Obama Inspires Black Men To Action

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LUCAS L. JOHNSON II | January 13, 2009 07:00 AM EST | AP

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Actor Jeff Obafemi Carr is shown in the Amun Ra Theatre he is creating in Nashville, Tenn., Dec. 4, 2008. Inspired by a conversation he had with President-elect Barack Obama during an Ohio campaign event, Carr is turning a run-down mosque into Nashville's first black theater in a hundred years. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — An actor turns a dilapidated, inner-city mosque into a theater in just a few days. A 20-year-old buckles down on his studies at a historically black college after his mother dies of cancer. A community organizer decides his plan to create thousands of green jobs is too modest and enlarges it twenty-fold.

Barack Obama's election to the White House is the very realization of what so many black fathers have told their sons to aspire to for years, even if often it was just a confidence-booster, not meant to be taken literally. And long before he wrapped up the contest, his candidacy had driven these three black men and others to actions they say they might not have taken without his example.

Jeff Obafemi Carr, who had been a successful actor in New York, was debating whether to return there or stay in Nashville, where he wanted to turn a run-down mosque into Nashville's first black theater in a century. It was an ambitious and daunting idea considering that some in the neighborhood figured the building would wind up as a liquor store or a thrift shop.

Then the 41-year-old remembered a conversation he had with Obama during an Ohio campaign stop. The then-Democratic nominee encouraged him to keep working on his project.

"He told me that we're going to make a big change for the country with my help," Carr recalled.

When Carr returned from that event, he put his plan in motion. With the help of community volunteers, donated time from professional builders and materials from corporations, Carr set a date for construction and built the Amun Ra Theatre. Its first major performance will be next month with "Gem of the Ocean," by American playwright August Wilson.

Throughout the process, Carr said he and the workers repeated Obama's slogan: "Yes we can." Now the theater's Web site proclaims, "Yes, We Did!"

Justin Bowers, a junior at historically black Oakwood University in Huntsville, Ala., was thinking about dropping out after his mother died of cancer two years ago at age 48.

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"It was a lot of stress," Bowers said. "I was struggling. It was really hard."

A friend pointed out Obama's perseverance after the president-elect lost his 53-year-old mother to cancer. Bowers said the story motivated him to stay in school and study harder to honor his mom.

"I know she would have wanted me to press on with my life regardless of what adversities might come," said Bowers, 20, who is majoring in accounting and marketing. "That's just how I was raised. And clearly, that's how Barack was raised."

Van Jones, 40, founded Green For All, a national program that seeks to create clean energy jobs. His Oakland, Calif.,-based program, which employs 25 people and has an operating budget of $4.5 million, was instrumental in passing a portion of a national energy bill, called the Green Jobs Act. It will use up to $125 million to train 30,000 people in jobs such as installing solar panels and retrofitting buildings to make them more environmentally friendly.

With Obama's election, Jones decided to shop a $33 billion proposal before Congress that would hire about 600,000 over the next two years for similar work.

"I wouldn't have believed in myself enough to come forward with an idea that bold," Jones said. "But now, you've got somebody who's up there, who's telling people, 'Let's be bold.'

"The ceiling has come off. We can dream of ... bringing new technologies and new jobs into communities that have been left behind. Yes we can."

Obama's historic run has provided ammunition for black fathers, too, who can point to it in motivating the next generation of black men. Will Rodgers, a communications manager at an electric company in Tampa, Fla., said he takes every opportunity to talk to his 12-year-old son about Obama and "how our nation has transformed."

"I want him to understand the gravity of what's happened," said Rodgers, who boasts of having been a conservative Republican who never voted for a Democrat for president until Obama.

"He can really be anything he wants to, even president of the United States."

___

On the Net:

Amun Ra Theatre: http://tinyurl.com/a48z7y

Green for All: http://www.greenforall.org

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — An actor turns a dilapidated, inner-city mosque into a theater in just a few days. A 20-year-old buckles down on his studies at a historically black college after his mother d...
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — An actor turns a dilapidated, inner-city mosque into a theater in just a few days. A 20-year-old buckles down on his studies at a historically black college after his mother d...
 
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First, Is this a generalization, yes. Most social analysis is.
The two problems facing the black/white racism issue in America are these.

50% of the problem is due to behavior of whites; racism, slavery/segregation, governmental injustice.
50% of the problem is due to behavior of blacks; black fathers abandoning their children, teenage pregnancy epidemic.

The problem is, each part of that equation blames the other. Instead of worrying about the parts THEY control.

Whites should focus on eliminating issues like governmental injustice and racism. Instead of worrying about blacks abandoning their children. Why"? because whites are not in control of what black fathers do.

Blacks should focus on educating their own sons and daughters about birth control and about the destructive nature of abandoning your own children. Why? Because blacks are not in control about how racists whites are.

Now that does not mean that blacks should not seek legal action to protect them from structural racism.
If blacks could get a handle on the things THEY control, then they can focus their energies on the harder issues of what they don"t control.

