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Rachida Dati: In 2002, she wrote to Sarkozy, saying, 'You need me.'
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In clubby France, a Muslim woman as justice minister

Rachida Dati presents Nicholas Sarkozy's tough law-and-order proposals to the Senate this week.

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'Dazzled' by Dati's energy

Dati was born in the village of Saint-Loup-de-Varennes, where her Moroccan father worked as a stone mason. But she spent most of her youth in Chalon-sur-Saone, first in a rundown housing project and then in a newly built suburb of factories and apartment blocks.

She was sent, along with her younger sisters, to a private Catholic school. In her catechism class, she convinced the teachers to let her read out a weekly passage from the Koran for discussion by her fellow students.

At 14, according to her own accounts and those of her family, she sold cosmetics door-to-door. At 16, she worked at night as a nurse's aide in a clinic.

While studying economics at a college in Dijon, she noticed a newspaper story about an upcoming reception at the Algerian Embassy in Paris for then-Justice Minister Albin Chalandon. She requested, and got, an invitation. At the party, she zeroed in on Mr. Chalandon and asked him to help her find a good job.

In an interview with Le Monde, he described being "dazzled by this energy that radiated from her."

"I can help you put one foot in the stirrup," he said he told her, "but you have to prove that you can put the other one there."

Chalandon was only the first of the many high-placed officials and corporate titans that she sought out and approached for support. From short stints at French companies, including the oil giant Elf-Aquitaine, she nurtured an impressive list of contacts.

In 1997, at the urging of her influential mentors, she applied to the prestigious National College of Magistrates. Being a judge, one of them told her, would give her status in French society. She won a place in the training school and worked for two years as a magistrate, dealing mostly with bankruptcy and financial-fraud cases.

But she had bigger ambitions to influence policy. Her opportunity came in October 2005, when Sarkozy made a tumultuous visit as Interior minister to the crime-ridden housing projects in Argenteuil.

Surrounded by hostile, shouting residents, his official car in flames, he took the cellphone numbers of some of the angry young people who demanded to talk to him. A few days later, he invited a group to the ministry and assigned Dati to work with them.

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