I,
too, sing America.
I
am the darker brother.
They
send me to eat in the kitchen
When
company comes,
But
I laugh,
And
eat well,
And
grow strong.
Tomorrow,
I’ll
be at the table
When
company comes.
Nobody’ll
dare
Say
to me,
“Eat
in the kitchen,”
Then.
Besides,
They’ll
see how beautiful I am
And
be ashamed -
I,
too, am America.
-I, Too, Sing
America
- Langston Hughes, 1925
For the
first time in the history of the United States, the nation let its darker brother
out of the kitchen and into the dining room of its national
politics. A major political party gave him a seat at the table
of democratic power, to lay claim for a legitimate opportunity
to sit at the head of this nation’s table as President of
the United States. Political reciprocity has avoided
Black America for 221 years (since the nation’s constitutional
formation in 1787). Yet,
on June 3rd, 2008 - on that date - in this time, America
finally recognized the beauty of its darker brother, got over
being ashamed of its past (at least in making the first big
step) and gave Illinois Senator, Barack Obama, enough votes
to secure the Democratic Party’s nomination for President
of the United States.
In many regards,
part of America grew up then. Another part grew this past
Saturday when Senator Hillary Clinton (finally) conceded.
Hillary Clinton tried to coronate herself the next President
of the United States, had the power
and influence to set up the primary races in her favor and
tried to will the American people into believing that it was
her time by February 5th. It
was not her time. Not because Barack Obama said so,
not because the America People said so, but because destiny
has said so.
Destiny
defines any great moment in time. People do not define great
moments. People are defined by great moments. Any moment considered
“great” produces it’s own energy, its own euphoria and its
own outcome. Despite the routers (that tried to steer this
race in Hillary’s direction), the doubters (who didn’t believe
it could happen) and the haters (who want to prevent it from
happening), the construction of the political equality agenda
in America
took a major step (social equality, currently in regression,
is another matter). Let us not be naïve or misguided in what’s
about to happen over the next few months. Folks who never
took Barack Obama seriously in the past, will take him seriously
now, and that’s good AND bad. We should be very guarded in
advancing the notion that America is ready for a black President. But we
should bask in the significance of this moment, on this day
- in this time.
Barack Obama
has risen to national prominence, advocating that the American
people must take its nation back - that it must change Washington. Obama not only talks about “the time,”
he talks (and walks) in time with what Americans need, staying
in the moment which is what many Americans want - though they
may not admit it. Obama’s oratory has been compared to America’s last conscious messenger, Martin Luther
King, Jr. Both were on time as much as they were in time.
The real comparison should be that both men walked in time
with “the time” when nobody else could see it, and tried to
unify the nation at critical junctures where the nation faced
war, class/race conflict and economic instability. America needed King and his
message, whether it knew it or not - and rejected it in the
most vile manner. As correct as his message was, and has been
glorified in martyrdom, America
couldn’t get past his race. America
needs Barack Obama, and his message, whether it knows it or
not - but I’m still not convinced that it knows it or prepared
to embrace it.
All national
polls indicate that the Democratic Party is seven to tens
ahead at the precinct level in nearly every state in America. The
nation is fed up with Republican domestic and foreign policy
debacles, yet Republican nominee, John McCain, is running
nearly even with Barack Obama. What accounts for the difference
when clearly the nation is not feeling Republican ideology,
and clearly wants a change? They say Barack’s “too liberal.”
Well, that’s exactly what the “out of work” factory workers
in Pennsylvania would want, right? A liberal approach to keeping jobs
in America. That’s exactly what hard working, white
voters in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio would want,
right? A liberal construction on mortgages to save “the American
dream,” their homes, right? The fact of the matter is that
the difference is race, not message.
With
Hillary Clinton’s delayed concession, the play is now to hold
Barack hostage on his Vice Presidential pick. Where military
experience was once the top priority, it’s now someone who
can keep working class whites and white women in the party
- an indication that to many Democrats, the message is correct,
timely and appropriate, but the person is not. Remember, Obama’s
supporters represent one half of one party, that represents
only one-third of the voting electorate in America. The other two-thirds
are Republicans and Independents, and their support is highly
unpredictable at this juncture. Where will they land in November?
This
will be the ultimate test in whether America
is prepared to do what is right, in getting past its historical
race-phobia.
We will see
over the next few months. In the meantime, we celebrate this
man, Barack Obama, on this day, in this time. We too are America. The darker brother,
after 200 years, has been let out of the kitchen, and has
earned a seat at the table to lay claim to the Presidency
of the United States. Let’s see what
America
does in November, when company comes…
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing
director of the Urban Issues Forum and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom.
His Website is AnthonySamad.com.
Click here
to contact Dr. Samad.