Obama's Church: Cauldron of Division

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Harry D. Dope

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Obama's Church: Cauldron of Division
Jim Davis
Thursday, Aug. 9, 2007
Presidential candidate Barack Obama preaches on the campaign trail that
America needs a new consensus based on faith and bipartisanship, yet he
continues to attend a controversial Chicago church whose pastor routinely
refers to "white arrogance" and "the United States of White America."


In fact, Obama was in attendance at the church when these statements were
made on July 22.


Obama has spoken and written of his special relationship with that pastor,
the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr.


The connection between the two goes back to Obama's days as a young
community organizer in Chicago's South Side when he first met the
charismatic Wright. Obama credited Wright with converting him, then a
religious skeptic, to Christianity. [Editor's Note: Can Oprah Winfrey make
Barack Obama president? Click Here.]


"It was ... at Trinity United Church of Christ on the South Side of Chicago
that I met Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., who took me on another journey and
introduced me to a man named Jesus Christ. It was the best education I ever
had," Obama described his spiritual pilgrimage to a group of church
ministers this past June.


Since the 1980s, Obama has not only remained a regular attendee at Wright's
services in his inner city mega church, Trinity United Church of Christ,
along with its other 8,500 members, he's been a close disciple and personal
friend of Wright.


Wright conducted Obama's marriage to his wife Michelle, baptized his two
daughters, and blessed Obama's Chicago home. Obama's best-selling book, "The
Audacity of Hope," takes its title from one of Wright's sermons.



Because of this close relationship, questions have been raised as to the
influence the divisive pastor will have on the consensus-building potential
president.


Obama and Wright appear, at first blush, an unlikely pair. Wright is
Chicago's version of the Rev. Al Sharpton.


It was no surprise that Sharpton recently announced that with Wright's
backing, he was setting up a chapter of his New York-based National Action
Network in Chicagoland. The chapter will be headed by Wright's daughter,
Jeri Wright.


Minister of Controversy


Obama was not the only national African-American figure to cozy up to
Wright. TV host Oprah Winfrey once described herself as a congregant, but in
recent years has disassociated herself from the controversial minister.



A visit to Wright's Trinity United is anything but Oprah-style friendly.



As I approached the entrance of the church before a recent Sunday service, a
large young man in an expensive suit stepped out to block the doorway.


"What are you doing here?" he asked.


"I came to hear Dr. Wright," I replied.

After an uncomfortable pause, the gentleman stepped aside.


On this particular July Sabbath morning, only a handful of white men - aside
from a few members of Obama's Secret Service detail - were present among a
congregation of approximately 2,500 people.


The floral arrangements were extravagant. Wright, his associate pastors,
choir members, and many of the gentlemen in the congregation were attired in
traditional African dashiki robes. African drums accompanied the organist.


Trinity United bears the motto "Unashamedly Black and Unapologetically
Christian."


Wright says its doctrine reflects black liberation theology, which views the
Bible in part as a record of the struggles of "people of color" against
oppression.


A skilled and fiery orator, Wright's interpretation of the Scriptures has
been described as "Afrocentric."


When referring to the Romans, for example, he refers to "European
oppression" - not addressing the fact that the Egyptians, who were also a
slave society, were people of Africa.


The Trinity United Web site tells of a "commitment to the black community,
commitment to the black family, adherence to the black work ethic, pledge to
make all the fruits of developing acquired skills available to the black
community."


"Some white people hear it as racism in reverse," Dwight Hopkins, a
professor at the University of Chicago Divinity School, a member of the
Trinity United Church of Christ, tells The New York Times. Blacks tend to
hear a different message, Hopkins says: "Yes, we are somebody; we're also
made in God's image."



Controversy Abounds


Several prior remarks by Obama's pastor have caught the media's attention:



a.. Wright on 9/11: "White America got their wake-up call after 9/11. White
America and the Western world came to realize people of color had not gone
away, faded in the woodwork, or just disappeared as the Great White West
kept on its merry way of ignoring black concerns." On the Sunday after the
attacks, Dr. Wright blamed America.


a.. Wright on the disappearance of Natalee Holloway: "Black women are being
raped daily in Africa. One white girl from Alabama gets drunk at a
graduation trip to Aruba, goes off and gives it up while in a foreign
country and that stays in the news for months."


a.. Wright on Israel: "The Israelis have illegally occupied Palestinian
territories for over 40 years now. Divestment has now hit the table again as
a strategy to wake the business community and wake up Americans concerning
the injustice and the racism under which the Palestinians have lived because
of Zionism."


a.. Wright on America: He has used the term "middleclassness" in a
derogatory manner; frequently mentions "white arrogance" and the
"oppression" of African-Americans today; and has referred to "this racist
United States of America."

Bush's Bulls--t


Wright's strong sentiments were echoed in the Sunday morning service
attended by NewsMax.


