From;
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/070826/3obama.htm
On the Streets of Chicago, a Candidate Comes of Age
As a community organizer, Obama was a pragmatic leader
In 1985, he moved to Chicago to work with local churches organizing job training and other programs for poor and working-class residents of Altgeld Gardens, a public housing project where 5,300 African-Americans tried to survive amid shuttered steel mills, a nearby landfill, a putrid sewage treatment plant, and a pervasive feeling that the white establishment of Chicago would never give them a fair shake.
Jerry Kellman, a social activist who recruited Obama, recalls, “He was very bright, very articulate, very personable, and very idealistic,” inspired by civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.’s philosophy of nonviolence. Kellman offered Obama a job at the annual salary of $10,000, and he threw in $2,000 so Obama could buy a ramshackle car to get around.
Obama was a stranger to the area but caught on quickly by showing humility and a strong work ethic. “We knew what was wrong in the community but we didn’t know how to get something done about it,” recalls Yvonne Lloyd, 78, who worked with Obama. Obama insisted on “staying in the background while he empowered us.” By Obama’s own admission, there were few big victories. But whether it was getting the city to fill potholes, provide summer jobs, or remove asbestos from the apartments or persuading the apartment managers to repair toilets, pipes, and ceilings, Obama encouraged residents to come up with their own priorities with the gentle admonition: “It’s your community.”
From;
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/070826/3obama.htm
Obama insisted on staying in the background while he empowered us.
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me
He walked around and yakked with folks in the neighborhood.