A childhood of privilege, not hardship
By Richard Pollock, Examiner staff writer
http://israel-commentary.org/?p=4722
Obama and his bride Michelle Robinson, a fellow Harvard Law School
graduate, on their wedding day, Oct. 3, 1992, in Chicago. (Associated
Press). (Beautiful couple but “Underprivileged” wedding scene? Well, not exactly) jsk
First lady Michelle Obama told the Democratic National Convention
that “Barack and I were both raised by families who didn’t have much in
the way of money or material possessions.”
It is a claim the president
has repeated in his books, on the speech-making circuit and in
countless media interviews. By his account, he grew up in a broken home
with a single mom, struggled for years as a child in an impoverished
Third World country and then was raised by his grandparents in difficult
circumstances.
The facts aren’t nearly so clear-cut.
Ann Dunham was just 18 years
old when she gave birth to Obama. She was a freshman at the University
of Hawaii. His Kenyan father, Barack Hussein Obama, Sr., was a few years
older than Ann. They were married against family wishes.
ObamaSr.,
not appear to have been welcoming or compassionate toward his new wife
or son. It later turned out that he was secretly married to a Kenyan
woman back home at the same time he fathered the young Obama.
He
abandoned Obama Jr.’s mother when the boy was 1.
In 1964, Dunham filed for a divorce that was not contested. Her
parents helped to raise the young Obama.
Obama’s mother met her second
husband, an Indonesian named Lolo Soetoro, while working at the
East-West Center in Hawaii. They married, and in 1967, the young Obama,
then known as Barry Soetoro, traveled to Indonesia with his mother when
the Indonesian government recalled his stepfather.
In Indonesia, the family’s circumstances improved dramatically.
According to Obama in his autobiography “Dreams from My Father,” Lolo’s
brother-in-law was “making millions as a high official in the national
oil company.” It was through this brother-in-law that Obama’s stepfather
got a coveted job as a government relations officer with the Union Oil
Co.
The family then moved to Menteng, then and now the most exclusive
neighborhood of Jakarta, where bureaucrats, diplomats and economic
elites reside.
A popular Indonesia travel site describes Menteng:
“Designed by the Dutch Colonial Government in 1920s, Menteng still
retains its graceful existence with its beautiful parks, cozy street
cafes and luxurious housing complexes.”
In 1971, his mother sent young Obama back to Hawaii, where his
grandmother, Madelyn, known as Toots, would become one of the first
female vice presidents of a Honolulu bank. His grandfather was in sales.
Obama’s grandparents moved the same year into Punahou Circle
Apartments, a sleek new 10-story apartment building just five blocks
from the private Punahou School, which Obama would attend from 1971 to
1979.
Obama explains in “Dreams from My Father” that his admission to
Punahou began “the start of something grand, an elevation in the family
status that they took great pains to let everyone know.”
To his credit,
Obama did not downplay Punahou’s upscale status, noting in his
autobiography that it “had grown into a prestigious prep school, an
incubator for island elites. Its reputation had helped sway my mother in
her decision to send me back to the States.”
Obama also admitted in the book that his grandfather pulled strings
to get him into the school. “There was a long waiting list, and I was
considered only because of the intervention of Gramps’s boss, who was an
alumnus.”
The school still features a lush hillside campus overlooking
the Waikiki skyline and the Pacific Ocean. It was one of the most
expensive schools on the island, and both Obama and his half sister Maya
Soetoro-Ng received scholarships.
While the Dunhams were not among the wealthiest families on the
island, he nevertheless studied and socialized with the children of the
social and financial elite. Obama has said he didn’t fit in at the
school. But that’s not how other Hawaiians remember it.
Associated
Press writer Sudhin Thanawala reported from Honolulu in 2008,
“Classmates and teachers say Obama blended in well. He served on the
editorial board of the school’s literary magazine, played varsity
basketball and sang in the choir. He went on the occasional date.”
In his recent book “Barack Obama: The Story,” Washington Post
reporter David Maraniss said the future chief executive often smoked
marijuana with prep school friends, rolling up the car windows to seek
“total absorption,” or “TA.” They called themselves the “Choom
Gang.”
Edward Shanahan, a retired newspaper journalist who now edits
downstreet.net and makes no effort to conceal his admiration for Obama,
retraced his Hawaii years shortly after the president was elected.
Shanahan wrote that Obama lived in a well-off neighborhood near the
University of Hawaii where Barry, as he was known, resided in a
comfortable home with his mother and her parents before she took him to
Indonesia. Shanahan said, “Our tour ended up on the lush, exquisitely
maintained and altogether inviting campus of Punahou School, which we
can imagine was a place of great comfort for Obama.”
Tellingly, Obama
has never lived in a black neighborhood.
Maraniss reported in his book that when leftist activist Jerry
Kellman interviewed Obama for a community organizing job in Chicago, he
asked Obama how he felt about living and working in the black community
for the first time in his life.
Obama accepted the job but chose not
to live among those he would be organizing. Instead, he commuted 90
minutes each way daily from his apartment in Chicago’s famous Hyde Park
to the Altgeld Gardens housing project where he worked.
It was an early instance of Obama presenting himself one way while acting in quite a different way.
Next: Chapter II: The myth of the rock-star professor
1 comment:
Just one of hundreds of lies...
No wonder they know the Clinton's...
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