Wright laced into America's establishment, blaming the "white arrogance" of
America's Caucasian majority for the woes of the world, especially the
oppression suffered by blacks. To underscore the point he refers to the
country as the "United States of White America." Many in the congregation,
including Obama, nodded in apparent agreement as these statements were made.


The sermon also addressed the Iraq war, a frequent area of Wright's
fulminations.


"Young African-American men," Wright thundered, were "dying for nothing."
The "illegal war," he shouted, was "based on Bush's lies" and is being
"fought for oil money."


In a sermon filled with profanity, Wright also blamed the war on "Bush
administration bulls--t."


Those are the types of statements that have led to MSNBC's Tucker Carlson
describing Wright as "a full-blown hater."


Wright first came to national attention in 1984, when he visited Castro's
Cuba and Col. Muammar Gaddafi's Libya.


Wright's Libyan visit came three years after a pair of Libyan fighter jets
fired on American aircraft over international waters in the Mediterranean
Sea, and four years before the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie,
Scotland - which resulted in the deaths of 259 passengers and crew. The U.S.
implicated Gaddafi and his intelligence services in the bombing.


In recent years, Wright has focused his diatribe on America's war on terror
and the U.S. occupation of Iraq.


For a February 2003 service, Wright placed a "War on Iraq IQ Test" on the
Pastor's Page of the church Web site. The test consisted of a series of
questions and answers that clearly portrayed America as the aggressor, and
the war as unjustified and illegal. Marginally relevant issues regarding
Israel received attention.


The test also portrayed the Iraqi people as victims of trade sanctions, but
Saddam Hussein's propensity for using "oil for food" proceeds to build
palaces rather than buy medicine was never mentioned.


At the end of the test, the pastor wrote, "Members of Trinity are asked to
think about these things and be prayerful as we sift through the 'hype'
being poured on by the George Bush-controlled media." Obama's campaign staff
did not respond to a NewsMax request for the senator's response to Wright's
statements.


In April, however, Obama spoke to The New York Times about Wright, and
appeared to be trying to distance himself from his spiritual mentor. He
said, "We don't agree on everything. I've never had a thorough conversation
with him about all aspects of politics."


More specifically, Obama told the Times, "The violence of 9/11 was
inexcusable and without justification," adding "It sounds like [Wright] was
trying to be provocative."


Obama attributed Wright's controversial views to Wright being "a child of
the '60s" who Obama said "expresses himself in that language of concern with
institutional racism, and the struggles the African-American community has
gone through."


"It is hard to imagine, though, how Mr. Obama can truly distance himself
from Mr. Wright," writes Jodi Kantor of The New York Times. On the day Sen.
Obama announced his presidential quest in February of this year, Wright was
set to give the invocation at the Springfield, Ill. rally. At the last
moment, Obama's campaign yanked the invite to Wright.


Wright's camp was apparently upset by the slight, and Obama's campaign
quickly issued a statement "Senator Obama is proud of his pastor and his
church."


Since that spat, there is little evidence, indeed, that Sen. Obama has
sought to distance himself from the angry Church leader. In June, when Obama
appeared before a conference of ministers from his religious denomination,
Wright appeared in a videotaped introduction.


One of Obama's campaign themes has been his claim that conservative
evangelicals have "hijacked" Christianity, ignoring issues like poverty,
AIDS, and racism.


This past June, in an effort to build a new consensus between his new
politics and faith, Obama's campaign launched a new Web page,
www.faith.barackobama.com.


On the day the page appeared on his campaign site, it offered testimonials
from Wright and two other ministers supporting Obama. The inclusion of
Wright drew a sharp rebuke from the Catholic League. Noting that Obama had
rescinded Wright's invitation to speak at his announcement ceremony,
Catholic League President Bill Donohue declared that Obama "knew that his
spiritual adviser was so divisive that he would cloud the ceremonies."


He noted that Wright "has a record of giving racially inflammatory sermons
and has even said that Zionism has an element of 'white racism.' He also
blamed the attacks of 9/11 on American foreign policy."

Donohue acknowledged that Obama may have different views than Wright and the
other ministers on his Web site, but "he is responsible for giving them the
opportunity to prominently display their testimonials on his religious
outreach Web site."


Political pundits have suggested that Obama's problems with Wright are not
ones based on faith, but pure politics. The upstart presidential candidate
needs to pull most of the black vote to have any chance of snagging the
Democratic nomination. Obama's ties to Wright and the activist African
American church helps in that effort.


But the same experts same those same ties may come to haunt him if he were
to win the nomination and face a Republican in the general election.



The worry is not lost on Wright.


"If Barack gets past the primary, he might have to publicly distance himself
from me," Wright told The New York Times with a shrug. "I said it to Barack
personally, and he said 'yeah, that might have to happen.'"


--
"The government gives them the drugs, builds bigger prisons, passes a
three-strike law and then wants us to sing God Bless America. No, no, no,
God damn America, thats in the Bible for killing innocent people.God damn
America for treating our citizens as less than human. God damn America for
as long as she acts like she is God and she is supreme"
Obama Mentor Rev. Wright
 
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