Friday, November 7, 2008

Obama

Addressing my graduating class, the Dean of the Duke University Chapel gave a stirring speech about how we needed to resist being labeled the 9/11 generation. Though the horrific terrorist attacks happened during our senior year, the Dean urged us to think beyond 9/11 and become the generation that made its mark by decisively and proactively moving society away from that event and towards a better future. Rather than becoming pessimistic and jaded about our world, he wanted us to use our energies, skills and talents to refocus the collective gaze of society on the good and the promising.

Nearly seven years later, I witnessed a slew of my friends taking up the Dean's challenge, inspired the first black man gaining a major party nomination for President, who embodied progress, optimism and youth, speaking of hope and change. Several friends participated directly in the Obama campaign, working long hours in battleground states, making calls and coordinating rallies. Others chose to engage in vociferous discussion with their families and friends about their beliefs and about what they felt was the most important decision our country has had to make in a long time. Still others spent election day calling complete strangers encouraging them to get out to vote. Tuesday night, and for the rest of the week thereafter, these friends and many others across the country walked around with gleaming smiles, radiating a sense of optimism that seems to be a perfectly natural extension of the events of the last few months, but also completely remarkable given the aftermath of 9/11 and the recent financial crisis. As one of my professors gushed on the day after the election: "It is now morning in America."

I think the implicit Reagan comparison is entirely appropriate. If Reagan was the transformational figure of our parents' generation, Obama is most definitely ours. Before Tuesday, though, my views on President-Elect Obama had been more muted. To me, "Hope" and "Change" were empty campaign promises that I'd heard before, made by another inspirational candidate who turned out to be an underwhelming President. If anything, I chose to vote for Obama mainly because I liked his technocratic and pragmatic outlook (and also because the erstwhile Maverick Senator McCain had become much less of one).

Tuesday taught me that these concepts are not, and had never been, just vague and hazy campaign rhetoric. Indeed, the tangible effects of being inspired by a man who has become both a symbol and a (potential) instrument for optimism and progress are substantive and significant and should not be underestimated: millions of people appear ready to make sacrifices and continue to work at a grassroots level for change. Some of the optimism appears a bit unhealthy - after all, Obama does not hold a magic wand - but I think much it can be harnessed and put to use in a way never before seen, certainly not in my lifetime.

Prior to Nov 4, 2008, 9/11 was indeed the defining historical moment of our generation. It clearly changed our views about the world and about our own country. Much of this decade has been colored by this event, from the tangible policies and actions we have taken as well as to our national mood more generally. We now have another defining moment for our generation: the election of Barack Obama to the Presidency, with all its optimism and its possibilities. Now let's put this all our good-will, excitement and sense of purpose to good use and get down in the trenches with our new President.

It's time to get to work.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

"one more person who drank the Obama kool-aid"

James H. said...

And isn't it refreshing...

Nice post, Atheen, good points and true.