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Barack Obama: Dreams From My Father – Chapter Two

I’m reading Barack Obama’s first book:  Dreams From My Father.  My goal is to try to understand the man from his own perspective, his own words.  There are a lot of people who have a lot of opinions of the man.  I think that I owe it to him and myself to see what he has to say about himself.

Chapter Two:

The very first thing I noticed about chapter two is that the artistry of chapter one is missing.  This isn’t to say that the chapter s hard sledding, it’s just to say that the vivid images that the book initially evoked are missing.  It’s as if Chapter One took months and months of work while the rest of the book was the result of the normal writing process.  Or, maybe someone else wrote that first chapter.

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Barack Obama: Dreams From My Father – Chapter One

I’m reading Barack Obama’s first book:  Dreams From My Father.  My goal is to try and understand the man from his own perspective, his own words.  There are a lot of people who have a lot of opinions of the man.  I think that I owe it to him and myself to see what he has to say about himself.

Chapter One:

The book begins with a college aged Obama living with his college roommate.  Obama was 21 at the time and living in New York.

Right away I’m struck at the artistry of the story telling.  Clearly the author is adept, even skilled, at the art of writing.  The flow of the words into thoughts and thoughts into images is very well done.  I won’t say powerful, it’s too early in the book to deliver a power punch, but it sets up the book nicely.

Concurrent with that artistry is the nice unexpected contrast.  In a book that is about a man and his father, the story begins with Obama’s retelling of his hearing the news that his father had passed away.  A phone call from a long lost aunt in a far away nation delivering news of a far away man.  A far away man and his passing.

With that news, the book pivots into the history, albeit a brief and cursory one, of his father, his grandfather and grandmother.  Barack Obama the elder grew up in Kenya and attended a school established by the colonial British.  Having done there, the student was invited to attend University in the United States; Hawaii to be exact.  From the opposite side, the book explores the journey of Barack’s maternal grandparents.  Their journey from Kansas to the Army, from California to back to Kansas and then Texas finally moving to Seattle.  Finally even Seattle gave way to the to final move to Hawaii.

There man and woman met, fell in love, got married and had a child.

Obama was born in Hawaii.  He spent his very early years in Hawaii.  However, not much is mentioned of those early days.  More is focused on the refined older Obama.  His British accent, his intelligence, his refined nature.  Further,  significant portion of the 1st chapter details the struggle of Obama’s grandparents confronting racism in some of the parts of their world.  There is the story of the janitor at the bank weeping with sorrow.  The story of Obama’s young mother playing with a black childhood friend and the conflict it created.  The narrative almost creates this couple, the future grandparents, as a couple expecting that their daughter would meet and marry, then give birth to, a black man.

I was a little taken back at the memories, and how they were expressed, by that Obama; 21 in college in New York:

When the weather was good, my roommate and I might sit out on the fire escape and smoke cigarettes and study the dusk washing blue over the city, or watch white people from the better neighborhoods nearby walk their dogs down our block and let the animals shit on our curbs–

The Republican part of me wanted to latch onto that; to grab it and run with it.  But I realized that life is full of the we’s and the they’s.  I remember growing up and I knew the kids with money and the kids who had even less than we did.  I remember.  And it was a they and a we.  I knew it then and it should be fair for a man who’s writing his story to relate to events in his life the same way.

 

Barack Obama: Dreams From My Father

 

I can’t remember if I mentioned that I bought both of Barack Obama’s books.  The campaign to see who gets to campaign against the President is in full swing, but I anticipate a fantastic political season ahead.  And these will be fascinating references.

I’m sure to call our President a whole bunch of “ists”.  I suspect I’ll call him a socialist.  For sure a statist.  Without a doubt a lefitst.  Maybe even a communist.  Who knows?  But is it fair?  Is it fair to label a man those things without really kinda knowing what that man thinks, and feels, says and write?

I think maybe I owe him the benefit of the doubt.

So here it is.  Barry O in his owns words.  Here we can see what he really thinks, or thought, as he put pen to paper.

Before I go into the books I wanna write down what I think of the man, his life experience and his beliefs.

  • I think that Obama’s view of America is unlike that of virtually every American alive.  He grew up in a state that had only recently been granted statehood.  He didn’t grow up in the America that we envision America to be.  He grew up in an island paradise hours from the mainstream mainland of America.
  • I think that Obama was highly influenced by his education in Indonesia.  I think the schools he attended, the friends he had and the society he lived in had a tremendous impact on his world view.
  • I think that his mother was a very far left wing radical.
  • I believe that when Barack Obama attended college he sought out non-mainstream individuals and organizations.
  • I think that Barack Obama sees the American version of capitalism as flawed.  I feel he believes that it creates winners and that it creates losers.  Further, that the losers are not losers of their own actions.
  • I believe that a young collegiate Barack Obama cared for the poor, the weak and the downtrodden; I think his cause was a noble one.
  • I think that he entered an occupation that would help those he saw as victims.
  • He became political and became a player in that system.  Especially that system of Chicago politics.

In short, the people that surrounded a young child Obama and the people that surrounded an older Obama were not mainstream Americans.  These were people who held an antagonistic view of America.  An antagonistic view based either on nationalism or one of “nature”, as in, what is Americanism?

So, I begin by reading Dreams From My Father by Barack Obama.