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Reasons I’m Sad to See the First Black Presidency End

Jarvis Williams

In this new year, Americans and the world are trying to prepare themselves for the Trump presidency. Many minorities and women await the Trump presidency with fear and uncertainty. Some minorities and many white citizens eagerly await the Trump presidency with excitement and anticipation that maybe president-elect Trump will make America great again for them.

I, on the other hand, though hopeful that the next four years will be prosperous for many, spend the final days of President Obama’s presidency saddened that the first (and possibly the last during my lifetime) black presidency will soon end. I list 6 reasons below for my sadness.

We Shall Overcome

The words of the Civil Rights movement, “We shall overcome someday” have been a powerful reality with the Obama presidency. Who would have thought the same country that enslaved, exploited, lynched, and segregated African-Americans would elect an African-American President? With many prayers, blood, sweat, tears, and deaths of black and white people within American history, a multi-racial black man is about to end an 8-year presidency.

Obama’s presidency proves that racism can in fact be overcome in a racist society. Yes, race relations are bad in America as we come to the end of a black presidency. And yes, racism has been proven to be a much deeper problem than we ever thought in a post civil rights America. But we still have a black presidency—proof that at some level, the democratic process empowered the nation to overcome certain racist political tendencies, even if only for 8 years.

This does not mean all who voted for Obama are without racism in their hearts, nor does it mean that those who refused to vote for Obama are racist. But my point is despite racism in America, we still have a black president. And the refrain from the Civil Rights movement has, at least partially, come to pass.

My President Looks Like Me

As an African-American man with a multi-ethnic heritage and a multi-ethnic family, I’m so proud to see an articulate, honorable, smart, educated black and multi-racial man, who is also a loving husband and a respectable father, serve in the highest office of the United States.

In my view, one reason certain people dislike Obama is because he and his family shatter the various racial and racist stereotypes of black people. And, quite frankly, many white Americans cannot come to grips with an educated and accomplished bi-racial black man occupying the White House with his educated and accomplished black family.

And yet, repeatedly, President Obama and Mrs. Obama have handled many racist criticisms and much disrespect from many Americans from different races with class and dignity. The Obamas made me proud to be brown skinned. And for the past 8 years, I could say (even though I disagree with many of his political decisions) that my president looks like me and has a similar up bringing (i.e. black, multi-ethnic, and comes from humble circumstances and means).

And he understands better than any other president before him what it’s like to be black, brown, and marginalized in a racialized society.

White Supremacists Are Now Empowered

The divisive rhetoric during the election season empowered some white supremacist hate groups. On the one hand, I trust in God’s sovereign hand to uphold and sustain all things according to his perfect will. I am a Calvinist after all. However, on the other hand, I sincerely fear what the next 4 or 8 years will bring for many black and brown people and other marginalized groups.

Will mass incarceration increase? Will families be ripped apart due to mass deportation? Will other marginalized groups become even more marginalized? Will hard working and loving Muslim families and other groups be the object of hate crimes because of how white supremacy has become part of the American political rhetoric?

I don’t know the answers to these questions. But I do know that a black marginalized president has done a great job at trying to sympathize with other marginalized groups during his time in the White House. I’m not affirming his political policies, but I’m simply stating the obvious: generally speaking, marginalized people care about the welfare of other marginalized people. And President Obama regularly demonstrated this throughout his presidency.

Ethnic Diversity in the “White” House

One of the things a black presidency has brought to America is black and brown representation of the beautiful and colorful faces in America. I’m proud that my black president brought many qualified and smart black and brown faces into the White House throughout his 8 years.

My 8-Year-Old Brown Skin Son Has Only Known a Black President

I remember the day when my young son, no older than 1, made his way over to the television set, touched the screen and uttered the words “President Obama” as the president gave a press conference.

My son was born into a United States into a multi-ethnic black and brown family where a black man is the president. His world is one in which his daddy is a black NT scholar and professor, his mom is a Hispanic woman who works in finance, and a black man is his president. He doesn’t have to live his life wondering whether brown or black skin is capable of achieving an ivy league education, a PhD, a job in finance, or becoming the president. He knows, because his mother and I teach him, he can do anything God wants him to do and because he has seen black and brown people in high positions of influence in each of his 8 years of life. With God, we tell our son, all things are truly possible for him as a brown man.

Because of President Obama’s ascension to the White House, many black and brown boys from humble circumstances have come to realize that education is important, hard work does generally pay off, and a black and brown man should set high goals and have high aspirations because they are achievable. And my son has seen this firsthand for 8 years of the Obama presidency.

