Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Obama's Speech

I want to mention politics as little as possible on this blog, because it's so divisive and quickly leads to defensiveness and name-calling and the spread of hurtful misinformation (and that's just on my part!), but I have to bring attention today to Barack Obama's long-awaited speech on race and racial relations and the whole Rev. Jeremiah Wright thing. If you didn't see or hear the speech, here's a transcript. Read it if you have the time.

My immediate response is that Obama knocked it out of the park. I'm not sure how much of his own speechwriting Obama does*, but this is a brilliantly written speech (brilliantly delivered, too, but his oratorical skills are no surprise at this point). I'm impressed that he is able to be honest about his connection to -- and admiration for -- his pastor without throwing him out the window, disowning Wright's ideas and inflammatory stance without disowning the man himself. He denounces Wright's hateful attitude while calling attention to the systemic racism that produced him and many others. He acknowledges that black people aren't the only victims of racially based disadvantages. He owns up to his own failures, educates his audience on the history of America's racial divide and the factors that still contribute to it -- on ALL sides -- then calls his audience to join him in trying to rise above them. He wraps this challenge into the original intent of the Founding Fathers, and says this divisiveness and resentment on all sides needs to be overcome. And he says it with humility and authentic religious faith and without showing off. As far as speeches go, it was gracious, forgiving, compassionate, empathetic, and -- wait for it -- hopeful.

It's the right speech, with the right content, at the right time. In fact? I'll go out on a limb. This will be the speech that defines him, and it'll be the reason he wins not just the Democratic Primary, but the 2008 election.

[* Update: Marc Ambinder reports that Obama wrote the speech himself over the past couple of nights. Man. I'm impressed.]

[Another Update: I can't say it any better than Andrew Sullivan..."This was a testing; and he did not merely pass it by uttering safe bromides. He addressed the intimate, painful love he has for an imperfect and sometimes embittered man. And how that love enables him to see that man's faults and pain as well as his promise. This is what my faith is about. It is what the Gospels are about. This is a candidate who does not merely speak as a Christian. He acts like a Christian."]

3 comments:

Matt said...

I love the text of the speech for all the reasons you cite and more. I read it on my treo in the airport, and was ready to run through a wall for Obama. Later last night, I watched the video at home and was slightly disappointed. He delivered it a lot flatter than I imagined as I read. Still, I found the whole of that speech, not just the part addressing the rev. Wright, bold and full of truth.

Jason Boyett said...

I totally agree, Matt. I read the speech first and kept finding myself thinking, "This is a historical document we'll still be talking about a long time from now." Goosebumps and stuff. Then I heard clips from it and was surprised by the absence of passion or flourish in his voice. I wonder if that was deliberate, though. His most serious speech, responding to a serious challenge, requiring a serious tone free of the rhetorical style he's known for?

Trace&Becca said...

agreed. i was absolutely moved when i read the speech - an historic document for sure. I was surprised by the amount of fallout & criticism from the speech/rev. wright issue. i find it so beautiful that he was able to condemn wright's position while still loving him as a brother. apparently that's not allowed in politics. harumph. But, as we like to say in the bundy household: "Barack the vote!"