Last Nov. 5, we were in the wake of celebrating the election of the first black president of the United States. The Root's editor-in-chief, Henry Louis Gates Jr., penned a narrative about this "new dawn of American leadership." It is reprinted below.
A new dawn of American leadership is at hand.
President-elect Barack Obama
We have all heard stories about those few magical transformative moments in African-American history, extraordinary ritual occasions through which the geographically and socially diverse black community—a nation within a nation, really—molds itself into one united body, determined to achieve one great social purpose and to bear witness to the process by which this grand achievement occurs.
The first time was New Year's Day in 1863, when tens of thousands of black people huddled together all over the North waiting to see if Abraham Lincoln would sign the Emancipation Proclamation. The second was the night of June 22, 1938, the storied rematch between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling, when black families and friends crowded around radios to listen and cheer as the Brown Bomber knocked out Schmeling in the first round. The third, of course, was Aug. 28, 1963, when the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. proclaimed to the world that he had a dream, in the shadow of a brooding Lincoln, peering down on the assembled throng, while those of us who couldn't be with him in Washington sat around our black-and-white television sets, bound together by King's melodious voice through our tears and with quickened-flesh.
But we have never seen anything like this. Nothing could have prepared any of us for the eruption (and, yes, that is the word) of spontaneous celebration that manifested itself in black homes, gathering places and the streets of our communities when Sen. Barack Obama was declared President-elect Obama. From Harlem to Harvard, from Maine to Hawaii—and even Alaska—from "the prodigious hilltops of New Hampshire … [to] Stone Mountain of Georgia," as Dr. King put it, each of us will always remember this moment, as will our children, whom we woke up to watch history being made.
My colleagues and I laughed and shouted, whooped and hollered, hugged each other and cried. My father waited 95 years to see this day happen, and when he called as results came in, I silently thanked God for allowing him to live long enough to cast his vote for the first black man to become president. And even he still can't quite believe it!
How many of our ancestors have given their lives—how many millions of slaves toiled in the fields in endlessly thankless and mindless labor—before this generation could live to see a black person become president? "How long, Lord?" the spiritual goes; "not long!" is the resounding response. What would Frederick Douglass and W.E.B. Du Bois say if they could know what our people had at long last achieved? What would Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman say? What would Dr. King himself say? Would they say that all those lost hours of brutalizing toil and labor leading to spent, half-fulfilled lives, all those humiliations that our ancestors had to suffer through each and every day, all those slights and rebuffs and recriminations, all those rapes and murders, lynchings and assassinations, all those Jim Crow laws and protest marches, those snarling dogs and bone-breaking water hoses, all of those beatings and all of those killings, all of those black collective dreams deferred—that the unbearable pain of all of those tragedies had, in the end, been assuaged at least somewhat through Barack Obama's election? This certainly doesn't wipe that bloody slate clean. His victory is not redemption for all of this suffering; rather, it is the symbolic culmination of the black freedom struggle, the grand achievement of a great, collective dream. Would they say that surviving these horrors, hope against hope, was the price we had to pay to become truly free, to live to see—exactly 389 years after the first African slaves landed on these shores—that "great gettin' up morning" in 2008 when a black man—Barack Hussein Obama—was elected the first African-American president of the United States?
I think they would, resoundingly and with one voice proclaim, "Yes! Yes! And yes, again!" I believe they would tell us that it had been worth the price that we, collectively, have had to pay—the price of President-elect Obama's ticket.
On that first transformative day, when the Emancipation Proclamation was signed, Frederick Douglass, the greatest black orator in our history before Martin Luther King Jr., said that the day was not a day for speeches and "scarcely a day for prose." Rather, he noted, "it is a day for poetry and song, a new song." Over 3,000 people, black and white abolitionists together, waited for the news all day in Tremont Temple, a Baptist church a block from Boston Common. When a messenger burst in, after 11 p.m., and shouted, "It is coming! It is on the wires," the church went mad; Douglass recalled that "I never saw enthusiasm before. I never saw joy." And then he spontaneously led the crowd in singing "Blow Ye the Trumpet, Blow," John Brown's favorite hymn:
Blow ye the trumpet, blow!
The gladly solemn sound
Let all the nations know,
To earth's remotest bound:
The year of jubilee is come!
The year of jubilee is come!
Return, ye ransomed sinners, home.
At that moment, an entire race, one that in 1863 in the United States comprised 4.4 million souls, became a unified people, breathing with one heart, speaking with one voice, united in mind and spirit, all their aspirations concentrated into a laser beam of almost blind hope and desperate anticipation.
