”Places He Remembered”
Six writers reflect on how the places Barack Obama has lived might have helped mold the man who will be the next president of the United States.
Printed in The New York Times on 18 January 2009.
“Obama’s Indonesian Classroom”
By ENDY M. BAYUNI
Published: January 17, 2009
Jakarta, Indonesia
WHEN Barack Obama and his mother
arrived in Jakarta in 1967, Indonesia was just emerging from major political
upheaval and a deep economic crisis that had made it one of the most
impoverished nations in Asia. The city’s few high-rise buildings only
highlighted the poverty around them. Those who had cars, perhaps more for
status than for transport, competed for space on asphalt roads with public
buses, motorcycles, three-wheeled rickshaws, pedestrians and hawkers peddling
food, cigarettes and whatever else they could sell.
The Indonesia that Barack Obama
found was a densely populated country that could barely feed its own people and
had to be propped up with huge infusions of foreign aid. Not long before his
arrival, hundreds of thousands of people accused of membership in the
Indonesian Communist Party had been massacred, and the staunchly pro-American
General Suharto had seized power from the left-leaning President Sukarno.
Under Suharto, the army took firm
control of the government, and increasingly every facet of people’s lives.
Anyone suspected of harboring even the slightest sympathy for the communists
risked incarceration. Some of the more serious offenders were sent to a remote
prison island named Buru.
Mr. Obama’s family was not exactly
poor, but they were not rich either. He lived on the outskirts of Jakarta, and
not in the exclusive district where American expatriates mingled with Jakarta’s
high society. Instead he lived in a neighborhood that was not particularly
affluent but did have houses with gardens. Barry, as he was called by friends
back then, went to Indonesian schools. He learned the local language and
culture through playing and running in the streets with his Indonesian friends.
His height may have drawn some attention, but otherwise he could have easily
passed as an Indonesian from the Molucca archipelago, where people have dark
skin and curly hair.
Anyone going to a public school in
Jakarta would have had early exposure to a vast array of cultures. These
schools were microcosms of Indonesia, a nation of many different races, ethnic
groups and religions. Indonesia has certainly had its share of religious
extremism (and terrorism), but its religious tolerance remains a point of pride.
The Muslim-majority nation would have ceased to exist long ago if bigotry got
the better of its people.
Sadly, this openness did not extend
to politics. By the time Barry left Indonesia at age 10, military control was
widespread. Students attended indoctrination classes where they would profess
their loyalty to the state. Dissent and criticism were not tolerated in public
life. There was barely freedom of thought.
In 1971, Barry’s mother wisely sent
him back to Hawaii to live with his maternal grandparents. His childhood years
in Indonesia served him well; growing up respecting cultural and religious
differences probably helped prepare him for his return to the United States, a
society still divided by race.
Indonesians wish him “selamat”
(congratulations) in his new job.
Endy M. Bayuni is the chief
editor of The Jakarta Post.
“This Man Is an Island”
By LOIS-ANN YAMANAKA
Published: January 17, 2009
Honolulu
AT Punahou, Hawaii’s most exclusive
private school, the class of 1979 would have been mostly über rich “kama aina
haole” (land-owning whites with missionary blood), filthy-rich Chinese (the
first immigrant group to arrive as contract workers, leave the plantation and
become business owners or marry into Hawaiian families with land) and descendants
of plantation Japanese workers who rose to political and economical power after
statehood in ’59.
Then there was Barack Obama — a
scholarship student with a single mother and an absent African father raised by
his grandparents. No missionary ancestors, no wealthy Chinese popo and
goonggoong giving him $100 lee see for being No. 1 grandson, no powerful
government official Uncle Kazu who could pull strings for an easy state job
counting bridges on the civil engineers’ planning maps. The other students probably
called him “the popolo guy in student gov,” popolo being the word for black
nightshade.
In diverse, stratified Hawaii, we
all designate each other by race, using references that evolved from sugar
plantation pidgin dating back to the late 1870s. When I was young I was the Japanee girl with the big mouth and the Dorothy Hamill
hairdo. (Japanee is pidgin for Japanese). And the
white guy who ate Rice-A-Roni with butter was the haole who
didn’t speak pidgin or eat real rice. There was the pake (Chinese) girl who took calculus at the community
college senior year. The hapa (half-blooded) babies
fathered by military guys who promptly left. The kuro-chan
(literally, black man) who lived across the street. He had green eyes,
blond-tipped hair and caramel skin. The bukbuk (Filipino),
the yobo (Korean), the borinque (Puerto
Rican), the portagee (Portuguese).
In those days, I lived on the Big
Island, where pop-culture-wise we were always five years behind Honolulu and 10
years behind the mainland. But we had words, our own
words for everything, for what we wore, what stink foods we ate, our
idiosyncrasies, what cars we drove, what parts of town we inhabited, what bad
habits we had or what pagan rites we practiced. Words for the whole list of who
we are, and they go on and on.
