Barack Obama Biography
Early Years
Barack Obama was born in Hawaii on August 4th, 1961. His father,
Barack Obama Sr., was born and raised in a small village in Kenya,
where he grew up herding goats with his own father, who was a domestic
servant to the British.
Barack's mother, Ann Dunham, grew up in small-town
Kansas. Her father worked on oil rigs during the Depression, and
then signed up for World War II after Pearl Harbor, where he marched
across Europe in Patton's army. Her mother went to work on a bomber
assembly line, and after the war, they studied on the G.I. Bill,
bought a house through the Federal Housing Program, and moved west
to Hawaii.
It was there, at the University of Hawaii, where Barack's
parents met. His mother was a student there, and his father had
won a scholarship that allowed him to leave Kenya and pursue his
dreams in America.
Barack's father eventually returned to Kenya, and
Barack grew up with his mother in Hawaii, and for a few years in
Indonesia. Later, he moved to New York, where he graduated from
Columbia University in 1983.
The College Years
Remembering the values of empathy and service that his mother taught
him, Barack put law school and corporate life on hold after college
and moved to Chicago in 1985, where he became a community organizer
with a church-based group seeking to improve living conditions in
poor neighborhoods plagued with crime and high unemployment.
The group had some success, but Barack had come to
realize that in order to truly improve the lives of people in that
community and other communities, it would take not just a change
at the local level, but a change in our laws and in our politics.
He went on to earn his law degree from Harvard in
1991, where he became the first African-American president of the
Harvard Law Review. Soon after, he returned to Chicago to practice
as a civil rights lawyer and teach constitutional law. Finally,
his advocacy work led him to run for the Illinois State Senate,
where he served for eight years. In 2004, he became the third African
American since Reconstruction to be elected to the U.S. Senate.
Political Career
It has been the rich and varied experiences of Barack Obama's life
- growing up in different places with people who had differing ideas
- that have animated his political journey. Amid the partisanship
and bickering of today's public debate, he still believes in the
ability to unite people around a politics of purpose - a politics
that puts solving the challenges of everyday Americans ahead of
partisan calculation and political gain.
In the Illinois State Senate, this meant working with
both Democrats and Republicans to help working families get ahead
by creating programs like the state Earned Income Tax Credit, which
in three years provided over $100 million in tax cuts to families
across the state. He also pushed through an expansion of early childhood
education, and after a number of inmates on death row were found
innocent, Senator Obama worked with law enforcement officials to
require the videotaping of interrogations and confessions in all
capital cases.
In the U.S. Senate, he has focused on tackling the
challenges of a globalized, 21st century world with fresh thinking
and a politics that no longer settles for the lowest common denominator.
His first law was passed with Republican Tom Coburn, a measure to
rebuild trust in government by allowing every American to go online
and see how and where every dime of their tax dollars is spent.
He has also been the lead voice in championing ethics reform that
would root out Jack Abramoff-style corruption in Congress.
As a member of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, Senator
Obama has fought to help Illinois veterans get the disability pay
they were promised, while working to prepare the VA for the return
of the thousands of veterans who will need care after Iraq and Afghanistan.
Recognizing the terrorist threat posed by weapons of mass destruction,
he traveled to Russia with Republican Dick Lugar to begin a new
generation of non-proliferation efforts designed to find and secure
deadly weapons around the world. And knowing the threat we face
to our economy and our security from America's addiction to oil,
he's working to bring auto companies, unions, farmers, businesses
and politicians of both parties together to promote the greater
use of alternative fuels and higher fuel standards in our cars.
Whether it's the poverty exposed by Katrina, the genocide
in Darfur, or the role of faith in our politics, Barack Obama continues
to speak out on the issues that will define America in the 21st
century. But above all his accomplishments and experiences, he is
most proud and grateful for his family. His wife, Michelle, and
his two daughters, Malia, 9, and Sasha, 6, live on Chicago's South
Side where they attend Trinity United Church of Christ.
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