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----- Original Message -----
From: bruno evangelista
To: tony
black
Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 6:07 PM
Subject: Mr. Obama
Something I took from Democracy Now, an independent news program I get from my satellite, but available on-line as well. Reverend Jeremiah Wright is speaking at the National Press Club. He is essentially defending his previous comments, since they have become so controversial. REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT: These two foci of liberation and transformation have been at the very core of the black religious experience from the days of David Walker, Harriet Tubman, Richard Allen, Jarena Lee, Bishop Henry McNeal Turner and Sojourner Truth, through the days of Adam Clayton Powell, Ida B. Wells, Dr. Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, Malcolm X, Barbara Jordan, Cornell West, and Fanny Lou Hamer. These two foci of liberation and transformation have been at the very core
of the United Church of Christ since its predecessor denomination, the
Congregational Church of New England, came to the moral defense and paid for
the legal defense of the Mende people aboard the slave ship Amistad,
since the days when the United Church of Christ fought against slavery, played
an active role in the Underground Railroad, and set up over 500 schools for
the Africans who were freed from slavery in 1865. And these two foci remain at the core of the teachings of the United Church
of Christ, as it has fought against apartheid in South Africa and racism in
the United States of America ever since the union which formed the United
Church of Christ in 1957. These two foci of liberation and transformation have also been at the very
core and the congregation of Trinity United Church of Christ since it was
founded in 1961. And these foci have been the bedrock of our preaching and
practice for the past thirty-six years. Our congregation, as you heard in the introduction, took a stand against
apartheid when the government of our country was supporting the racist regime
of the African government in South Africa. Our congregation stood in solidarity with the peasants in El Salvador and
Nicaragua, while our government, through Ollie North and the Iran-Contra
scandal, was supporting the Contras, who were killing the peasants and the
Miskito Indians in those two countries. Our congregation sent thirty-five men and women through accredited
seminaries to earn their Master of Divinity degrees, with an additional forty
currently being enrolled in seminary, while building two senior citizen
housing complexes and running two childcare programs for the poor, the
unemployed, the low-income parents on the South Side of Chicago for the past
thirty years. Our congregation feeds over 5,000 homeless and needy families every year,
while our government cuts food stamps and spends billions fighting in an
unjust war in Iraq. Our congregation has sent dozens of boys and girls to fight in the Vietnam
War, the first Gulf War and the present two wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. My
goddaughter’s unit just arrived in Iraq this week, while those who call me
unpatriotic have used their positions of privilege to avoid military service,
while sending—while sending over 4,000 American boys and girls of every race
to die over a lie. Our congregation has had an HIV/AIDS ministry for over two decades. Our
congregation has awarded over $1 million to graduating high school seniors
going into college and an additional $500,000 to the United Negro College Fund
and the six HBCUs related to the United Church of Christ, while advocating for
healthcare for the uninsured, workers’ rights for those forbidden to form
unions, and fighting the unjust sentencing system which has sent black men and
women to prison for longer terms for possession of crack cocaine than white
men and women have to serve for the possession of powder cocaine. Our congregation has had a prison ministry for thirty years, a drug and
alcohol recovery ministry for twenty years, a full-service program for senior
citizens, and twenty-two different ministries for the youth of our church,
from preschool through high school, all proceeding from the starting point of
liberation and transformation, a prophetic theology which presumes God’s
desire for changed minds, changed laws, changed social orders, changed lives,
changed hearts in a changed world. The prophetic theology of the black church is a theology of liberation. It
is a theology of transformation. And it is ultimately a theology of
reconciliation. DONNA LEINWAND: You have said that the
media have taken you out of context. Can you explain what you meant in a
sermon shortly after 9/11 when you said the United States had brought the
terrorist attacks on itself, quote, “America’s chickens are coming home to
roost”? REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT: Have you heard the
whole sermon? Have you heard the whole sermon? DONNA LEINWAND: I heard most of it. REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT: No, no, the whole
sermon, yes or no? No, you haven’t heard the whole sermon? That nullifies that
question. Well, let me try to respond in a non-bombastic way. If you heard the whole
sermon, first of all, you heard that I was quoting the ambassador from Iraq.
