In extended first family, a nation of many faces

Above: Barack Obama greets an unidentified relative as he
arrives at Capitol Hill for his swearing in as the 44th President
at the 56th Presidential Inauguration ceremony in Washington,
D.C., Tuesday, Jan. 20. (Shawn Thew / EPA)

NYT
Tues., Jan. 20, 2009

WASHINGTON – The president’s elderly stepgrandmother brought him an oxtail fly whisk, a mark of power at home in Kenya. Cousins journeyed from the South Carolina town where the first lady’s great-great-grandfather was born into slavery, while the rabbi in the family came from the synagogue where he had been commemorating Martin Luther King’s Birthday. The president and first lady’s siblings were there, too, of course: his Indonesian-American half-sister, who brought her Chinese-Canadian husband, and her brother, a black man with a white wife.

When President Barack Obama was sworn in on Tuesday, he was surrounded by an extended clan that would have shocked past generations of Americans and instantly redrew the image of a first family for future ones.

As they convened to take their family’s final step in its journey from Africa and into the White House, the group seemed as if it had stepped out of the pages of Mr. Obama’s memoir — no longer the disparate kin of a young man wondering how he fit in, but the embodiment of a new president’s promise of change. Read more.
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Obama Takes Oath, and Nation in Crisis Embraces the Moment

Barack Obama is sworn in as the 44th president of the United States during
a ceremony at the Capitol by Chief Justice John Roberts. (Doug Mills/NYT)

NYT
By PETER BAKER
Published: January 20, 2009

“We will not apologize for our way of life, nor will we waver in its defense.”

WASHINGTON — Barack Hussein Obama was sworn in as the 44th president of the United States on Tuesday and promised to “begin again the work of remaking America” on a day of celebration that climaxed a once-inconceivable journey for the man and his country.

Mr. Obama, the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas, inherited a White House built partly by slaves and a nation in crisis at home and abroad. The moment captured the imagination of much of the world as more than a million flag-waving people bore witness while Mr. Obama recited the oath with his hand on the same Bible that Abraham Lincoln used at his inauguration 148 years ago.

Beyond the politics of the occasion, the sight of a black man climbing the highest peak electrified people across racial, generational and partisan lines. Mr. Obama largely left it to others to mark the history explicitly, making only passing reference to his own barrier-breaking role in his 18-minute Inaugural Address, noting how improbable it might seem that “a man whose father less than 60 years ago might not have been served at a local restaurant can now stand before you to take a most sacred oath.” Read more.



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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