November
7, 2008 - Issue 298 |
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Obama
Blues Represent Our Resistance By Dr. Lenore J. Daniels, PhD BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board |
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November 3, 2008 The Obama blues dominate the front yards of Black and white homes and apartment buildings. Some yards have several Obama blues for emphasis. In the parking space shared by Dunkin Donuts, Burger King, and KFC, the pigeons have been struggling to maintain the space where they normally search for food left out for them. Overhead are the seagulls flying, sounding off, and disrupting the pigeons’ daily routine against a white background of clouds. There’s an elderly white man eating from a discarded pizza box over a city trash can. On The sign O-B-A-M-A
and an arrow points toward a store front on This space became
too small for volunteer training, said the security guard sitting at
her desk. “We sign people up here and send them to Tonight, I know what they are thinking as they wait. He looks like them and he doesn’t look like the other candidate and the other candidates before him. He will come through because they have hope. They are inspired to hold their collective breaths and hope. They want to believe that after enslavement and after legalized segregation and the last forty years, the rulers are willing to let them in the door. They want to believe without asking why now? Why this man? Why would the rulers be willing to accept Barack Obama? November 4, 2008 A middle-aged Black woman, she is the first to exit from the voting poll where I live. It is 7:15 a.m. “This is incredible.” She says only three people where in line for the primaries. Through the glass door, I see the line is long and doubled in the lobby of the building. A little after 6:00 a.m., when I came down to take notes, I found about seven people waiting to vote. The election staff was still setting up. She is smiling as she walks away toward the parking lot, on her way to work. It is chilly
and cloudy again and people do not want to linger. But the people, mostly
Black, are smiling, saying “go Obama” as they pass me and three voter
protection staffers just in from Around 10:00
a.m., five people are in line. I walked back down to “Have you voted?” At the neighborhood library, the guard and librarian at the counter ask every patron if they have voted. The response is a resounding “yeah” followed by laugher and talk about a “historical” day. Outside on Chelten again, “Vote for Obama. Vote for Obama.” It’s someone with a bullhorn in a red van passing a busy intersection, slowing down to a crowd who stops to cheer. It feels
like Back in my building lobby, people, one or two at a time, come in walking with a bounce. Everyone is talking at once. “Obama.” “Obama.” Laughter. “Yeah!” I stand around to listen. The election staff, residents of the building, is enjoying itself, despite the long day. It feels like an Obama win. I am conscious
of standing alone near the security counter in a lobby filled with people
- Black people. They suspect I am some back-in-the-day-radical or “militant.”
Oh you are from That would sound as if you are talking against Obama! Against Obama? These are
Black workers who want to see a Black man in the White House. Change
is a changing of the guard. Obama will bring jobs! But how? It was more
than changing guards or the rulers in I am watching
Democracy Now’s five-hour coverage of the election when I hear it. Women
screaming. Yelling. O-B-A-M-A! O-B-A-M-A! Car horns. Then Amy Goodman
announces that Sen. Barack Obama is the projected winner! I call my
sister in I can see a darker face, but one surrounded by the messengers of death. I can’t see my ancestors in this image! I can’t! My sister and
the people I encountered yesterday and today - hope - despite all the
warning signs - not so much in some narrative about “transcending race”
but in one man reversing the tide that has been against them. One man
would free them of the chains of being Black in the The people are speaking, rightly or wrongly, in the silence of the Left. The Left
in the I started
these 18 months thinking about a Cynthia McKinney run for President.
I showed the video American Blackout a couple of times in the community
while I lived in So I pulled away and watched as Left activists, journalists, and intellectuals wrote article after article and drafted letter after letter in support of the Democrat. He’s better than McCain. It’s a Republican or a Democrat. It’s the election. It’s the vote. How many committed, life-long human rights activists, like Jeremiah Wright, were betrayed and excluded by the so-called Black Left in order to see the Democratic Party - not the people - the Party - succeed on November 4th? The Left
could have held its ground. It could have returned to the real hard
work of grassroots organizing by teaching the young, one, two, ten,
students at a time in teach-in sessions at local cafes or in their living
rooms or on front porches. The left could have used these last forty
years to educate the people, particularly the young people, about fascism
and the corporate takeover of the media and government. The Left could
have educated workers about the necessity to organize for their own
interests and link their interests to workers globally battling While I hold
the phone in one hand and wait for President-elect Obama to appear before
what we know now is a crowd of 200,000 gathered at Grant Park in I remember stand
beside my mother to see Pope John Paul II and later Luciano Pavarotti
at Grant Park. Years before that, I remember watching the news at home,
surrounded by my family, as the Chicago Police attacked protesters in
Grant Park during the 1968 Democratic Convention. Now I have to describe
to my sister what I see on the computer screen. There’s the president-elect
Obama holding Sasha’s hand and there’s Michelle holding Malia’s hand.
(It’s an African American family). There’s a screaming,
waving, crying crowd of racially mixed people. Then there’s the next
president of the One people. One nation, Obama tells the crowd again. One people. One nation. (The emotional call of the citizens to war). Obama frowns and looks sternly toward the crowd as he shakes his war rattle: there will be violence! Count on it. (The announcement of old business as usual). But my sister doesn’t hear this. She is crying. I can’t speak. At the end,
the stage is filled with Obama and Biden’s families. Children white
and Black… A union of white and Black for the convenience of the
fascists! Malcolm warned that the rulers in the November 5, 2008 The day after,
the Black Philadelphians on Sounds like an old Blues song. And so begins
a new era of Click
here
to post a comment about the election BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has been a
writer, for over thirty years of commentary, resistance criticism and
cultural theory, and short stories with a Marxist sensibility to the
impact of cultural narrative violence and its antithesis, resistance
narratives. With entrenched dedication to justice and equality, she
has served as a coordinator of student and community resistance projects
that encourage the Black Feminist idea of an equalitarian community
and facilitator of student-teacher communities behind the walls of academia
for the last twenty years. Dr. Daniels holds a PhD in Modern American
Literatures, with a specialty in Cultural Theory (race, gender, class
narratives) from |
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