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Pride Swells As Obama Advances

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  • Pride Swells As Obama Advances

    PRIDE SWELLS AS OBAMA ADVANCES
    by Paul Wyche and Corey Mitchell

    The Saginaw News - MLive.com
    June 5 2008
    MI

    Saginaw NAACP President Leola Wilson remembers how three years ago,
    a friend phoned her about an upstart black politician with a "funny
    name."

    "She was traveling to Illinois to help with a get-out-and-vote
    campaign," Wilson said, "and I remember her telling me she didn't
    even know how to pronounce the candidate's name and wondered how in
    the world a black guy with a name like Barack Obama thought he was
    going to get elected to the U.S. Senate."

    Well, get elected he did, and today he stands as the first black
    American with a true shot at the White House.

    "Pride swells over you, but no, I never thought I would live to see
    the day," said Wilson, who heads the Saginaw County chapter of the
    National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

    "This is a defining moment, not just for black America, but for
    America."

    Retired attorney and Saginaw's first black mayor, Henry Marsh, said
    he hopes so.

    "I didn't even know who Barack Obama was when this thing first
    started," said Marsh, 86. "I would have voted for Hillary (Clinton)
    in a minute, but not now. I don't like the way she ran her campaign
    with the (verbal attacks), and she should have conceded when he got
    all of the needed delegates for the nomination."

    Across the country, people across the political, racial and
    socio-economic spectrum expressed excitement, pride, hope, relief
    and caution as they considered the implications of the 46-year-old
    Obama's historic achievement as Democrats' likely presidential nominee.

    His rival, New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, ended her bid to
    become the first female president. She prepared to declare Saturday
    that she is backing the Illinois senator after Obama on Tuesday
    secured the 2,118 delegates necessary to clinch the nomination.

    Obama now has turned to the hunt for a running mate.

    "He seems to be an extraordinary young man, but he will need some
    help," Marsh said. "But this means the country has turned a corner."

    When Saginaw High School graduate Sandile Ashford heads to college
    this fall, she may get a firsthand look at history.

    Ashford plans to attend Howard University in Washington, D.C., to
    study journalism.

    The 18-year-old is among millions of black people, young and old,
    celebrating the accomplishments of Barack Obama.

    Ashford graduated second in her class last week.

    "I'm happy," said the daughter of Stephen and Cynthia Ashford of
    Bridgeport Township. "Being that this is America, it's something that
    should have happened already."

    The teenager also could play a role in determining history.

    The excitement surrounding the presidential campaign led her to
    register to vote shortly after her birthday. While in the nation's
    capital, she plans to cast her first-ever vote for via absentee ballot.

    "It's going to be a big deal there, and I'll actually have a say,"
    she said. "It gives me hope that I can make it further than I ever
    thought."

    Around the nation

    Retired pharmacist Arthur Dees, 80, marveled at Obama's triumph. An
    Army veteran, he recalled attending Dwight D. Eisenhower's inauguration
    in 1953 and finding he was not welcome in any downtown Washington,
    D.C., hotels or restaurants.

    "They were all segregated," he said at a mall in Wheaton, Md.,
    12 miles north of the White House. Fighting back tears, he added,
    "My people have always had doggone names. We were darkies. Then
    colored. Next they called us Negroes. After that, we were black. Now,
    we're Afro-Americans. But with Obama, we're going to be just
    Americans. Won't that be something!"

    John Trapp, a 46-year-old white homebuilder from Poulsbo, Calif.,
    echoed Martin Luther King's famous line when he said he hopes the
    country is "beyond race" and will judge Obama "by the content of his
    character." He is dubious, though.

    "Some people will vote for him because he is black, and some will not
    vote for him because he is," said Trapp, who said he is more excited
    by Obama's age than his race. After all, he said, "He's the first
    person of my generation" to be a major party nominee.

    In Atlanta, Sharon McLaurin, 43, a clerk who grew up in Mississippi,
    stared into the reflecting pool surrounding King's crypt and recalled
    that her parents had to sit in the back of buses, use separate
    restrooms and drink from different fountains. When she sees Obama on
    TV, she said, she's struck by how many faces in his crowds are white.

    "That tells me they are looking at the issue of change," she
    said. "They no longer see his color. That's great."

    America is ready for a black president, said Rady Williams, 40, who
    sells T-shirts and King merchandise. "He just has to be clean-cut,
    drive a Chevy truck and be an apple-pie Christian," he said. "He
    can't be a crook, and he can't be bitter about slavery."

    For Daphne Brown, a 21-year-old North Hollywood student and single
    mother, Obama's success could give younger blacks like her a renewed
    sense of their own worth. Plenty of young people, she said, have
    adopted the attitude that " 'I don't care about anything. I just want
    to be a rebel.'

    "But now," she said, "I see that we count. We're important. We're all
    important. Every race is important. And I think with Obama, coming into
    this candidacy, that it's just going to be a total change for my race."

    The world is watching

    Obama's ascent has captivated many of those watching the American
    political contest abroad.

    Newspaper front pages and television newscasts throughout the world
    Wednesday featured photographs and footage of the smiling senator.

    The French daily Le Figaro described him as "the man in a hurry who
    dethroned Hillary." The London-based Guardian called him "a political
    giant slayer" who defeated his own party's entrenched interest.

    And in Mexico, an editorial cartoon in the daily Reforma depicted
    him as a Christlike figure atop the Democratic donkey on Palm Sunday.

    "Obama's America on the doorstep of history," said a headline on the
    front page of Assafir in Lebanon.

    Obama remains popular throughout the world. According to a poll
    released this week by the pan-Arab Qatar-based Al-Jazeera news channel,
    more than half of those interviewed in 22 countries preferred Obama
    over Clinton or Republican John McCain, who was the least recognized
    and least preferred presidential candidate.

    Still, some analysts expressed concern about Obama's foreign
    policy positions. In Turkey, some worried about Obama's support for
    Armenians, who are locked in a dispute with Turks over the Armenian
    genocide of the early 20th century. And many Israelis worry about
    Obama's willingness to negotiate with the Jewish state's enemies,
    especially Iran.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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