
Barak Obama broke ties with Trinity United Church of Christ this weekend. I hate it. He had to do it, no doubt. It was the politically expedient thing to do. He probably couldn't have won the general election without it... but I hate it.
George Will said it well when he described it as the only way Obama could "coderize the wound." Now, George and I probably differ greatly on what we interpret that wound to be. The wound that George and others often speak of is, frankly, imaginary to one who has been through the crucible of race. It's the self-delusion that racism as an institution has been dismantled and that the wounds it once inflicted on the public psyche are categorically on the mend and that comments such as those made by Rev. Wright or Father Phleger only serve to lacerate regenerated tissue. I find this to be naive wish-fulfillment. The wound I perceive has been the lancing of the dominant culture's racial sensibilities and ahistorical fantasies, precipitated by the viable Presidential candidacy of a person of color and the inevitable revelation that his story validates some but not most of the myths the dominant culture has told itself about "truth, justice and the American way." (By the way, "dominant culture" in this instance is not code for "white".) Obama had to leave Trinity because all too many could not have heard his message of unity otherwise.
I get why he left. I believe Obama understands intuitively an ethic that is difficult for me to appreciate at this very moment: If you want the right to help shape the world, you have to give the world the right to help shape you. The same is true of one's country. And these are the very rights—not just privileges—we extend to the person we as citizens vote into the White House.
Obama's decision to leave Trinity is thus deeply political, so deeply political that its public expediency trumps any personal or spiritual considerations. Not that there are no personal or spiritual considerations, but the argument that they are somehow paramount is kinda like arguing the significance of one's flashlight in the flood of a glaring spot light. Yet I do not believe this to be a bad thing. It's probably the most righteous politically expedient thing I've ever seen done.
Labels: Obama, politics