Michelle Obama

One of President Obama’s greatest accomplishments was marrying First Lady Michelle. She, like her husband, handled racism with class and dignity. And she gave many black and brown girls and women many reasons to believe that there is no shame in being black, brown, or female. Mrs. Obama showed us for 8 years that black and brown are truly beautiful, and by no means inferior. She also showed us that a woman can be strong, intelligent, black, and a loving and supportive wife and faithful mother at the same time. Her class and integrity will certainly be missed by many.

President Obama was certainly not a perfect president. And I often disagreed with his politics and with certain policies. But for this black and multi-racial man, he was a president of whom I could be proud most of the time. His character, kindness, generosity, and his concern about issues that effect black and brown communities and other marginalized communities will be missed by me.

5 thoughts on “Reasons I’m Sad to See the First Black Presidency End

  1. Mikee

    Whatever good was accomplished in having a president that looked like you (and I concede there was some good in it) was more than erased by policies that decimated poor people and people of color disproportionately. In one line, calling babies in the womb a mistake, he probably doomed thousands of babies of color to their death by providing air cover for those wishing to do away with their internal inconvenience.

    BTW brother, I don’t know which white people you’ve met, but I don’t know a single person who disrespects President Obama because he is the antithesis of what they imagine a black man to be. If anything, they grieve over someone who is so obviously talented doing so much harm to society and America’s reputation in the world.

  2. William Smith

    After the recent POTUS election African American evangelical Christians interpreted the election in Biblical terms. One would have thought that African Americans (regardless of Christian profession) in the United States were ancient Israelites soon to live in Egypt under a Pharaoh who knew not Joseph. Did they think that soon they would be back on the plantations? Or that Jim Crow would be re-instituted? That they’d be riding in the back of the bus? That they would have to pay a poll tax? Did the think the 1964 Civil Rights Act and all the laws and regulations that have followed would be undone? Or that their children would be sent to separate and unequal schools?

    Moreover, they were painfully disappointed that their white evangelical (supposed) brethren had voted for Trump. And they were wondering why these same “brethren” could not at least don sackcloth and sit with them in the ash heap to mourn.

    But it was an election! Just an election. Trump won. Hillary lost. Had Hillary won, would I have been justified to do a “Job” and to expect that Black Christian Democrats would appreciate my despair? As a matter of fact, I went to bed on election night rather than watch the returns, fully anticipated awaking to a President-elect Clinton, very possibly a Democrat majority in the Senate, and the expectation my last years would be spent watching the country go to hell. But I didn’t expect Jemar Tisby or Thabiti Anyabwile to sit Shiva with me.w

    From the Blog “The Right Not To Be Upset” https://justacurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2017/01/the-right-not-to-be-upset.html

  3. Cynthia Mathai

    What an impactful picture you painted when describing your son’s 8 years.These 8 years!
    I grew up in Kenya and lived in Zimbabwe in my youth, so I took it for granted that those in power (and in poverty) looked like me. My skin color was never a reason to believe certain professions or accomplishments were out of the question for me.
    I have a growing appreciation the longer I live in the US for positive representations of black and brown people in mainstream culture.

    As a woman of color, what you wrote about Michelle Obama struck a chord. Her grace and poise, her love and support of her husband, her love for her children and dedication to raising them well, her intelligence and personable nature, made her a role model to many. As a woman of color, I know experientially that what Michelle represented mattered tremendously to black womanhood in America.

  4. Jonathan McGuire

    I’m a reforned Christian white man who didn’t vote for President Obama either time, disagreed with nearly every policy position he held, disagreed even more with his understanding of the constitution and the power of the presidency, and am generally relieved that his chosen successor did not win in November (an event that, hopefully, will at least stall the march of leftward progressivism in the USA).

    But I agree with you that it was a good thing to show to the world, and to our own youth, that the USA elected a black man to the highest office in the land…twice! There is a fine line between a Christian recognizing the value of seeing ethnic diversity in the White House and a Christian affirming the agenda of those who promote identity politics. But, for now, I still see the majority of us on the safe sofe of that line.

  5. Clinton

    Good post. I am a Christian black American man. It was good that Barack Obama was elected and it was good for the country in some ways. No, I definitely didn’t agree with most of his policies and am vocal against his stance on the healthcare law and more government regulation and his administration’s stance on gays and how they sided with secular groups against Christians. I don’t agree with the term African American because it is politically correct rather than getting down to where we are really from in the continent of Africa. I think that with him being elected that racism didn’t change, that it became worse. But we should trust God as Christians, not the government.

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