peace, Who...
Noel Hentschel Remembers Her Friend Benazir Bhutto as an Instrument for Peace, Who Like Mother Teresa, Devoted Her Life to Others LOS ANGELES--(Business Wire)--Hentschel related that her last communication with Bhutto was when she was in China. Knowing Benazir's love of China she asked if she would like to meet her there. Bhutto responded on November 5, "I hope you are well. I left Dubai suddenly for Pakistan because of the imposition of emergency. Would love to catch up with you 'as and when life allows.' Love to your children." Concerned for Bhutto's safety, Hentschel said to her, "I contacted Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity sisters around the world and they are praying for you. They said they love you and appreciated your speech in Cairo when you spoke out for pro-life. We all agree you are God's instrument for peace. Take care. Hope to see you very soon." She added that "Mother Teresa and Benazir Bhutto were both peacemakers and I was blessed to have a personal relationship with these inspirational and courageous women." The friendship between the former Prime Minister and Hentschel spanned two decades. She knew Bhutto to be a very selfless person who also loved and admired Mother Teresa. After meeting and working with Mother Teresa, Hentschel was inspired to start The Noel Foundation in 1989. She began supporting projects that help women to help their families via education. Through The Noel Foundation she created the "Life" award, a program to honor women who have made a difference in the world. After reading Bhutto's autobiography, Daughter of Destiny, and learning she had written it while spending seven years in solitary confinement, Noel knew the first female Prime Minister of Pakistan should be honored for her extraordinary life's work. Upon receiving the invitation, Bhutto invited Hentschel to come to Islamabad to meet with her and visit many women's organizations in Rawalpindi. Just before the former Prime Minister was to be honored she was suddenly placed in prison -- so her mother Begum Nusrat Bhutto accepted the award on her behalf. The awards ceremony took place in 1990 at the United Nations and then Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar presented The Noel Foundation's "Life" award to Bhutto together with Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister of Great Britain, Gro Harlem Brundtland, Prime Minister of Norway and Corazone Aquino, President of the Philippines at a Celebration of International Leadership. The award was presented a second time to Bhutto personally in New York after she secured her prison release and was free to travel. Hentschel remembered once when she was planning a dinner for Bhutto in Los Angeles (coincidentally this was during the time of the OJ Simpson trial), she asked who would Bhutto like to have her invite to the dinner? "I want to meet Marcia Clark," she said, "and my husband wants to meet Robert Shapiro." During the dinner she said, "Only in America could you have two opponents dining together, a prosecutor and a defense attorney." Hentschel and the former Prime Minister worked together for many years on projects and programs to advance peace and economic opportunities for women and their families. Hentschel's Noel Foundation helped establish the Bahtawar Zardari project for girls in the poorest region of Pakistan. Hentschel and Bhutto felt that educating girls in Pakistan was one of the most essential investments to be made to improve the country's future. Bhutto was the first special guest speaker at Hentschel's Stonepine Retreat in Carmel Valley at the Global Issue Forum addressing peace in the Middle East. "She was completely committed to her country," Hentschel recalled. "She put her country first before anything else, even her own safety. She believed that her destiny was to be a peacemaker and that God was guiding and using her as an instrument." Hentschel also said that Bhutto often opened up about her faith and felt that Islam had taken a beating. "When you read the Koran, you will learn that Islam is respectful of women and honors them," Benazir said. "And anyone who does not -- is not a true follower of Islam." Hentschel believes that Bhutto was a voice for her faith, a voice for women and a voice for peace. "My heart goes out to her husband Asif, to her three children who were her life and to all who loved her. Her courageous example and message to us of hope, reconciliation and the preservation of life will endure through those she touched," Hentschel concluded. Noel Irwin Hentschel is the CEO/Chair and co-Founder of AmericanTours International (ATI), America's largest American-owned, privately held, inbound tour operator, serving one-million visitors annually from more than 70 countries around the globe. Hanson & Schwam PR Mike Casey, 310-248-4476 (direct) Copyright Business Wire 2007
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