Ever since he announced he was running for president, Obama has talked a
lot about his community organizing activities in Chicago, and how it led to his
bid for public office. But long before that, he was living on a tiny island in
the middle of the Pacific Ocean. And those who knew Obama back then say the
lessons he learned in Hawaii have served him well in this campaign. Heidi Chang
reports from Honolulu.
Barack
Obama may be Illinois' favorite son, but earlier this year, during the Hawaii
Democratic caucuses, he reminded people that he hadn't forgotten where he came
from. "Almost 50 years ago, my family came to Hawaii in search of a better
life," he says in a TV campaign ad. "I was born here and grew up
here. This beautiful state and its great people hold a special place in my
heart."
Obama's
parents — Barack Obama Senior, from Kenya, and Ann Dunham from Kansas — met
at the University of Hawaii. But the marriage didn't last. A few years after
her divorce, Obama's mother married a man from Indonesia and the family moved
to Jakarta. That's where his sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, was born.
After
four years, young Barack returned to Hawaii, where he lived with his maternal
grandparents. His mother and sister followed soon after. Soetoro-Ng says that's
when her brother dove into Island life. "He liked to go body surfing and
he liked to play basketball with his friends because he was a regular guy, he
wasn't particularly motivated in high school academically."
Obama
attended Punahou, one of the top private schools in Hawaii, with help from
financial aid. John Kolivas, one of his classmates, points out that they had a
lot in common. "You know, for my own background I'm half Korean, half
Greek, and he's also half, half, they call that "hapa" here in Hawaii."
He says race wasn't an issue for the two friends, "we just enjoyed each
other's company and we didn't think of each other in terms of race."
Obama
played on Punahou's basketball team, and in 1979, his senior year, they won the
state championship. His teammate Dan Hale, remembers being impressed by Obama's
ability to communicate and resolve disputes. "He was always one that could
step right up and kind of get to the heart of the matter and, so everybody
could kinda move on and not get stuck on [questions like] whose foul it was, or
was that basket good, or what was the score, or whatever. And you know, he'd
kinda just use that smile and that kinda real sense of reason." Hale says
he sees that quality in the candidate today, even though he admits that there
are now a lot bigger issues at stake than a pick-up basketball game score.
Obama's
ability to connect with people doesn't surprise Alice Dewey. She was his
mother's dissertation advisor at the University of Hawaii, where she got her
doctorate in anthropology. Dewey says Ann Dunham was passionate about getting
micro credit loans for craftspeople, especially women, in rural areas of
developing countries, and she passed on her sense of compassion to her son.
"Her caring for the impoverished people in the developing world was her
life's work. And I think he [Obama] grew up thinking that's what you did. You
help people."
Dunham
did field work with communities in Indonesia, Pakistan, Kenya and other
nations. Dewey notes that Obama did community work in the south side of Chicago,
adding "He's done that when he could have taken at job at a fancy law firm
after he finished his degree in law at Harvard."
Obama's
sister Maya agrees they were inspired by their mother's international vision.
And she says Hawaii, with its multicultural openness and aloha spirit, has
always been a vital place for her brother, mentally and spiritually.
"I
think it was Hawaii that made him so broad and spacious and that forced him
really to learn how to talk to different kinds of people and to not make assumptions
about who they are or what they need. And to also recognize that on a very
fundamental level we are all the same. And I think one of my brother's many
strengths is that he is able to help people find common ground."
Obama's ability to bring people together has inspired a wave of support across the nation. And with the general election just months away, polls show Barack Obama has a good chance of becoming the nation's 44th President. If that happens, Dan Hale has one request of his former basketball teammate. "Don't forget to invite me to the first pick-up game at the White House!"