Even in these politically correct
days, we locals still laugh at ourselves, because these pidgin designations
taught us to grow thick skins and take punches. (To haoles new to the islands I
often say, “If I call you haole, I’m trying to tell someone who you are, i.e.
‘the haole boy with the cowboy boots.’ If I say, ‘the haole with the stupid
cowboy boots,’ then you can get offended.”)
I define locals, for the record, as
those of us who have been here for a few generations and plan to stay. So my
definition does not include Barack Obama. He was not local. At least to me he
wasn’t.
He wasn’t until I saw that
photograph of him body surfing a break-neck barrel from last August. He had
that local-boy reach of the arm as he glided down a huge summer swell, the
grace of his relaxed face, proud, turned into the tidal force of current, the
way only a local boy can take a real wave and make it his very own ride, sleek
and easy. A natural local boy.
Lois-Ann Yamanaka is the author
of, most recently, “Behold the Many.”
“The Occidental Tourist”
By MARGOT MIFFLIN
Published: January 17, 2009
WHEN Barack Obama made his first
public speech — on Feb. 18, 1981, exhorting the trustees of Occidental College
to divest from South Africa — he wasn’t the only speaker. He wasn’t the
featured speaker. He wasn’t even the best speaker. But the event crystallized
the key values Occidental promoted, which helped shape the man making history
this week: critical thought and social justice. It also inspired the kind of
social alchemy Mr. Obama later mastered on a national scale: bringing disparate
groups together and making serious politics seriously fun.
The protest fell on the kind of
sun-bleached winter day you see only in Southern California. The students
gathered outside Coons Hall administration building, a glass-paneled monolith
dubbed “the Chrysler showroom” because it clashed with the stunning
Mediterranean Revival buildings on the rest of the well-manicured campus. While
the trustees met inside, the speakers — black, white, Hispanic and South
African — delivered their pleas, starting with Mr. Obama, whose speech was cut
short when two students hauled him away in a staged display of white
suppression. After the rally, a pair of folk singers harmonized as we wandered off
to class, feeling groovy.
In “Dreams From My Father,” Mr.
Obama wrote that he didn’t think the demonstration made any difference, but he
was wrong. Though Occidental’s 1991 divestment was shamefully belated, more
than 300 students from every corner of the tiny campus came together that day:
I saw geology and art majors, actors and athletes, international students and
sandy-haired Californians, shoulder to shoulder, laughing and shouting back at
the speakers with the kind of politically inspired camaraderie that also
characterized Mr. Obama’s 2008 campaign rallies.
Occidental is a fine liberal arts
college in Eagle Rock, 10 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles, an intimate
campus where we were taught above all to think critically and creatively — it
was spelled out in the curriculum. The year before Barry (as we called him)
arrived, the freshman “core program” was begun, requiring students to become
globally literate through courses on international culture that raised
questions like, “How have different societies defined justice, the sacred and
the truth?”
The student body was international,
although not nearly as racially diverse as it is now. But we were economically
diverse, hailing from homes with swimming pools in wealthy Los Angeles suburbs
like Brentwood, as well as from blue-collar towns in Connecticut and
Massachusetts. We swam in Santa Monica, bowled in Eagle Rock, camped in Mexico,
hiked in Joshua Tree National Park and skated at Venice Beach — something that
Barry occasionally did with his friend Hasan Chandoo. We partied, but only
after we studied. Our professors pushed us to apply for grants that took us
around the globe, and worked community service into our course requirements.
They wanted us to become citizens of the world.
For Barry, that meant moving on. A
few months after the rally at Coons Hall, he left to finish his degree at
Columbia, having decided to pursue public policy — in large part, he later
said, because of his involvement in the divestment movement. His closest
friends had just graduated. His activism had been ignited. And as an aspiring
writer, he’d immersed himself in literature with the kind of Talmudic
dedication that, I’m convinced, ultimately made him a brilliant speaker. If
Occidental’s goal was to make us deep thinkers with a concern for justice and
community, Barack Obama earned the degree.
Margot Mifflin, a professor of
journalism at the City University of New York, is the author of the forthcoming
“The Blue Tattoo: The Life of Olive Oatman.”
“New York Was So Much Older Then”
By KEVIN BAKER
Published: January 17, 2009
I CAME to New York, and to Columbia
University, just a few years before Barack Obama arrived in 1981. Like him I
was a poor boy, eager to get to the city and start my life as an adult.
It was a dirtier city then, more
violent, more interesting — more accessible to poor, eager young people. We
lived four and five to a railroad apartment, the bathtub in the kitchen in some
places, the floors lined with clumpy chalk lines of boric acid that were our useless
defense against the cockroaches.
