I've thought of so many things I could say on this most special night. I thought of marches for equal rights, of walking hand in hand with an elderly Black man in Los Angeles for a 5K walk and enduring taunts and cat calls. I thought of my first boy friend, who my parents would not allow me to date because his grandfather was Black.
I thought of all the Black children in America who could now express the desire to one day be President and not have their parents try to direct their dreams to more "acceptable" or "possible" goals. I thought, "Now it is true. Any child can..."
I didn't want it to be all about Barak Obama being African-American, because there are so many issues facing us. But for me it inevitably comes back to that: that in my lifetime we can go from Selma and the schoolhouse steps in Little Rock and the all white colleges in the South being forced to integration, and the restaurant sit-ins and Rosa Parks. That in my lifetime we can go from that to an African-American President, one who represents all of America, every American. I cannot escape that most powerful part of his election: that American has grown up enough to elect a Black man and Black woman to the White House. That maybe, just maybe, we will become color blind.
Martin, you had a Dream. I remember standing by the Reflecting Pool, my feet hurting and being horribly tired and thirsty beyond bearing; and forgetting all that with the resonance of those wonderful words: I have a Dream.
Today, that Dream is reality. And Tomorrow we start to make the change real.
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
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2 comments:
Hear hear Jo! It is so nice to read a blog from someone that feels as I do! All morning I have mainly seen (with 2 exceptions) things such as *I will delete as a friend anyone who mentions Obama, I don't support him, never will, he is not MY President* along with a bunch of hate remarks.
Also like you I am the mother of a son with Down Syndrome and was so against Sarah Palin carrying that poor baby everywhere and then (when she came here) being all friendly with parents of special needs children, again while carrying her child. Can't say what I think of somebody trying to use their special needs baby to win an election.
I feel bad for all the narrow minded folks that are not seeing his win as what America needs right now and only seeing the color of his skin.
Judging from the landslide that turned him from *just another candidate* to President Obama, thankfully there are many more like us out there :-) and they aren't ALL black or Hispanic either!
It was time for a change, America knew it and made sure it could begin. Just goes to show that as He said in his acceptance speech, we are not red and blue states, we are the UNITED STATES and yes we can...
Half black! Oh - right. America still has a "one drop rule".
Yesterday I read quotes from various Texas Republicans, in which they spouted in great horror about "Now 'they' have control of the country" and "How could we let 'them' get control of the country?" They might as well have just said the N-word directly.
I am saddened that there are those who are genuinely in a paroxysm of fear and hatred today, people who are half-convinced that there will be a holocaust-style rounding up of whites or - worse yet! - a taxing of whites so their money can be given to those who are "undeserving", aka blacks. I believe this was referred to during the campaign under the thinly-veiled term "socialism".
Obama is sharp, has a cool head, and from a skills and personality standpoint seems to be a natural for this job. It isn't, or shouldn't be, about his having brown skin. If anything, that brown skin and the experiences which come with it will have contributed to his suitability.
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