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To: Beckwith

‘Remembering my friend Barak Obama

‘I met Barak, for the first time in the courses in economics that we took together at the University of Hawaii, in the early 1960’s. It was not difficult to spot Barak, as he was a rare African student on the Campus at the University of Hawaii, in Manoa Valley, Honolulu.

‘His easy-going manner, especially his infectious smile, and his proud bearing struck me the most. He was always very inquisitive and active in class discussions and after classes as well.

‘Although he was not an East-West Center grantee, he was always with us, especially at a Guest House owned and operated by the Asia foundation, situated on the top of road leading to Manoa valley. Atherton House was a place where most East-West Center grantees gathered for a drink or a chat.

‘Barak and I were a part of a small group of foreign students who participated in group discussions in various places (Churches, sinagogues, junior colleges) around the campus and in town. Those discussions centered on the role and impact of former Soviet Union and China had in the developing countries. Barak, was more hopeful than I was about the role and the influence of these two major Communist countries in the developing nations in the world, because I had the opportunity to study in Europe, and in France, especially, I was more aware of the nature of communism than Barak was.

‘In these debates, Barak was always very eloquent, and enthusiastic. We often were not on the same side, when discussing Communism in the developing countries. In our disagreement, Barak was always very gracious and fair. He was a very good listener which helped a great deal in making those discussions more constructive and pleasant

‘Finally, by chance when I was a staff member of the IMF, one day, a colleague of mine who led an IMF mission to Kenya in the early 1980’s, told me that he had met a government official named Barak Obama who said he was a classmate of mine in Hawaii. I knew it was the same Barak who was my classmate at the University of Hawaii. Needless to say that I was very happy to finally be able to be in contact again with Barak, after more than ten year of silence. My IMF colleague had given me Barak’s telephone number and I immediately called him in Nairobi. We had a long conversation and we were able to talk to each other a few more times until one day, when I called him and his secretary told me over the phone that he had passed away of an accident. I was shocked and sad to hear the bad news. That was the time I had talked to Barak, in the early 1980’s.

‘Barak was indeed a very special human being, with a lot of dignity and character. He was a very engaging, gracious, warm, and smart person. That is how I remember my friend Barak Obama.’

Washington DC. January 2006

Naranhkiri Tith Ph.D.

http://cambodiana.org/MainreasonsofmysupportofObama.aspx

NARANHKIRI TITH Ph.D. Writes on his webpage:

Present, and Future; by Naranhkiri Tith, Ph.D.

Let me introduce myself and my family

My name is Naranhkiri Tith, I am holding both US and European citizenship (French). I was educated in Europe and North America. I am an economist by profession, and I am specialized in international economics and finance, and in country risks analysis...

~snip

...I am married to Patricia Zakian, a great and lovely person , and have one wonderful grown up daughter named Teri. I also have a lovable cat, named Mikka (female)...

http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeof03b/id29.html


NOTICE ANYTHING? HE TELLS US HIS WIFE IS NAMED PATRICIA, HIS DAUGHTER TERI AND HIS CAT IS MIKKA.

But there’s nothing in his letter ‘Remembering My Friend Obama’ about Stanley Ann in the early 1960s. Nothing. And there’s nothing about a tribal marriage and a child in Kenya.


95 posted on 07/25/2009 4:08:42 AM PDT by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum!)
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http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/13098

Dreams from My Father, Pathology from My Mother

Excerpt:

“...Obama never needed his father’s coaching to learn to loathe America. His mother had little approbation for American traditions and values. Dunham may have been altogether earnest in her belief that socialism was the best apparatus to help the impoverished Third Worlders with whom she so identified. Dunham seems to have been imbued with the theory of the noble savage; the belief that man in his primitive state was free and good. Man was corrupted, therefore, by the accumulation of private property, leading to inevitable inequitable outcomes. The noble savage myth presupposes that civilization is the cause of corruption. Note the consistency of this line of thinking with Ikenga’s writings about the African Colonial.

Dunham’s parents were at ease with communism. Recall their affiliations with conspicuous communists, Paul Robeson and Frank Marshall Davis...


96 posted on 08/01/2009 5:05:10 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum!)
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To: Fred Nerks

Fred: I am at this point in your remarkable research. Your work is developing into bookworthy material; Did you notice in the letter his spelling of the father “Barak.” I don’t know if it is relevant to father or son (other than for variations on legal docs) but it is worth a mention for others pursuing that angle.


189 posted on 08/19/2009 12:47:18 PM PDT by thouworm
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