Quantcast
 
 
 

Across the Divide

How Barack Obama is shaking up old assumptions about what it means to be black and white in America.

 
Sponsored by
 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

 

Cornel West was on fire. Bobbing in his chair, his hands sweeping across the stage, the brilliant and bombastic scholar was lambasting Barack Obama's campaign. Before a black audience, at an event outside Atlanta called the State of the Black Union, West was questioning why Obama was 600 miles away, announcing his bid for the White House in Springfield, Ill. Did he really care about black voters? What did that say about his willingness to stand up for what he believes?

"He's got large numbers of white brothers and sisters who have fears and anxieties and concerns, and he's got to speak to them in such a way that he holds us at arm's length," West said, pushing his hand out for emphasis. "So he's walking this tightrope." West challenged the candidate to answer a stark set of questions: "I want to know how deep is your love for the people, what kind of courage have you manifested in the stances that you have and what are you willing to sacrifice for. That's the fundamental question. I don't care what color you are. You see, you can't take black people for granted just 'cause you're black."

A few days later, West was sitting in his Princeton office after class when the phone rang. It was Barack Obama. "I want to clarify some things," the candidate calmly told the professor of religion and African-American studies. Over the next two hours, Obama explained his Illinois state Senate record on criminal justice and affordable health care. West asked Obama how he understood the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. and interrogated him about a single phrase in Obama's 2004 Democratic-convention speech: that America was "a magical place" for his Kenyan father. "That's a Christopher Columbus experience," West said. "It's hard for someone who came out of slavery and Jim Crow to call it a magical place. You have to be true to yourself, but I have to be true to myself as well." A few weeks later, the two men met in a downtown Washington, D.C., hotel to chat about Obama's campaign staff. Just a month after ripping into him onstage, West endorsed Obama and signed up as an unpaid adviser.

West may have come around, but he raised one of the most potent—and controversial—questions facing the candidate: is he black enough? It's one that has long dogged Barack Obama's career, though he says he settled his own struggle with racial identity (as the son of an African father and white, Kansan mother) in his late teens. Questions about black "authenticity" are hardly unique to him; many successful African-Americans face them, too. Obama just happens to be grappling with the issue in full public view as he runs for the highest office in the land.

To the candidate, the debate says more about America's state of mind than it does about him. "I think America is still caught in a little bit of a time warp: the narrative of black politics is still shaped by the '60s and black power," he tells NEWSWEEK. "That is not, I think, how most black voters are thinking. I don't think that's how most white voters are thinking. I think that people are thinking about how to find a job, how to fill up the gas tank, how to send their kids to college. I find that when I talk about those issues, both blacks and whites respond well."

He may be right. One eye-catching measure of Obama's broad support is his extraordinary fund-raising. More than 150,000 donors gave $31 million for his primary campaign in the second quarter, roughly $10 million ahead of Hillary Clinton and far ahead of anyone else in either party. In the key, early-primary state of South Carolina, Obama and Clinton are locked in a close fight for Democratic voters, especially African-Americans who are the backbone of the state party; recent polls have shown the lead changing hands each month. Nationwide, the latest NEWSWEEK Poll suggests that race is no longer the barrier it once was to electing a president. A clear majority—59 percent—says the country is ready to elect an African-American president. That's up from 37 percent at the start of the decade, but it still indicates that a significant percentage of the country is either skeptical or prejudiced.

 
Discuss
Member Comments
  • Posted By: maloroxja @ 03/17/2008 9:50:59 PM

    Comment: By the way, the video about pastor wright preaching in that church was quite scary!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Posted By: Mary934 @ 03/17/2008 6:10:29 PM

    Comment: Finally we are seeing what Barack is all about! Not anyone that I want to vote for. Now or any other time. I could not believe what I was seeing when I watched Pastor Wright preaching to his congregation. Then I watched another pastor defending him saying that it what black preachers do, try to get the congregation motivated. Motivated to do what, just making them more hostile and angrier? I don't quite see the logic and I don't think anyone else does either. Hillary will be our salvation, and I will be voting for her. Time for a woman president. I am glad that he hasn't been able to hide this and I read the article re his cocaine and his sexual encounters and glad this will probably surface too. Hillary is the only one to beat McCain, and we certainly can't afford to have another Republican in the White House that thinks George Bush was a good president. His Administration would be just an extension of the present Administration.

  • Posted By: satchel1 @ 03/17/2008 7:57:32 AM

    Comment: Comment: I am confused when it comes to Barack Obama. If he is running for office thinking he can inspire people in america for change because he is black, then what part of him is white? The last time I check he was a product of a bi-racial couple, which is fine if you acknowledge that in the beginning. I think this guy is playing with people's minds saying hey vote for me because i am different then the typical candidate, I am BLACK. Again we should not put this guy in office bace on what he thinks he is, because simply in the minds of many he as gotten an easy pass because he is bi-racial. It should be noted, that Barack is well spoken and intelligent, but the bottom line is he is playing the race card and that bother's me a great deal. Too many black men and women have died in our history out of pure hatred because they had two black parents. Lets stop this madness and lets do the right thing here. When this guy is ready, and has a genuine platform to be a leader put him in office but now, I think Barack needs to go back to CHURCH, and re-evaluate himself. With that said and done, I challenge this guy to stop playing the race card and run a honest campaign.......lets see if he gets this message

Sponsored by
 
 
 
The Peek
 
 
STRATEGIES

Digital impresario Mika Salmi is transforming Viacom's MTV Networks into a new-media powerhouse, saving it from a fate worse than death: middle age.

Sponsored by
 
 
 
 
POLITICS
Condeleeza Rice, Gates

The comity between the two is a '180- degree turn' from Rumsfeld and Powell.

Sponsored by
 
 
loadingLoading Menu