Posted on 05/27/2008 6:25:50 PM PDT by SJackson
If he wins in November, Barack Obama will become the first president of the United States to have tried dog meat, or at least the first to have admitted it publicly.
Thats not likely to win him votes, but it sure makes him a hell of a lot more interesting to Filipinos. Here are a couple more biographical tidbits.
As a boy, Obama played kite duels like the game enjoyed by Pinoy children in which one tries to force an opponents saranggola (kite) down from the sky.
Then this: Obama knows on personal level the dehumanizing power of poverty and dictatorship in the Third World.
You can learn more from his memoir, Dreams from My Father, first published more than a decade ago, and has become a paperback bestseller in the US.
Its a fascinating read, especially for Filipinos.
Obama found dog meat tough, snake meat tougher and roasted grasshopper crunchy. Bicolanos, in particular, would enjoy his company: Obama said he learned how to eat small green chili peppers raw with dinner with plenty of rice.
I wonder if, as some of my childhood friends in Cubao did, Obama and his buddies also used razor blades attached to their saranggola string to gain an advantage in aerial duels.)
It is the third point that I think is most relevant to Filipinos.
After Obamas parents separated in Hawaii where he grew up, his mother married a visiting student named Lolo Soetoro who took his new family back to his native Indonesia.
Lolo had witnessed the rise of Indonesian nationalism that eventually led to the defeat of Dutch colonialism. His father and brother were killed in the resistance and the Dutch burned their house down. But as a student in Hawaii, with Indonesia emerging as a newly-independent nation, Lolo was so full of life, so eager with plans, Obama writes.
Things would be changing now that the Dutch had been driven out, Lolo had told [my mother]; he would return and teach at the university, be a part of that change, Obama continues.
But the change was not what he expected.
Sukarno, the admired but controversial independence leader and president became a target of right wing forces. In 1967, a coup still widely believed to have been aided by the CIA, overthrew his government. That led to a bloody crackdown and the rise of the Suharto dictatorship.
The death toll was anybodys guess: a few hundred thousand, maybe half a million, Obama writes. We had arrived in Djakarta less than a year after one of the more brutal and swift campaigns of suppression in modern times.
The change was devastating for Obamas stepfather. Lolo was a strong, hard working and decent man who took care of Obama and his mother. But he also faced painful choices in Indonesia under Suharto similar to those many Filipinos endured under Marcos. Some Indonesians fought back against dictatorship, while others simply accepted, even embrace, the new regime.
Lolo Soetoro chose the latter.
Power had taken Lolo and yanked him back into line making him feel its weight, letting him know that his life wasnt his own, Obama writes. So Lolo had made peace with power, learned the wisdom of forgetting.
Filipinos and Indonesians remember how, at the height of the Cold War, the United States endorsed, even bankrolled, brutal dictators who were considered friendly to American interests. That sinister policy reemerged in the post 9-11 world, underscored by the Bush administrations cozy ties with authoritarian rulers in Central Asia and the Middle East.
Would Obama embrace the same attitude? Or would he remember his stepfather and other Indonesians who endured repression and humiliation under dictatorial rule?
This is a critical question if, as some fear, the Philippines may be in danger of repeating a dark chapter in our own past. If the current occupants of Malacanang are indeed looking for a way to extend their stay beyond 2010, as some suspect, Obama in the White House could pose a serious problem.
Obamas memoir also offers some hints on how he might take on issues of poverty and inequality. These became real for him in the cities and countryside of Indonesia.
Recalling the beggars in Djakarta, Obama writes, They seemed to be everywhere, a gallery of ills men, women, children, in tattered clothing matted with dirt, some without arms, others without feet, victims of scurvy or polio or leprosy
He relates how his mother once visited a wealthy area in Djakarta that sounds much like the posh neighborhoods in Ayala Alabang or Makati, where diplomats and generals lived in sprawling houses with tall wrought-iron gates. To drive off a poor woman who had wandered near one of the fancy homes, a group of men who were washing a fleet of Mercedes-Benzes threw a handful of coins onto the road. The woman ran after the coins with terrible speed, checking the road suspiciously as she gathered them into her bosom, Obama relates.
And in the Indonesian countryside, he remembers the empty look on the faces of farmers the year the rains never came, the stoop in their shoulders as they wandered barefoot through their barren, cracked fields.
Obama also probably understands that people eat dogmeat in parts of Indonesia and the Philippines a practice viewed as reprehensible in the West for a simple reason: hunger and lack of food.
Many U.S. and European politicians have often appeared clueless, if not insensitive, when it comes to issues of poverty and repression in the developing world. Take the reaction of former US Secretary of State Colin Powell a few years ago when he was confronted in Manila with the Philippine governments bid to get duty-free access for tuna exports, similar to the one given to South America.