It is astounding to think that many of us today—myself included—can remember when it was a huge deal for a black man or woman to enter the White House through the front door, and not through the servants' entrance. Paul Cuffe, the wealthy sea captain, shipping merchant, and the earliest "Back to Africa" black colonist, will forever have the distinction of being the first black person to be invited to the White House for an audience with the president. Cuffe saw President James Madison at the White House on May 2, 1812, at precisely 11 a.m. and asked the president's intervention in recovering his famous brig Traveller, which had been impounded because officials said he had violated the embargo with Britain. Cuffe, after the Quaker fashion, called Madison "James"; "James," in turn, got Paul's brig back for him, probably because Cuffe and Madison both favored the emigration of freed slaves back to Africa. (Three years later, on Dec. 10, 1815, Cuffe used this ship to carry 38 black people from the United States to Sierra Leone.)
From Frederick Douglass, who visited Lincoln three times during his presidency (and every president thereafter until his death in 1895), to Soujourner Truth and Booker T. Washington, each prominent black visitor to the White House caused people to celebrate another "victory for the race." Blacks became frequent visitors to Franklin Roosevelt's White House; FDR even had a "Kitchen Cabinet" through which blacks could communicate the needs of their people. Because of the civil rights movement, Lyndon Johnson had a slew of black visitors, as well. During Bill Clinton's presidency, I attended a White House reception with so many black political, academic and community leaders that it occurred to me that there hadn't been as many black people in the Executive Mansion perhaps since slavery. Everyone laughed at the joke, because they knew, painfully, that it was true.
Visiting the White House is one thing; occupying the White House is quite another. And yet, African-American aspirations to the White House date back generations. The first black man put forward on a ticket as a political party's nominee for U.S. president was George Edwin Taylor, on the National Liberty Party ticket in 1904. Portions of his campaign document could have been written by Barack Obama:
"… in the light of the history of the past four years, with a Republican president in the executive chair, and both branches of Congress and a majority of the Supreme Court of the same political faith, we are confronted with the amazing fact that more than one-fifth of the race are actually disfranchised, robbed of all the rights, powers and benefits of true citizenship, we are forced to lay aside our prejudices, indeed, our personal wishes, and consult the higher demands of our manhood, the true interests of the country and our posterity, and act while we yet live, 'ere the time when it shall be too late. No other race of our strength would have quietly submitted to what we have during the past four years without a rebellion, a revolution, or an uprising."
The revolution that Taylor goes on to propose, he says, is one "not by physical force, but by the ballot," with the ultimate sign of the success being the election of the nation's first black president.
But given all of the racism to which black people were subjected following Reconstruction and throughout the first half of the 20th century, no one could actually envision a Negro becoming president—"not in our lifetimes," as our ancestors used to say. When James Earl Jones became America's first black fictional president in the 1972 film, "The Man," I remember thinking, "Imagine that!" His character, Douglass Dilman, the president pro tempore of the Senate, ascends to the presidency after the president and the speaker of the House are killed in a building collapse, and after the vice president declines the office due to advanced age and ill health. A fantasy if ever there was one, we thought. But that year, life would imitate art: Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm attempted to transform "The Man" into "The Woman," becoming the first black woman to run for president in the Democratic Party. She received 152 first-ballot votes at the Democratic National Convention. Then, in 1988, Jesse Jackson got 1,219 delegate votes at the Democratic convention, 29 percent of the total, coming in second only to the nominee, Michael Dukakis.
The award for prescience, however, goes to Jacob K. Javits, the liberal Republican senator from New York who, incredibly, just a year after the integration of Central High School in Little Rock, predicted that the first black president would be elected in the year 2000. In an essay titled "Integration from the Top Down" printed in Esquire magazine in 1958, he wrote:
"What manner of man will this be, this possible Negro Presidential candidate of 2000? Undoubtedly, he will be well-educated. He will be well-traveled and have a keen grasp of his country's role in the world and its relationships. He will be a dedicated internationalist with working comprehension of the intricacies of foreign aid, technical assistance and reciprocal trade. … Assuredly, though, despite his other characteristics, he will have developed the fortitude to withstand the vicious smear attacks that came his way as he fought to the top in government and politics those in the vanguard may expect to be the targets for scurrilous attacks, as the hate mongers, in the last ditch efforts, spew their verbal and written poison."
In the same essay, Javits predicted both the election of a black senator and the appointment of the first black Supreme Court justice by 1968. Edward Brooke was elected to the Senate by Massachusetts voters in 1966. Thurgood Marshall was confirmed in 1967. Javits also predicted that the House of Representatives would have "between thirty and forty qualified Negroes" in the 106th Congress in 2000. In fact, there were 37 black U.S. representatives, among them 12 women.
