The Obama's Fight

25-10-24 10:23:05
The Obama's Fight

The biography of Barack Obama :

Barack Obama, of his true name Barack Hussein Obama, is an American politician member of the democratic party. Born on August 4th, 1961 in Honolulu, he is the son of a Kenyan father and an American mother. He is graduate in political sciences and international relations. Barack Obama is married since 1992 to Michelle Robinson, met with the law firm where he works in 1989. From their union were born two girls : Malia Ann, born in 1998, and Natasha, born in 2001.

Barack Obama tells us that it has several times confused for a Servant !

Barack Obama indicated that it had been several times taken for a servant of carpark or a waiter. “There is not a black man of my age (...) which, expecting its car at the exit of a restaurant, did not have somebody who tightened his keys to him”, he explained, trustful why that had arrived to him personally.
“Small irritations or humiliating experiments that we undergo are nothing compared to what the former generation underwent”, Barack Obama moderated.

The fight against racism is not finished !

Barack Obama pointed out that racism did not disappear, but it also underlined good progresses : “If you think that nothing changed, ask somebody who lived in Selma, Chicago or Los Angeles in the Fifties ! ”. He added “He is enough for us to open our eyes, our ears and our hearts to know that the shade of the racial history this country always planes on us “
“The heritage of slavery, Jim Crow, discrimination in almost all the compartments of our lives, that had one durable impact and that always been part of our DNA” explained Barack Obama in this maintenance, with the very personal tone sometimes, the first black president of the United States lengthily tackled this delicate question in this country where the segregation was abolished only one half-century ago in certain States of the South.
But the US president also warns against temptation to rewrite the history or to minimize good progresses, stressing that the racial relations appreciably improved during the end of the 21st century. “Did not say that nothing changed”, he hammered. “Progress is real and is a source of hope. But what is also quite real is that walk is not finished”.