In presenting its case, the Philippine government had tried to convince Powell that the issue was a matter of survival for tens of thousands of impoverished fisherfolk in Mindanao. But Powell, who was then trying to sell the world on the Bush Administrations disastrous decision to invade Iraq, was unimpressed, even saying, "I did not know someday I would be dealing with tuna.
Would Obama react differently? As another American politician worried about how he is perceived at home and about his chances in the next election, maybe.
But theres also a chance, even a small one, that he would react differently. He would listen intently, consult his advisers and weigh the broader economic issues involved. But as he makes his decision, he may also see the faces, hear the voices and remember the stories of the struggling people he knew on the streets of Djakarta.
Copyright 2008 by Benjamin Pimentel
Bay Area journalist Benjamin Pimentel is the author of UG, An Underground Tale and Mga Gerilya sa Powell Street. He can be reached at http://bpimentel.blogspot.com
He ate dog and no doubt will get PETA’s endorsement.
Did he eat pork or was it considered “haram” in the Soetoro/Obama household?
I’m sure he did once he got to Hawaii.
Barack Obama vows to hold puppy mills accountable for torturous conditions: Will Obama fix the problem?
Feb. 28, 2008 03:55 p.m.
http://www.sodahead.com/question/53771/
Senator Obama doesnt currently have pets, but holding Baby, he looks like a natural. Baby is the focus of a recent book called A Rare Breed of Love by Jana Kohl, which focuses on the poodle that suffered a horrific decade of abuse in a northern California puppy mill.
Obama, in his response to a questionnaire from the Humane Society Legislative Fund, indicated his support for reforms to crack down on puppy mills, close loopholes that allow many puppy mills to escape federal regulation, and provide better enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act. The senator also supports legislation led by fellow Illinois Senator Dick Durbin to stop the imports of young puppies from foreign puppy mills — puppies from China, Russia, and Mexico who are shipped at just weeks old, exposed to extreme temperatures in airplane cargo holds and sometimes arriving in this country sick or dead.
"With Lolo, I learned how to eat small green chili peppers raw with dinner (plenty of rice), and away from the dinner table, I was introduced to dog meat (tough), snake meat (tougher), and roasted grasshopper (crunchy)," Obama wrote. "LIke many Indonesians, Lolo followed a brand of Islam that could make room for the remnants of more ancient animist and Hindu faiths. He explained that a man took on the powers of whatever he ate: One day soon, he promised, he would bring home a piece of tiger meat for us to share."
Agreed. Additionally, Mrs. Soetoro, Sen. Obama’s half-sister, is on the record stating that the latter was a practising muslim in Indonesia and the rest of his Indonesian family consists of Islamic “believers.” Obama’s own brother, Roy, is also a convert to Islam.
Just pray this NUT CASE does not get elected. The man is just plain crazy, a raging socialist with ZERO EXPERIENCE, especially in foreign policy. Anti-American, anti-military, anti-defense, anti-Constitution, anti-everything that IS AMERICA.
If he ate dog, it is nothing compared to how dangerous this guy and his ilk are to America.
btt
Obama, the boy candidate, does not know what Memorial Day represents. That’s enough for me.
Bet is, he doesn’t know the term “Devil Dog.”
What this article doesn’t say is the Sukarno was a commie and Indonesia was a client state of the Russians. When Suharto came to power he aligned with the west and opened the country to foreign investment which lead them out of poverty and to democracy. Suharto was no angel, but the country now is free and democratic. If LoLo had had his way, it would have stayed a socialist hell hole.
I worked in Indonesia during this period..so have first hand experience with the evolution of democracy. Proud to say that I had a hand in establishing western oriented business with humane treatment of employees. Now one of the best companies in Indonesia.
That explains everything. Barry ate snake.
Thanks for the post. I have read all the responses, and agree with almost all.
On a different note....if this all powerful, all intelligent, all uniting Obama was all of the above, why did he not in some way talk about his step-father without using the step-father’s real name. Obama spent many years in Hawaii and attended an exclusive private high school....Punahou....one of the very best, so he should have known better.
His step-father’s name is Lolo. In Hawaiian that means idiot, crazy. Paka lolo is the Hawaiian word for marijuana.
Lolo, indeed.
Clearly some sort of honkey companion animal, why his four year old uncle who liberated Auschwitz while serving in the Red Army probably owned one!
I wonder if Obama considers Indonesia one of his 57 states.
You have got to be kidding? Is that the most powerful man on earth's job? The President of the United States is supposed to protect puppies?
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