We feasted on $4 platters of Indian
food in restaurants on Sixth Street where you could bring your own wine. We
went everywhere by subway, riding in gray, graffiti-covered cars where half the
doors didn’t open and a single, sluggish fan shoved the air about on summer
nights. We took a cab sometimes, when there were five of us and we could get a
Checker, one person riding on the jump seat, staring out at the long avenues of
the city.
We lived dangerously, I suppose. Everyone’s
apartment was broken into. We were told that if we got out of the subway at
East 116th Street to never, ever try to walk through Morningside Park back to
Columbia. Women would go out to lunch and come back to the office to find their
wallets somehow missing from the pocketbooks they had held tightly between
their knees throughout the meal.
Late one night, leaving a party on
the Lower East Side, we saw a hulking, derelict figure emerge from under a
stairwell, ready to do mayhem. When he saw how many we were he frowned and
retreated beneath the stairs without saying a word, waiting for the next
victim.
It was a gray city, a weary one, an
older one. There were, in those days, pornographic theaters in good
neighborhoods; Bowery-style wino bars with sawdust on the floor on Upper
Broadway; prostitutes along West End Avenue slipping into cars with New Jersey
license plates. It was a city, too, that seemed to open up into an infinite
series of magic boxes, of novelty shops and diners, delicatessens and corner
bakeries, used record stores and bookstores.
Like Barack Obama we read everything
we could get our hands on. It was a movie-mad town then, and we lined up for
hours in the cold on the East Side to see the latest Fassbinder or Fellini, the
new Woody Allen. We nailed long, flapping schedules of all the revival houses
to our walls, from the Thalia and the New Yorker, Theater 80 St. Marks and the
Bleecker Street Cinemas. I saw my first Broadway show, “Equus,” for $3, and sat
on stage.
We danced all night at Danceteria,
and ate breakfast served by the transvestite waiters. I fell in love with an
artist who lived at the Salvation Army’s Evangeline residence for women, and we
walked the slate-blue paving stones around Gramercy Park for hours, talking
about art. Everything seemed like a revelation, right from the first day at
Columbia, when my art humanities professor took us to St. John the Divine and
explained what a Gothic cathedral was.
I’d like to think that New York
taught Barack Obama how indomitable people can be, even in a city that has been
written off, consigned to a dozen cinematic apocalypses. It was a poorer town
then, a harder one, but still a place of vaulting ambition, of indelible
beauty. We thought we could do anything. We felt such pride to be there.
Kevin Baker is the author of the
novels “Dreamland,” “Paradise Alley” and “Strivers Row.”
“Ordinary People”
By JOHN MATTESON
Published: January 17, 2009
I DON’T know how Barack Obama
reacted when he received his acceptance letter from Harvard Law School. When I
got mine, I dashed around the room high-fiving everyone and everything in sight
— including a large brass chandelier, whose bottom half I knocked clean off.
From then on, I naïvely thought, no
challenge would be particularly great, and no fortune would come as a surprise.
Perhaps our current president-elect felt the same way. Again, if he was like
me, he was far from anticipating the hardest, most precious lessons taught at
Harvard Law: the finitude of one’s own powers; the twin, paradoxical
necessities of self-reliance and interdependence; and the humanity that comes
when one finds oneself a long way from perfection, and then finds new ways of
striving.
Far from being a place for feeling
exceptional, my Harvard Law was a place for feeling strangely ordinary. Inside
the Ivy League, an Ivy League pedigree makes one precisely as distinctive as
being Chinese in Shanghai. The means of distinguishing oneself become
progressively scarce and difficult. And while Harvard Law affords every possibility,
almost every student starts out chasing a similar vision and the occasions for
disappointment outnumber the prospects for glory.
If the domineering, humiliating
Kingsfields of movies like “The Paper Chase” ever existed, they were no longer
much in evidence by the time I got to Cambridge, Mass., in 1983. The faculty
had largely adopted a no-hassle policy. Didn’t do the reading? Just say so; no
hard feelings. Yet their almost exaggerated gentleness didn’t make things
easier. Rather, our professors taught us to take sole responsibility for our
own failings. Called on to state a case in class, but don’t feel you can do it?
Go ahead, pass; but the word “pass” will burn in your throat.
Our future president probably also
discovered, as I did, that wonderful community known as the law school study
group, where overworked students divide responsibility for portions of a
syllabus and then pool their notes and interpretations. Foxhole alliances
rapidly form. Out of necessity, you learn to trust. Out of honor, you make your
work trustworthy. One may stand or fall on one’s own merits, but the wise do
not try to stand alone.
