Thursday, July 31, 2008

More on Obama

A shout out to Thom B. of Casselberry, FL for A) being a great friend and B) alerting me to this article!

In ANOTHER entry on Obama, this one actually is snippets taken from an article in the San Francisco Chronicle from yesterday titled, Could Obama Be The First Asian President?

First, the facts:

"He was born and raised in Hawaii, the only majority-Asian state in the union; he spent four formative years in Jakarta, the home of his Indonesian stepfather Lolo Soetoro, where he attended local schools and learned passable Bahasa Indonesia. The family with whom he's closest — half-sister Maya Soetoro-Ng and her Chinese Canadian husband, Konrad Ng — are Asian American. So, too, are the most senior members of his congressional team — his Senate chief of staff Pete Rouse, whose mother is Japanese American, and his legislative director Chris Lu, whose parents hail from China."

Having the common Asian-American experience:

"Evidence for Obama's affinity with the Asian American experience runs true even as one delves deeper into his history. "A lot of aspects of the senator's story will be recognizable to many Asian Americans," says Lu, a Harvard Law School classmate of the senator's who joined the team in 2005. "He talks about feeling like somewhat of an outsider; about coming to terms with his self-identity; about figuring out how to reconcile the values from his unique heritage with those of larger U.S. society. These are tensions and conflicts that play out in the lives of all children of
immigrants."

"TV, movies, the radio ... Pop culture was color-coded, after all," he writes. "I began to notice that Cosby never got the girl on 'I Spy,' that the black man on 'Mission: Impossible' spent all his time underground. I noticed that there was nobody like me in the Sears, Roebuck Christmas catalog ... and that Santa was a white man."

The emphasis on education:

"If the boy has done his work for tomorrow, he can begin on his next day's assignments. Or the assignments he will have when he returns from the holidays") and about his overprotective mother's use of guilt as leverage ("A healthy dose of guilt
never hurt anybody," she tells him, "It's what civilization was built on, guilt. A highly underrated emotion") the Asian American reader's feelings of deja vu will have slipped from amusing to uncanny."

"The senator often talks about the importance of education, the value of hard work, and the need for a sense of personal responsibility," says Chris Lu. "That resonates with a lot of Asian Americans, who feel they've pulled themselves up by their bootstraps, and understand the notion that what we accomplish in life is in large part a measure of who we are as people, and how hard we strive."

It's a stretch, I know, but an interesting intellectual exercise nonetheless.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

He's not going to be the first anything president unless all the readers of this blog start donating to his campaign. Donate today!

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Peter said...

Indeed, that's quite a stretch.

Having read his book myself, every single one of those passages is him trying to explain how hard it was to be black among the whites, or to have a white mother when he felt he was black.

In 300+ pages I don't think he once identified himself with asian culture.

That said, if asian-americans identify with most those traits, then you should be excited for whenever we have our first Jewish president. After all, pretty much every one of those traits or experiences you cite could be said by a Jewish person. ;)

Peter
http://www.FlashlightWorthyBooks.com
Books so good, they'll keep you up past your bedtime. ;)