The president wasn’t trained as an
ordained minister, he didn’t attend a theological seminary, but he’s searched
his soul over the past seven years in the White House and he’s found, I
believe, a spiritual calling to speak out about race with passion and purpose
at a time when America still struggles with racism, a deep cultural divide, and
the fresh pain from an assassin’s racial rampage
.
In Charleston, South Carolina, last
week, while delivering a powerful eulogy for Rev. Clementa Pinckney, who was murdered
inside his church by white supremacist Dylann
Roof, Obama delivered a commanding, unapologetic sermon as the
nation’s first African-American president where he became part civil rights
activist, part spiritual leader, and part racial healer.
Perhaps in his seven-year evolution as
Commander-in-Chief, Obama views his presidency as a God-driven ministerial
calling to encourage Americans to confront longstanding racial inequities and
injustices in our society.
I’ve listened to pundits who claim the
president is now unencumbered to discuss race and how he has been miraculously
transformed. That, in part, is true but the reality is this: Obama is a Black
man who knows racism first-hand. He has lived it, experienced it, and he’s felt
the sting of discrimination.
The president no longer talks about
race from a detached, intellectual viewpoint, he reflects on racial injustice
by tapping into a deep well of emotion and from the perspective of a Black man
who has risen to President of the United States despite the racism that still
permeates the corridors of power in this country.
Perhaps the president is now more
comfortable speaking freely about race since he’ll be leaving office next year,
but,at every opportunity he's rallying the nation around the prickly subject of
race and it’s now become an important part of his legacy.
Last week in Charleston, Obama preached
about racism and religion in an extraordinary way that America has not seen
from him before or from any American president. In fact, one senior pastor from
Emanuel AME Church affectionately referred to Obama as “Rev. President.” Obama
didn’t offer a lecture – he delivered a moving sermon with the
fire-and-brimstone cadence of a Black ordained minister.
“For too long, we were blind to the
pain that the Confederate flag stirred in too many of our citizens,” Obama told
about 6,000 people who packed into Emanuel AME Church.
“It’s true, a flag did not cause these
murders,” the president added. “But as people from all walks of life,
Republicans and Democrats, now acknowledge -- including Governor Haley, whose
recent eloquence on the subject is worthy of praise -- we all have to
acknowledge, the flag has always represented more than just ancestral
pride. For many, Black and white, that flag was a reminder of systemic
oppression and racial subjugation. We see that now.”
America is at a racial crossroads and
Obama has decided, correctly, to speak his truth with conviction.
“Maybe we now realize the way racial
bias can infect us even when we don't realize it, so that we're guarding
against not just racial slurs, but we're also guarding against the subtle
impulse to call Johnny back for a job interview but not Jamal,” Obama said to
thunderous applause.
But Obama pushed the envelope further.
No president in recent memory has tackled publicly the thorny subject of
removing the Confederate flag from state capitols across the country, but Obama
faced the flag issue head-on and talked about its racist symbolism. Roof was
driving a car with a symbol of the Confederate flag on the license plate before
he murdered nine black parishioners during a prayer service inside the church.
“Removing the flag from this state’s
capitol would not be an act of political correctness; it would not be an insult
to the valor of Confederate soldiers,” Obama said. “It would simply be an
acknowledgment that the cause for which they fought -- the cause of slavery --
was wrong -- -- the imposition of Jim Crow after the Civil War, the resistance
to civil rights for all people was wrong.”
The president clearly has a God-given
purpose. He even felt compelled to break into an acapella rendition of “Amazing Grace” that
brought everyone to their feet.
“None of us can or should expect a
transformation in race relations overnight,” Obama said. “Every time something
like this happens, somebody says we have to have a conversation about race. We
talk a lot about race. There’s no shortcut. And we don’t need more talk.”
A day before his eulogy, Obama returned
a draft of his remarks to White House aides with many revisions and reflections
which he scribbled on a yellow legal pad to include his own thoughts and views
about race and religion.
It was a profound, soul-stirring
message I suspect was as much for America as it was for the president himself.
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