The rise of Barack Obama - YOU ARE NOW INSIDE DANNY QUOTES BLOG, A PLACE TO GET INSPIRED FOR GREATNESS

YOU ARE NOW INSIDE DANNY QUOTES BLOG, A PLACE TO GET INSPIRED FOR GREATNESS

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Saturday 18 June 2016

The rise of Barack Obama

 


For President Obama, My Brother’s Keeper (MBK) is personal. He cares about a lot of issues. But when it comes to addressing the plight of young men and boys of color in this country, when he articulates the harrowing statistics that show their stunted growth and blunted promise, Obama displays the pain of someone with intimate knowledge of the problem. Still, there is a hopefulness and determination behind what he is doing because the president knows he is uniquely positioned to command the attention needed to bolster solutions in a very just cause.

Obama’s championing of MBK, a public-private endeavor he established in 2014, got the attention of documentary filmmaker Dawn Porter. “Rise: The Promise of My Brother’s Keeper,” which will air at 7 p.m. on the Discovery Channel and simulcast OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network on Father’s Day, looks at the lives of young men and boys of color in four MBK-principled programs around the country. It will premiere at the Newseum as part of the documentary film festival of the American Film Institute on June 18. But what will give the one-hour documentary added power is the participation of the president himself. Obama granted Porter an interview during his visit to Camden, N.J., on Monday.
“While I can’t speak for him, I think the fact that he did agree to participate reflects the importance of My Brother’s Keeper for him,” Porter told me in an interview. “I think I have seen or read every speech he’s made about My Brother’s Keeper, and what I took from his past speeches and the interview he gave us is that he has a real commitment to the goals of My Brothers Keeper – the most important of which may be helping to change the negative narrative that all too often accompanies images of young men of color.”
Even though Porter has read everything there is to read about MBK, including Obama’s many remarks about it, she said she was surprised by how “movingly and personally” he spoke about what motivated him to start the initiative. “I’ve read his memoir, but it was quite a powerful experience to hear him speak about his own life, and particularly about the absence of his own father and how that inspired him to be a good husband and father.”

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