Amid bombs, helicopter strafing and marauding Soviet troops roaming
the streets of Kabul in December 1979 Sonia Nassery, daughter of career
diplomat Dr. Sarwar Nassery, fled for her life to the United States.
By the mid-1980’s Sonia, who became an American citizen, began
efforts to aid her native country of Afghanistan. Frustrated by U.S.
indifference to the Afghan Freedom Fighters heroic but outgunned battle
against the invading Soviet Army, Sonia wrote a letter to President
Ronald Reagan. Invited by President Reagan to visit him in Washington
D.C., she answered his request to help him get Congressional authorization
for Stinger missiles to be sent to Afghanistan. From that point on the
tide began to turn, and the Communist Soviet regime fell to defeat.
Serving on the Board of the Afghanistan Relief Committee formed by past
U.S. Ambassadors to Afghanistan, under Chairperson Jeane Kirkpatrick,
Sonia took on new challenges. The organization asked her to assemble
a major fund raising event to help draw interest to the desperate circumstances
of millions of Afghan refugees fleeing their homeland to live in squalid
border refugee camps. She obtained the backing of then Vice President
George Bush, who served as an Honorary Chairman of her first fundraising
event, A Night for Afghanistan that was presented in Phoenix, Arizona
in early 1987. A great success, it was followed by a series of similar
galas in major cities, culminating in a 1992 event at the Regent Beverly
Hills Hotel , featuring acceptance of the Freedom Award by President
Reagan. Not long afterward Sonia was recognized with a Peace Medal at
the United Nations.
Following our 9/11 Tragedy and the international US-led coalition response,
Sonia realized that these changing circumstances required her take expand
her responsibilities in helping her native homeland. Forming the Afghanistan
World Foundation in May 2002, she gained underwriting support from the
Swiss firm of Audemars Piguet and Net Jets and began to plan for Time
to Give: A Celebration of Freedom. Participation and endorsements followed,
with President Hamid Karzai, former President George H.W. Bush, President
Bill Clinton, Mrs. Nancy Reagan all serving as an Honorary Chairpersons.
A host of influential dignitaries and celebrities joined the event's
committees honoring Muhammad Ali for his work in Afghanistan.
The December 2003 event proved a great success reaching millions of
people in the U.S., as well as audiences in countries around the world
receiving satellite programming and focused attention on the need to
support the reconstruction of Afghanistan. In 2004 AWF supported the
French charity, La Chaine de l'Espoir and its New York affiliate, Surgeons
of Hope Foundation in completing construction of the Mother-Child Hospital
in Kabul. The first wing, a 93 bed unit, was completed in September
of 2005. Subsequent partnership between La Chaine de l’Espoir,
the Government of Afghanistan, the Government of France and the Aga
Khan Development Network has now transformed the former Mother and Child
Hospital into a tertiary medical centre now known as the French Medical
Institute for Children (FMIC). FMIC was inaugurated in April 2006 in
the presence of President Hamid Karzai, France’s First Lady Madame
Bernadette Chirac and His Highness the Aga Khan.
Ms. Cole lead an AWF group to Kabul, Afghanistan in April 2004 to advance
her work in rebuilding schools, to coordinate with the various Ministries
as well as other charitable organizations working in Afghanistan, and
to visit with people at all levels of Afghan society. On this trip Ms.
Cole directed and produced a documentary, "The Bread Winner",
about a day in the life of a nine-year old Afghan boy, Farouk, who supports
his parents and siblings by selling newspapers and calendars. On December
4th 2006 at Capitol Hill, in the Cannon Caucus Ball Room, Ambassador
Stuart Holliday who is Meridian International's new President bestowed
the Afghan and American Sisterhood Award as Congressional recognition
of Ms. Cole’s devoted philanthropic services to education, economic
and social development of her homeland.
“American military support has been critical in liberating
Afghanistan, first from the invading Communist Soviet forces which was
followed by the opportunistic oppressive regime of the Taliban. Restoring
dignity to a valiant people whose innocent lives have been torn apart
for over two decades will need each one of us to be much more than silent
bystanders. Those of us living in this great country, America, are known
for our generosity and compassion in reaching out to those marginalized
communities whose future generations have nothing to look forward to
except despair and helplessness. We can change this hopeless path by
our individual actions in reaching out and touching the lives of a voiceless
people numb by grief inflicted from uninvited foreign armies and non-indigenous
forces imposed on their once happy destiny. Afghanistan World Foundation
dedicates each day in bringing awareness to as many people as possible
in appealing for assistance to end the cruel human indignity inflicted
on the Afghan people. We are a collective people and when human rights
is violated anywhere, it is violated everywhere.”