Still, if one has a character flaw,
Harvard Law will expose it. The long hours, the quantity and difficulty of the
work, and the pressure to excel are a recipe for frayed nerves, shortened
tempers and durable frustrations. I maintained very respectable grades for a
semester but lagged thereafter. To my considerable pain, my argumentative
agility and my competitive fire — qualities I thought I possessed in abundance
— were not strong enough to place me at the top.
Resigning myself to the second tier,
I began to define myself as something other than a law student. I taught myself
French cooking; for the first time, I fell seriously in love. Instead of taking
all my third-year credits at the law school, I enrolled in a pair of superb
graduate literature seminars — and began to understand that I was really meant
to be an English professor. The self that I imagined on The Law Review never
came to be, but I found other answers to my inner riddles.
I can’t tell whether Barack Obama
suffered into self-knowledge at Harvard Law the way I did. Whereas I never
discovered an academic comfort zone in Roscoe Pound Hall, he became president
of The Law Review — a feat of intelligence and dedication I can regard only
with awe.
Yet something tells me that Mr.
Obama, too, confronted the largeness of the tasks he faced and the immensity of
the expectations that called to him and, in those lonely, palpitating moments,
discovered who he was. He appears to have learned that he, to a degree quite
rare, possessed the confidence, the serenity and the supreme resiliency to
accomplish goals to which he may have feared he was not equal.
Any thoughtful president must surely
have infinitely greater moments of inwardly perceived inadequacy. If he
triumphs in those moments, he does so not by ceasing to question himself but by
confronting his questions with a courage born from humility and honesty. During
the next four years, I hope that Mr. Obama will remember the crucible of
character through which he passed at Harvard Law and that those recollections
will serve him well.
John Matteson, a professor of
English at John Jay College, won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for the biography
“Eden’s Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father.”
“United States of Chicago”
By ALEKSANDAR HEMON
Published: January 17, 2009
Chicago
IN the early ’90s, around the same
time that Barack Obama settled in Chicago, I found myself stranded there, unable
to return to my native Sarajevo because of the siege during the Bosnian war. It
quickly became clear to me that I would have to make the transition from being
a misfortunate tourist to being a Chicagoan, and my Sarajevan urban instincts
compelled me to seek the ways in which I would attach myself to the city and
make it my adopted hometown.
Early on, before any gainful
employment, I would pick a neighborhood and roam around in loosely concentric
circles, learning its human geography. When I got my first (legal) job
canvassing for Greenpeace, I visited and wandered in all the spaces between the
consumerist garishness and the heartbreaking blight. I learned that the beauty
of Chicago comes in cruel chunks, as does its ugliness. Loving Chicago, Nelson
Algren wrote, is “like loving a woman with a broken nose.”
Once, on a very cold winter day at a
North Side El stop, I saw three or four freezing Chicagoans huddled together
under the heating light like newly hatched chickens. It was 30 below zero, with
wind chill, the kind of cold that makes your bones hurt because the frozen
flesh is beyond the reach of pain. There was closeness in the huddle, but no
touching; there was solidarity, but no eye contact. And I realized I, too,
could huddle along and partake in the scarce warmth; I was no longer a tourist.
At 30 below zero we were all Chicagoans.
Ever since, it has been clear to me
that the gruff solidarity of survival is an essential part of living in
Chicago: we huddle together against calamity, be it bone-breaking winters or
hopeless public transportation; greedy, corrupt civic leaders or fantastically
hot summers. But once the hardship seems to have retreated, we break apart and
return to our cherished individualities and sad distances. There is unlimited
access to the hard facts of life here, plus the kind of pride that can never be
purged of shame. Enjoying a sunny day by the lake, a friend once overheard the
following line, which was seasoned by an expletive: “Don’t you smile at me —
get off the bike path!”
Chicago is the only city in America
I can imagine declaring independence one day and becoming a city-republic, only
to be riven, no doubt, by a rich repertoire of internal conflict. Saul Bellow
once wrote, about the experience of the city: “Chicago was nowhere. It had no
setting. It was something released into American space.” This “something in
American space” is held together by a common civic spirit that often feels
temporary, negotiated and limited, but is nevertheless ceaselessly humming
against all the individualistic noise. Chicago is the city that always works at
being a city.
But that is exactly what makes
Chicago a model American place. It is hard to keep it assembled, because it
keeps changing, like America. This is a nation that never stops working at
being a nation, its common purpose defined by constant flux, conflict and
transformation — it is what it is because it never settles for what it appears
to be.
What Mr. Obama should have learned
living in Chicago is that it takes far more than gut feeling and bullying, more
than fuzzy-warm nationalism and fantasies of greatness, to run a country as
vast and complicated as Chicago is a city. I have no doubt he did learn what he
needed to, for this city makes you learn.
Aleksandar Hemon is the author of
“The Lazarus Project,” a novel.