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Jan 22 2009
Obama as Savior? He'd better be | Print |  E-mail
Op_ed
By Don Williams   

Translation

Obama as Savior? He'd better beImage
 
So he can't walk on water.
 
Nor heal the sick with a touch.

His smile won't summon sunrise, nor cause angelic choirs to sing from the skies.

Still. Of all the presidential candidates to ever rise on the world stage, none have appeared more attuned than Barack Hussein Obama to notions of the common good--notions of inclusion, openness, nurturing, forgiveness and reconciliation, in keeping with our best spiritual traditions.

It showed in all the beautiful acts of his first 24 hours in office.

Our savior? On some level he'd better be, else we are lost.

Economically, Constitutionally, environmentally, militarily, diplomatically, culturally, and ethically, we have fallen.

Our challenges are existential, not in some mysterious, intellectual way, but in the sense that our very existence--as a nation, a species, as individuals--has been put at risk. And it's been put at risk mostly by forces that have grown from the darkness inside our own hearts.

False prophets led us to this abyss mostly by pointing fingers at the alleged shortcomings of others as the source of all our troubles. The result has been ill-advised invasions, torture, deregulation, military budgets that grow insanely, politics of personal destruction, waste, corruption, assaults on personal liberties, the Constitution, the very earth.

To acknowledge we've lost our way, marching off in every direction with drums pounding, violins skirling and banners flying, is to acknowledge the need for salvation. We're hanging on by a few thin threads. One false move and we risk unimaginable falls. Business and politics as usual will not save us. Pandering, blaming others, drawing down dwindling resources, building fierce new weapons and marching off against imagined enemies are luxuries we can no longer afford.

Has anyone challenged such old ways of doing business as Obama has? Of all the presidential candidates I've ever witnessed, his message has been the most hopeful, at least so far.

So far, he's been about healing.

So far he's been about reaching out.

So far he's been about uniting the tribes.

No, this impulse doesn't show in every appointment, and we must watch such players with vigilance. Still, as teachers from Jesus to Machiavelli have noted, there's wisdom in hugging your enemies close by.

A dinner for his biggest opponent, John McCain, on the eve of the inauguration? Unprecdented.

A place in the new administration for chief rivals Hillary, Biden and others? Outside the norm.

Gathering both a fundamentalist minister and a gay bishop into inauguration festivities? Unheard of.

His campaign should've prepared us for this. Accused of hatemongering by association with the Rev. Wright, he elevated the conversation in a speech that addressed race honestly and eloquently.

Accused of radicalism by association with William Ayers, he turned the other cheek, refusing to make much of McCain's own radical associations.

When it comes to Obama's fitness to lead, the signs have mostly been good. That's why some, myself included, have gushed at times, "Please, embrace this sane, rational and decent man."

Looking back across the landscape of his sojourn, Obama's made a history of embracing enemies, pouring oil on troubled waters, turning the other cheek. All along, he's inveighed against embracing the darkness inside our own hearts, and urged us to.

Oppose unnecessary wars.

Oppose the deliberate cruelty of torture.

Oppose unbridled greed.

Oppose destruction of communities.

Oppose prejudice against women, gays and immigrants.

Oppose the urge so prevalent within the human heart to scapegoat and demonize.

Oppose nuclear proliferation and other forces that endanger the whole earth.

Maybe it's because he is of the Whole Earth generation that he's so attuned to this existential moment. Obama is of a generation that grew up with the Whole Earth as ubiquitous icon. His generation grew up electronically connected and therefore exposed to the cruelties, pieties and generosities of others. He spent times not only at elite universities but also on the streets, driving broken down cars. Along the way he experienced a magical mystery tour as he sought to understand his own mythic family, his own identity. In coming to such understanding, he forged a new politics.

His message of peace, hope and community springs from this journey, this essence that is Barack Hussein Obama. At last he can proclaim his full name. It's part of a message that recognizes the dignity of others, the dignity of blood, sweat and tears, and a world community we all must work to save, lest it fall into the abyss that yawns inside each human heart.

Obama as savior? On some level he'd better be.

Else we are lost.

Don Williams a contributing editor at MWC is a widely published columnist, short story writer, and the founding editor and publisher of New Millennium Writings, an annual literary anthology...

Read other articles by this author
http://mwcnews.net/Don-Williams


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Comments (1)
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1. 22-01-2009 20:09
So long as all his wishes have the US of A up front and the rest of the world two steps in tune behind. 
Same story line performed by a new talking head. 
Don\'t get me wrong I was in the man\'s corner even when he was the non-american, closet radical activist, born to a Jewish mother and African Moslem father and who was to white for African American population and too black for the Southern White folk. 
Hell if nothing else the man is young, street savy and has not been in federal politics long enough to be tainted. 
But......there has to be a but. 
For someone on the other side of the world (like myself) to keep me on board the new Prez needs to engage meaningfully and equally with all sides in all disputes. Enough with the rifle but over the head and more direct one on one. Give those so called rougue states some leaway and bring them on board with equal status. There has been 60 years of the bullet diplomacy how about a few years of intellectual dialogue just to see how that works. 
I will be watching and gauging how many \"yes we can\" approvals the new Prez is entitled to by the declining number of bullets fired around the world.
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