That’s number one. But number two, to quote the Bible, “Be not deceived. God
is not mocked. For whatsoever you sow, that you also shall reap.” Jesus said,
“Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” DONNA LEINWAND: Senator Obama has tried
to explain away some of your most contentious comments and has distanced
himself from you. It’s clear that many people in his campaign consider you a
detriment. In that context, why are you speaking out now? REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT: On November the 5th
and on January 21st, I’ll still be a pastor. As I said, this is not an attack
on Jeremiah Wright. It has nothing to do with Senator Obama. It is an attack
on the black church launched by people who know nothing about the African
American religious tradition. And why am I speaking out now? In our community, we have something called
playing the dozens. If you think I’m going to let you talk about my mama and
her religious tradition and my daddy and his religious tradition and my
grandma, you’ve got another thing coming. DONNA LEINWAND: What is your relationship
with Louis Farrakhan? Do you agree with and respect his views, including his
most racially divisive views? REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT: What I think about
him, as I said on Bill Moyers and it got edited out, how many other African
Americans or European Americans do you know that can get one million people
together on the Mall? He is one of the most important voices in the twentieth
and twenty-first century. That’s what I think about him. I said, as I said on
Bill Moyers, when Louis Farrakhan speaks, it’s like E.F. Hutton speaks, all
black America listens. Whether they agree with him or not, they listen. DONNA LEINWAND: What is your motivation
for characterizing Senator Obama’s response to you as, quote, “what a
politician had to say”? What do you mean by that? REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT: What I mean is what
several of my white friends and several of my white Jewish friends have
written me and said to me. They said, “You’re a Christian. You understand
forgiveness. We both know that if Senator Obama did not say what he said, he
would never get elected.” Politicians say what they say and do what they do based on electability,
based on sound bites, based on polls, Huffington, whoever’s doing the polls.
Preachers say what they say, because they’re pastors. They have a different
person to whom they’re accountable. As I said, whether he gets elected or not, I’m still going to have to be
answerable to God November 5th and January 21st. That’s what I mean. I do what
pastors do. He does what politicians do. Now we'll hear from Obama (I sound like a reporter). Though I agree with you completely that Obama is better than both McCain and Clinton, he is still a politician. And as such, I believe he will throw his own mother under a bus to save his ass come election time. Below, you will note how he conveniently throws Wright under a bus. Perhaps I'm too cynical, but I think that if Obama could, he'd repudiate his blackness, and claim he was white all along. Senator Obama’s comments Tuesday came in the wake of the renewed media attention on his ties to Reverend Wright and one week before the primaries in Indiana and North Carolina. We’re going to play an excerpt of Senator Obama’s statement Tuesday. SEN. BARACK OBAMA: Yesterday we saw a
very different vision of America. I am outraged by the comments that were made
and saddened over the spectacle that we saw yesterday. I have been a member of
Trinity United Church of Christ since 1992. I’ve known Reverend Wright for
almost twenty years. The person I saw yesterday was not the person that I met
twenty years ago. His comments were not only divisive and destructive, but I
believe that they end up giving comfort to those who prey on hate, and I
believe that they do not portray accurately the perspective of the black
church. They certainly don’t portray accurately my values and beliefs. When he states and then amplifies such ridiculous propositions as the US
government somehow being involved in AIDS, when he suggests that Minister
Farrakhan somehow represents one of the greatest voices of the twentieth and
twenty-first century, when he equates the United States wartime efforts with
terrorism, then there are no excuses. They offend me. They rightly offend all
Americans. And they should be denounced. And that’s what I’m doing very
clearly and unequivocally here today. JUAN GONZALEZ: Senator Obama, denouncing Reverend Jeremiah Wright, his former pastor from the Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. Sign in to Windows Live Messenger, and enter for your chance to win $1000 a day—today until May 12th. Visit SignInAndWIN.ca |
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