Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Campaign 2008

Exclusive Interview: Becoming Barack Obama

The Democratic presidential candidates talks about his schooling and growing up in Hawaii

Posted May 30, 2008

Barack Obama took time out from his campaigning in Colorado last week to speak by phone with Chief White House Correspondent Kenneth T. Walsh about his childhood in Hawaii; specifically, how it shaped his life, his character, and his political philosophy. Excerpts:

On cultural diversity. When I was growing up and going to school, we would go to a Hawaiian potluck and a Japanese wedding or meet some Portuguese friends of my grandfather's and play checkers with them. There would just be a range of different people, and you'd learn to appreciate people's different cultures and different styles.

On Hawaii. My years in Hawaii make me more attuned to certain issues—the environment being a good example. Fairly early on, growing up in Hawaii, not only do you appreciate the natural beauty, but there is a real ethic of concern for the land that dates back to the native Hawaiians. So it was natural for me, I think, growing up, to be concerned about these issues in a way now I think is common across the country but was more deeply embedded in Hawaii at the time. And the same would be true for my appreciation of Asian culture and the importance of the Pacific Rim. Obviously, as somebody who grew up in that area, you know, I'm particularly attuned to the rise of Asian economies and what that may mean for the United States.

On criticism that he is an "elitist." It's the opposite of the life I led there and the life I've led for the last 46 years. This is a good example of how your image in public oftentimes doesn't match up with who you are, but the press runs with it and it gets deeply embedded and people get snippets and then that becomes a story line. Anyone who goes back and learns about my growing up in Hawaii knows we lived very humbly. My grandmother still lives in the apartment where essentially I lived all through high school. It's a two-bedroom condo that could probably fit into a lot of living rooms these days.

On ice cream. I worked for Baskin-Robbins down the street from my grandmother's apartment. And it was tough work. I was behind the counter. I had the uniform and everything. That was one of my first jobs. And I haven't really been the same with ice cream since. I don't really eat ice cream much.

On attending the exclusive Punahou School in Honolulu. It is just an outstanding place to learn. You know, when I first got there, I was a little bit out of place. It did not have a large African-American population. I was coming from a foreign country. Most of the students there were wealthier than I was. You know, we were on a partial scholarship. It certainly probably made me somewhat class conscious in the sense many of my classmates had big homes and fancy cars of their own and were living much more lavishly than I was.

Reader Comments

going on with the present

I think before anyone makes any suggestion on what they think. They should give it some thought and look at the change ahead.

Re: Barack Obama's Interview

This is a response to the comments made by Frank of CA, dates June 2, 2008...

Dear Frank;

It's a so obvious that you sir have trouble relating to other cultures. I salute you for your service to our country during WWII, but please be honest with your comment about serving with Blacks. I'm sure you were well aware of the rear guard action the Blacks saw at the start America's entry into WWII, regulated to the most unsavory duties as opposed being on the front lines. Even Pres. Roosevelt couldn't bring himself to desegregate the military. It took his wife to convince him to use Blacks in combat situations. And look at the American Japanese troops who served with honor in European theater, many of whom came from Hawaii. And how many of those Japanese, Portuguese or Italian kids that you attended school with did you call your equal. I too grew up in Hawaii, a state that no state in the Union can say they are a true melting pot. You are surrounded by a wide variety of cultures. You may have passed thru Hawaii during war, but it wasn't to get immersed in different cultures of the islands. My father was a military contract worker during and after war in Hawaii. So I was accustomed being around military familes and I have to tell you, in most cases, not all, they were most prejudiced people I came across. So for you denegrate Barack Obama for being proud of his growing years in Hawaii just goes to your own ignorance of various cultures. If by chance Sen. Obama does become our nation's leader, there will be a change in the way the rest of the world will view these United States of America.

WELL TRAVELED

olemaid of NJ. I'm sorry but I just can't buy that so- called diverse family and experience pitch. I grew up on a tiny little farm, attended school with Portuguese, Japanese and Italians.

I served in the Army in France with Japanese, Blacks, British , and Southern Rednecks. Many of these soldiers were, and I expect still are ignorant.

I passed through Hawaii during WWII, along with thousands of other Veterans.

Perhaps you have some difficulty relating to the people of other cultures and it is easy for you to judge the country by your own experiences.

However, there are millions of Veterans who have served and are presently serving overseas among many other cultures.

And one doesn't need to be a serving Veteran. I'm not the only civilian to travel in Europe and throughout the U.K. enjoying the beer and the Pub Lunches and the Irish (PADDY).

I think that you do us all a disservice.

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