you might not have known who you were or what you were going to accomplish but you knew who you were. that has stuck with me since that moment. this is all to try and help get girls the education that they deserve and in many, many places it is not education that s focused on, it s your life. at 9 years old, some of these girls i spoke with said they were looked at as a wife first and this is their attempt to try and give them a chance to try and do other things. wow. they re lucky to have you on that stage with them, by the way. sarah s a workhorse mama. coming up, wait for this, we re going to talk to kristy about the remarkable work she s been doing for a decade. there she is chatting with our
right. you know, the clintons, you can talk about an awful lot of powerful people who did business with harvey weinstein over the years and, well, i heard stories and they leave it there. but in the meantime a lot of women were being abused. absolutely. chris wallace, your show is fantastic. these interviews are really eye opening and very well done. you can watch who s talking to chris wallace sunday nights here on cnn, 7 p.m. eastern you can see that full quentin tarantino interview. and coming up, s sarah sidne sat down with michelle obama. what would you tell your 25-year-old self now that you ve lived a lilife?
valued, you re worthy, your story matters, your voice matters, you will do the great things that you can do. i would say define failure as not trying because actually going for things and falling flat on your face is fine, it s a learning experience, it makes you stronger but if you don t try and if you don t actually follow your dreams or even admit what they are and go for it, it s something that will stay with you. wow. sarah seidner joins us now, she is the most of mission, which premieres on sunday. on that stage, i told them right off the bat, listen, i m just going to let you know, i am intimidated. i feel incredibly intimidated because of the accomplishments that they have made in their lives but also the people that they are.
post industrial job loss and poverty. one might think that the shared struggles would bring people closer. but nope. because our fears and frustrations have been used to divide us. and we all know that can end in violence. on affordable care act 27th, 2018, an alt-right white supremacist from just south of the city killed 11 people at the tree of life synagogue in squirrel hill. his online manifesto was packed with language blaming jewish people and immigrants for the problems plaguing the whites. i brought an expert. are you nervous? yeah. a little. there is no way. i m scared of what you might get me to say. reporter: if you are watching cnn and a reporter is somewhere in america talking about racism, hate, or violence, it is probably sarah seidner.
what looked like a teen confronting a native american elder at the lincoln memorial. it led, of course, to outrage and condemnation. but as cnn national correspondent sarah seidner shows us the emergence of another video gives us a different perspective. reporter: the catholic high school student who comes face to face with a native american elder in a viral video is now responding. in a statement, student nick sandmann says the viral video does not reflect the true nature of events when the students arrived at the lincoln memorial. when we arrived we noticed four protesters who were also on the steps of the lincoln memorial. the protesters said hateful things. indeed, a small group of black men who identify as hebrew israelites did say hateful things to seemingly everyone around them, including a priest. a bunch of child molester s.