Will no one rid the
airwaves of this
turbulent pastor?
WASHINGTON D.C.
(Economist)
May 3, 2008 — After he
became notorious as the
man who urged God to
damn America, Jeremiah
Wright claims he
wrestled with two
impulses. The first was
to heed the proverb: “It
is better to be quiet
and be thought a fool
than to open your mouth
and remove all doubt.”
The second was to “come
across the room” and
fight back. Wright's
decision to come across
the room with his mouth
wide open is proving a
disaster for all
concerned.
Wright, who was Barack
Obama's pastor for 20
years, has reason to be
angry about the way he
has been caricatured.
The video clips that
made him famous
represent mere seconds
of the thousands of
hours he has spent
preaching (207,792
minutes on Sunday
mornings alone,
according to his church,
the Trinity United
Church of Christ.)
Wright volunteered to
serve in Vietnam and
spent six years in the
armed forces. That, as
he pointed out, is six
years longer than Dick
Cheney.
Wright's appearance at
the National Press Club
on April 28th before a
massed throng of
reporters provided him
with the perfect
opportunity to set those
seconds in context. But
he chose to do exactly
the opposite. He
surrounded himself with
some of the most
divisive figures in
black America: Marion
Barry, Washington's
disgraced former mayor,
Malik Zulu Shabazz of
the New Black Panther
Party, Cornel West of
Princeton University and
a posse of security
guards supplied by the
Nation of Islam. And he
hurled a succession of
rhetorical bombs.
He defended his remark
about “chickens coming
home to roost.” He
called Louis Farrakhan
“one of the most
important voices in the
20th and 21st century.”
He talked about whites
worshipping in church in
the morning and putting
on white Klan sheets at
night. He defended his
assertion that the
American government
invented the
HIV
virus to decimate blacks
(“Our government is
capable of doing
anything.”) He even
argued that blacks and
whites have different
learning styles, further
proof that he endorses
the racist theory that
blacks and white have
differently wired
brains.
This is both a personal
and a political tragedy
for Obama. Wright was
clearly a father-figure
to a fatherless man who
was confused about his
identity. He introduced
him to Christianity, and
later conducted his
wedding and baptized his
children. In his speech
on race relations in
Philadelphia Obama
resisted incredible
pressure to throw Wright
under a bus.
Wright responded by
throwing Obama under the
bus instead. He
dismissed Obama's
attempt to distance
himself from his former
pastor as a politician
doing what he had to do.
He announced, if
Obama becomes president,
he will be “coming after
him” because he will
represent a government
“whose policies grind
under people.” Obama was
said to be “deeply,
visibly angry” when he
was shown transcripts of
these remarks. He
responded with a press
conference, in which his
tone was alternately
hard-hitting and
elegiac, to make it
clear that “whatever
relationship I had with
Rev Wright has changed.”
Whether that will
reassure nervous white
voters, time will tell.
This was also a tragedy
for Wright. He is far
more than the blustering
buffoon who was on the
stage on Monday. He has
presided over an
increase in the size of
his congregation from 87
when he arrived in 2072
to 8,000 today. Trinity
is a welfare state in
its own right, providing
more than 70 welfare
programs for the poor,
the unemployed,
prisoners and
HIV
patients.
He is one of the most
liberal members of the
black church, happy to
question Scripture when
he thinks that it
forsakes common sense
and unusually tolerant
of gay couples, who can
be seen holding hands in
his pews. No less a
figure than Martin
Marty, who is probably
America's most
distinguished historian
of religion and who
happens to be white, has
defended Wright and said
how welcome he and his
family feel in his
congregation. But Wright
could well be remembered
as a race-baiter who
helped to prevent one of
his parishioners from
becoming the first black
president of the United
States.
And finally this is a
tragedy for race
relations in general.
Wright had a chance to
explain how blacks can
feel ambivalent about
America — how they can
volunteer to fight in a
war, as he did, but also
feel furious about
slavery and segregation.
But he furnished the
anger without the
explanation.
No quiet exit
He also had a chance to
explain how blacks are
über-Americans when it
comes to religion. They
are the most religious
people in the country,
and black churches are
among America's greatest
self-help organizations:
they provided slaves
with a social framework
when they were denied
even the right to form
families, and they
continue to provide
support and welfare
services. There were
hopes that Wright might
have done this; he was
in Washington for a
conference on the black
church. But he ended up
doing the opposite,
arguing that any
criticism of him was a
criticism of the black
church in general.
What inspired this
calamitous performance?
Egomania was clearly
part of it. Wright
responded to the
applause of the amen
corner in his audience
with ever more
outrageous assertions.
There was probably a
touch of jealousy too.
Wright has seen his
former protégé rise to
heights he himself could
never have dreamed of,
and he has been caught
up in the tailwinds.
But there is also
something deeper here: a
generational struggle
for control of black
politics. Wright belongs
to a generation of
activists — Jesse
Jackson and Al Sharpton
are other prominent
members — who thrived in
part by playing to the
resentments of their
black supporters.
Wright's generation is
not about to leave the
stage quietly. So much
the worse for America.