But as long as both sides ignore the parts they control, and focus on the parts the other does, progress will be slow.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 PM on 01/14/2009

David, your comment has some validity, but you fail to grasp the fact that one leads to the other. The history of blacks in America has put blacks in the position of having to fight for everything - including the resources needed to keep a family together and as long as their is racism, residual or not, that fight continues. I will also venture to say that fathers abandoning their children or teenage pregnancy is not just a "black" problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 PM on 01/15/2009

My comment was crude....and not really meant for people who are interested in reading Huffington Post.

My apologies.

My comment comes from frustration. I live in an urban environment where it appears that the accepted cultural norm is that young black men are to dress like gansta's, drive around in cars with annoying thumping stereos, brandish guns and use language that is barely understandable and certainly not employable.

I am acutely aware that poverty is the number one reason for this behavior...but I do think a close second is the black cultural acceptance (even expectation) that young black males are failures and doomed to a life of crime. This is perpetuated by the black community just as much as the white community. Poor black male children are not expected to succeed, so they don't.

There are many unfair reasons why this trend started (slavery, racism, segregation, poverty) but I think a clinging to a learned helplessness in the black community has kept many blacks from overcoming these difficult obstacles. A black president contradicts this learned helplessness and replaces it with hope. Barack Obama himself has called for black men to "step up".

I hope with the Obama family's leadership, example and encouraging but tough-love rhetoric toward black men we will see black communities work out of a terrible terrible cycle.

I am just as tired of anyone else at seeing black man after black man after black man on the 11:00 news.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:40 PM on 01/14/2009
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"that the accepted cultural norm is that young black men are to dress like gansta's, etcx"
Its often many balck entertainers themselves who prepetuate this stereotype in their own wardrobe and the music they create.

Also, I work in the entertainment industry and have seen first hand what happens when a white production protraying blacks is commented on by blacks. If blacks are portrayed as educated, well spoken and well dressed they are considered "too white" and "sellouts", "not real".
Then if the black characters are protrayed as living in a ghetto or rappers they are called "stereotypes".

Yet when blacks in rap videos portray themselves as living in the "hood" or "thugs", then they are just being true to their culture and "down" with with is really going on the black community.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 PM on 01/14/2009

I see what's happening here. Many black males from the 'hood don't see any hope of genuine acceptance no matter how much they may try to conform to mainstream values, so they internalize the negative stereotypes. If a child is told long enough that he's no good and he sees no other viable options, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy. Children have to be taught hope from an early age, accompanied by some tough love, enabling him or her to function effectively in the society.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 01/15/2009

Again, I think you missed the whole point of what Princessofnowt said. Read it again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 PM on 01/15/2009
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The whole gangsta - urban theme is a backdrop for an alternative stratification model, wherein those who participate can strive to succeed within the alternative model.

Presumably the alternative stratification system was sought (by the participants) due to the apparent lack of upward stratification mobility opportunity in general society here in the USA, creating a system within which they have the opportunity to rise to the highest levels of success by their own definitions of the word. Entertainment and sports are other models of alternative stratification, for example.

What President elect Obama has created, in rising to what has traditionally been the symbolic pinnacle one can reach in the American general society system of stratification, is a signal merely that it is possible. It is no longer an unknown, there is no longer the suspicion that no matter what efforts are put, something or someone would prevent it at all costs.

That it is possible does actually change the stratification model in all reality. I think, as well, that while HIllary did not attain the highest office, for women it still signaled the message that it is now attainable, no longer a wild and crazy thing to hope for or dream of.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 PM on 01/14/2009

Very well said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 01/15/2009
- jOke I'm a Fan of jOke permalink

i agree..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 AM on 01/15/2009

I can well understand your frustration. I am a black woman and I was called things like "Uncle Tom," "sellout," "wannabe white,", etc., etc. whenever I encountered "underachieving" blacks to whom it was absolutely inconceivable that one could be black and still enjoy such things as classical music, great literature, fine art, diverse cuisines, etc. The things that interested me, I will admit, have been stereotyped as being enjoyed exclusively by affluent whites. However, this is not actually true---they really are accessible to anyone who's interested. Far too many have learned to see these things as somehow a threat to "black culture," without defining what black culture is. Many aspects of black culture and heritage are actually rejected by many young blacks because they don't consider it "cool" enough (whatever that is), living in a rather narrow straitjacket of what they consider "black." They are unwilling to step outside a very tiny and limited box and see the world, including blackness, for what it truly is and the scope of it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 01/15/2009

There have ALWAYS been Black men and women taking action, making their communities better places, doing the right things, etc. etc.

It is not President Elect Obama's fault that it wasn't until he won the election that the media has decided that NOW it's ok to report on these kinds of stories.

Instead of whining about the timing and the catalyst, we need to be making sure that the stories keep coming!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 PM on 01/14/2009
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I THINK WERE FORGETTING ABOUT THE CLASS OF THE NEW GENERATION AGAIN....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 PM on 01/14/2009

Sorry, black women. You get butkus, except the dream that some man will take care of you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 PM on 01/14/2009

We all know, or should have known, that there were always been wonderful, intelligent, hard-working, family-oriented Black men. Any other perception was what the press [white] purported you to be and in some cases were successful in makin you believe - the whole time they made money off of you. With Obama in office it just cements what's always been the truth. If it weren't, would Obama have had the audacity to try to become President? Stop suffocating yourselves with what others think -- that is your worst enemy -- you thinking what others think and actually caring what you think they think they know. We have too many great men -- inventors, writers, lawyers, doctors, engineers, need I go on?, before this magnificent event. Don't spoil it or your past.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:05 AM on 01/14/2009

With a black president, there are no more excuses. Time to STEP UP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 PM on 01/13/2009

Wha?