Sen. Javits was one very keen prognosticator. When we consider the characteristics that he insisted the first black president must possess—he must be well-educated, well-traveled, have a keen grasp of his country's role in the world, be a dedicated internationalist and have a very thick skin—it is astonishing how accurately he is describing the background and character of Barack Obama.
I wish we could say that Barack Obama's election will magically reduce the numbers of teenage pregnancies or the level of drug addiction in the black community. I wish we could say that what happened last night will suddenly make black children learn to read and write as if their lives depended on it, and that their high school completion rates will become the best in the country. I wish we could say that these things are about to happen, but I doubt that they will.
But there is one thing we can proclaim today, without question: that the election of Barack Obama as president of the United States of America means that "The Ultimate Color Line," as the subtitle of Javits' Esquire essay put it, has, at long last, been crossed. It has been crossed by our very first postmodern Race Man, a man who embraces his African cultural and genetic heritage so securely that he can transcend it, becoming the candidate of choice to tens of millions of Americans who do not look like him.
How does that make me feel? Like I've always imagined my father and his friends felt back in 1938, on the day that Joe Louis knocked out Max Schmeling. But ten thousand times better than that. All I can say is "Amazing Grace! How sweet the sound."
Henry Louis Gates Jr. is editor-in-chief of The Root and is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor at Harvard University.

Comments
Prof Gates - I'm a 45 yo black man and I didn't like your article at all and below I'm giving my reasons. I found problematic statements in every paragraph so I'm writing and paragraph by paragraph critique.
Your first paragraph makes the unfounded & ridiculous claim that 'everyone' is aware of this thing with blacks where 'magically' they come together (few times in 400 yrs) to witness a 'unifying' event occur - is not only untrue (so 2 ridiculous ex is proof of of this phenomena?) but selfdefeating to say. Open your eyes Prof, there are countless examples of black people throughout history fighting the societal oppression all on fronts. Paragraph 1 = patrionizing and incorrect
The 1st time 1863? That's debatable professor and I take offense to you're insinuation that blacks 'didn't strike against societal oppression till 1863'. Yes, that is the implication and you know it. They fought in Africa to avoid the raids, they fought on the slave ships, they rebelled constantly. The welts on all their backs was proof of that.
You then state that Obama's election win was some momentous event that knocked black people off their equilibrium putting them in some sort of confused & helpless state and that's anti-black white supremist stereotype 101. "I was so confused, I didn't know what to do but shout out, huh? Didn't know of that stereotype doc? Yeah right, you didn't.
Well, people like me, a 45 yo black man, were very happy to see Obama elected but we are knowledgeable of USA and World History; therefore, we understand that the real work begins with governing not campaigning. We understand the USA is a 'system' and operates a particular way we understand that campaigning and governing are 2 entirely different things. Politicians will promise you the moon but might not delivery SQUAT if you don't know the game of manipulating them to your benefit. So yes, we were very happy & emotional but we're REASONABLE too. We apply perspective and try to see the forest and not be 'lost in some tree' - very common mistake, huh doc?
You then go to call the labor the slaves provided as mindless. The slaves performed all the trades, the female slaves cared for the white children. You think growing those crops was easy and took no thought? You think caring for kids is easy? Didn't everyone have a valet? - that's mindless. You're wrong again professor and that was very disrespectful and wronghead and ultimately, hateful to say.
You, a so-called professor no less, then go on and list appx 15 very serious facts (there's many more) about some of the govt imposed 'practices' employed to oppress African Americans over the centuries and make the STUPID assumption that I'd (black people) would consider Obama's presidential win as "payback" for our history? No, only an idiot would think that sir.
You seem to think it is a symbolic culmination of our history. I certainly don't think that. He's just a figurehead atop a 400 yo anti-black, white supremist capitalist system. He has power but can only help blacks, if he's so inclined, if blacks know what is required of them now that he is in office. Without a bold, dignified show of organized unity on the part of the black community that is willing to 'go to bat' and advertises that so everyone knows (gotta use the media) for Prez Obama, he can go 8 yrs w/o bringing home 'anything' for that community. The ball's in the black community's court and we'll either play it properly or we'll blow it cause we 'don't know the game'.
The John Brown saga did indeed hasten start of the Civil War but believe me professor, there will millions of black John Browns - you just choose not to speak about them. Why? Are you ignorant of them?
The next outrage, is you quote some so-called Jew's (Khazar?) prognostications of what would be required for a 'black' to win the presidency and you lable it 'brilliant'. Puleeze, it was not brain surgery. He raised the most $$$$ (revolutionary use of internet), is highly knowledgeable, well spoken and most importantly, LIKEABLE. Those are politics 101 requirements to win in politics. White politicians, hispanic politicians, asian politicians, gay politicians, women politicians also better have those qualities if they want to win. You think Javits said something so 'enlightening'? Whew Ever since you spoke out against NOI's book 'Secret relationship between blacks and Jews', some consider you just a paid-for, CIA tool.
