Opinion
Yes, Obama will change the world
Posted Saturday, November 8 2008 at 18:20
I am feeling rather emotional as I write this, on the morning when Barack Obama has been elected president of the United States of America.
This is my 300th article for the Sunday Nation, and the milestone could not have come at a better moment. So you will forgive me if I stray from the strictures of writing a column, and let go a little.
I believe sincerely that I have witnessed a once-in-a-lifetime event, a moment that may change history as we know it, a result that may make many of us rethink what we know about the world.
I believe sincerely that Barack Obama is a leader who will define his epoch. I am a student of leadership, and I believe this man is the real deal: the kind of leader who, like Mandela, transcends race and origin, and who will blaze a trail for the world at large.
Senator Obama visited us here in Kenya two years ago, and I noted then in this column that we were in the presence of extraordinary talent. We all saw that this man has that indefinable “something” that all those destined for greatness have.
A star quality, a confident demeanour and youthful good looks, yes; but Obama has far more than that. He combines a powerful intellect with a warm heart; he focuses on those kicked down by life.
We are proud of the President-Elect’s “Kenyanness”, but we all seem to forget that he has no such thing in him.
His connection with Kenya is with a father who abandoned him and his mother when he was a baby – a father who went on to sire many more children with many more women. That is indeed the Kenyan way, and no one would have forgiven young Barack for wanting nothing to do with this heritage.
But that is not what the young man had in mind. He sought out his father and his roots, and confronted the reality head-on. He built bonds with his step-siblings, and spent time understanding his Kenyan grandmother and her life.
He forgave, and he gave forbearance. That is the mark of an unusual man, who I am sure is destined for unusual greatness.
Obama demonstrates all the qualities of great leadership. First and foremost, he is a thinker and a listener. He has clear ideas, but he pays attention to the opinions of a wider team.
He picked some outstanding strategists to join his team, and the results were telling.
This was quite possibly the best-planned, best-funded, best-executed election campaign in history. It had to be, to place a black man in the White House.
Obama attracts talent. Robert Rubin, Paul Volcker, Larry Summers and Warren Buffet stepped forward to advise him on matters economic; Colin Powell broke party lines and endorsed Obama as the right man for America. A top leader has this magnetism. Good people believe in his brand and want to work with him. The world at large endorsed Obama with a margin of 4 to 1.
Let us also congratulate America, its ideals and its people. I did not think Americans were capable of electing a black, or even part-black, person to the highest office in the land. But they have shown that indeed they were.
And let us be honest: which other society is ready to elect an “outsider” to lead it, a man with a skin colour that is not that of the majority; a man with a strange and unfamiliar and suspicious name; an outsider who will command its armed forces?
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Submitted by ZawadiPosted November 10, 2008 04:16 PM
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Submitted by bendrixdotme
This is my first time reading your blog. I must say thank you for writing as freely and as personal as you did. Your moment of reflection captures a special moment that is definitely felt across the world. I am an African American male who lives in NYC. This is the first time in my adult life that I felt that the minority vote actually made a difference for once.
Posted November 09, 2008 08:04 AM




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(huuu, your 300th article is really super great. obama got 51% but i think he'd have got more than 81% for the whole world vote)