The assumption is that black men have made excuses prior to Obama's presidency.

Please read this.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/14/oscar-grants-killer-bart-_n_157824.html

Racism is still real. Poverty is still real. That didn't go away because Obama is president.

Please be realistic.

There are black men doing A LOT. Unfortunately, media cares only for those heading to jail.

Obama is inspirational but certain mindsets are not going to change over night.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 01/14/2009

This sucks for us black men who were already inspired. You cant tell someone you are going to law school anymore without them assuming that just a few months ago you were probably living in a box, smoking crack and smacking h.o.e.s. in a 3 piece lime green suit.

God story and all but I think most people who think that black men were not inspired before Obama's election were simply not looking for those who were inspired on their own or by teachers, parents, friends, etc.

If you think that on Nov. 4th 2008, black men suddenly got some inspiration then its time to venture out further into the world and stop believing every stereotype that seeps out of society's b.u.tt crack.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 01/13/2009

I'm sorry, I really am. I know your message was serious, and I appreciate it. But I couldn't help but laugh at your description of people's assumptions. Not that you are wrong, it was just a well delivered line that would have been perfect coming from Chris Rock.

Seriously though, the one thing that is different, in the opinion of this white as toast American man, is that with Obama as President, black men such as yourself can take your children and point to the T.V. screen and say, "See...yes you really can do it...".

Like I said, I'm white as toast, so my opinion may not count for much in terms of how Obama has affected the black community, but I think it is a great thing.

And I didn't even vote for the guy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:45 AM on 01/14/2009

Seven7ns,

I think you make a good point and I think men like Bill Cosby had a lot to do with this. Like it or not, white and black republicans (the Heritage Foundation, Thomas Sowell, etc.) too urged black men to do the right thing for their families (and themselves) long ago.

Obama is really the icing on the cake. That is worth celebrating. Young black (bi-racial) male children will now have a tangible model to refer to pattern themselves after should they desire to pursue excellence.

That is worth celebrating as well. All of it is a good thing (as Martha Stewart would say).

:o)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 01/14/2009

Everybody involved in 100 Black Men of America, Inc., the Million Man March, Big Brothers, the NAACP, the Urban League, the Black Congressional Caucus, the PUSH/Rainbow Coalition, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, United Way, etc., etc., etc., also are probably bemused by the fact that Obama's getting so much of the credit. But just goes to show that reality and mainstream media don't often have much in common. More power to all those guys, they inspire me!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 PM on 01/15/2009

In a quieter, less publicized way, there have always been black men who were role models for younger black males and others. My late father was such an individual and he and my mother produced three sons who are successful as husbands, fathers, and in their chosen careers. The girls of the family have also done well. The six of us have passed these virtues on to the next generation. Even in earlier days when a good deal more Jim Crow segregation could be found, hope was taught at our house. Instead of the word "can't" I heard "There's a new day coming---be ready!" Throughout my entire adult life, I have believed that I would see a black president in my lifetime. There was no party label attached, either. I always felt that he might be either a Democrat or a Republican. I am pleased to see that Obama's election is encouraging, motivating, and inspiring higher achievement.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 PM on 01/13/2009

I'm very touched by what you wrote. Thank you for sharing this with us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 AM on 01/14/2009

Beautiful piece, Mr. Johnson!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 01/13/2009

Hats off to these men. Barack's influence goes beyond black men and indeed his country.

As a Caribbean black woman engaged in adult literacy tutoring (voluntarily) I too am inspired to give more to ensure that success is measured not simply by the numbers who passed through the classroom but by how many of these persons can actually read and write at the end of their time in the program.

I know that I have gone the extra mile because I have made his 'fierce urgency of now' my mantra. I also know that my attitude is not a unique as I have heard similar themes from my Caribbean friends.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 01/13/2009
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And to this I will add............ The ascension of Barack is but half the story. I am white, and ask my white brethren, who as of yet have not opened up their hearts and minds to the idea of true inclusiveness. Racial and ethnic division is a tool of the Devil and the Republican Party. Step out of the shadows of hate, open your hearts and become in tuned with the needs of all around us. For a while, at least, Hope may be all we have to get by on for a while. If we are consumed by a hatred that serves no purpose, we will be working against our rebirth as the Nation we have been, and can be again.
Set aside the curse of of exclusivity and get our country back. Together!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 01/13/2009

This makes such a nice read. I hope it'll be the same for other groups especially the one I have an emotional tie to, Japanese-Americans.

Best of luck to Carr and everyone else as well as all other groups. :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 PM on 01/13/2009
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What a heartwarming story. I got teary-eyed reading it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 PM on 01/13/2009
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