You considered a black president in '72 pure fantasy but the USA 2009 is very different from the USA 72. Blacks in '72 with the 2nd largest demographic in the country. Today, we're the 3rd largest. The influence of lobbyists today is much stronger than in 72. In conclusion, 72 societal factors look better for a black achieving the presidency than 2009. BTW prof, thinking black people have always understand that politics is a 'game' and must be played properly if you want to win.
Only you would think 'stories of which door we entered' was somehow entertaining and that significant when one looks at the 'full scope' of our story. What's interesting is why and how the power structure could treat a people with so much sadism, violence, cruelty and barbarity and how that people dug deep and survived it. Not some freakin door, fool.
Only a fool, IMO, would think Obama's election to the presidency would 'magically' reverse the quality of life stats of African Americans. Those stats were systematically created thru 400 yrs of govt imposition using statutes will only reverse themselves with an acknowledgement of the govt's complicity and then making the govt repair the damage it created.
Needless to say, I disagree with your perspective. You don't seem to realize that doing something one way for 1st 350 of 400 yrs will create a structural tradition. Said structural tradition is still firmly in place and hasn't been dismanted. The black man and women have always been the central character in that system. Think African Americans realize our struggle is all encompassing and is systematic and must be fought intelligently and strategically on all fronts.
Your article is little more than a rambling list of your personal 'thoughts' when you think about the African American story. You certainly don't think you related some kinda relevant, illuminating account of our story, do you? Puleeze doc, this is a serious 2000 yo problem that is rooted in false Talumid theology and unjust govt statutes. It deserves repair. Reparations are a common, historic remedy. The struggle won't be over till African Americans are repaired. Any study of world history, will inform African Americans that, of course, it's not over till the repair occurs.
You think the 'ultimate color line' has been crossed. Let me tell you something, 57% white man (he was so impressed to find that out, wasn't he?) - let your white wife know that Barack Obama's mother is white. Let her know that although African American genes are indeed dominant and that society calls him a black man, society knows darn well his mother was white and that was a HUGE political plus. Thinking people also realize that genetics controls more than one's looks. It also controls feeling and thinking.
Needless to say doc, I think you just spouted alot of wrongheaded, no-perspective nonsense about me and mine and I'm offended. You come across as some kinda paid govt informant tasked to confuse and defame African American history with aim of keeping the issue of black oppression unresolved and UNPAID for. Hey folks, $$$$ talks - ya never know.
I disagree with you 100% and have followed you for years and have never agreed with you. Terrible essay IMO.
Actually, no it's not so astonishing, really... If you'd read the Clip Notes about Professor "White Wife" Gates, the fact that the Powers-That-Be have selected, bought and currently pay for his allegience would be quite obvious.
This "brotha," and I'm using that term VERY loosely, belongs to a special clique of Black elites who've sold out (won't even utter the phrase "Black Nationalism"). Haven't you ever wondered why these "Safe Negroes" just come out of nowhere to helm such supposedly presitgeous organizations like the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor-ship?
Come on now, these brothas/sistas know just what to say; but even more importantly, what NOT to say.
Actually, no it's not so astonishing, really... If you'd read the Clip Notes about Professor "White Wife" Gates, the fact that the Powers-That-Be have selected, bought and currently pay for his allegience would be quite obvious.
This "brotha," and I'm using that VERY term loosely, belongs to a special clique of Black elites who've sold out (won't even utter the phrase "Black Nationalism"). Haven't you ever wondered why these "Safe Negroes" just come out of nowhere to helm such supposedly presitgeous organizations like the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor-ship?
Come on now, these brothas/sistas know just what to say; but even more importantly, what NOT to say.
lol...we all know 'skip' might say anything, anytine it's convenient...for him. i thought the 'ultimate' color line was a black roman catholic pope....there's lot's of black presidents.
Astonishing that Gates should write this piece; he recently cried "racism!" when subjected to legitimate inquiries from law enforcement.
Nothing has changed.
Just because a select group of Black elites can conspire with the existing power structure to manufacture, finance, and prodcue the "political illusion" that is the Obama presidency DOES NOT constitute real structural, lasting advancement for the whole of Black America... and I voted for the brotha, too, but I'm nobody's fool... What B.S.
Only because a select group of Black elites can conspire with the existing power structure to manufacture, finance, and prodcue the "political illusion" that is the Obama presidency doe not constitute real, structural advancement for the whole of Black America... and I voted for the brotha, too, but I'm nobody's fool... What B.S.
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