The Edmond Sun

Opinion

September 11, 2012

Michelle Obama's speech at DNC recalls influence of another first lady

EDMOND — “I am the man who accompanied Jackie Kennedy to Paris, and I really enjoyed it,” President John F. Kennedy joked to reporters in Washington after he returned from a gathering of world leaders in the French capital in June of 1961.

The French people were charmed by the American first lady’s command of their language, and the press on both sides of the Atlantic documented the warmth and affection that was displayed to her by the French citizenry. At a formal state dinner at the Palace of Versailles, Mrs. Kennedy succeeded in getting the austere and distant French President Charles de Gaulle to smile as she spoke to him about her interest in French culture.

And it is possible that First Lady Michelle Obama’s performance at the Democratic Convention in Charlotte last week could inspire a similar statement from President Obama. Her speech at that gathering demonstrated how she has evolved into a skilled campaign speaker, and polls now indicate she enjoys higher approval numbers with the American people than her husband currently does. Pollsters have documented how Mrs. Obama is admired for her poise, glamour and warmth. And the first lady’s popularity may also be predicated on the realization that she is a self-made woman from relatively humble origins.

Mrs. Obama’s family story has been chronicled in the recently published “American Tapestry: The Story of the Black, White, and Multiracial Ancestors of Michelle Obama” that was authored by New York Times reporter Rachel L. Swarns. Part of Swarns’ research for that book included taking DNA containers to the home of Joann Tribble, an elderly white woman who resides in Atlanta, Ga., and obtaining a DNA sample from her. Samples were also obtained from several of Mrs. Obama’s relatives.

Tribble is the descendant of a white farmer who was named Charles Shields. Swarns documents that the results of the tests that were conducted on those samples proved that Michelle Obama was also his descendant, and that she and Joann Tribble are distantly related as a result. Shields fathered a child with an African-American woman born in slavery who was named Melvinia who is one of the first lady’s ancestors.

Swarns’ research reveals that Mrs. Obama’s ancestry includes other people of mixed racial heritage who made their way to Chicago, Ill., in pursuit of economic opportunities and the chance of a better life for their children.

Michelle Robinson Obama, we are told, grew up in a working-class neighborhood in Chicago where she lived with her parents and brother in a two-room apartment. But at an early age she displayed the dedication and determination that would eventually take her to Harvard Law School and then back to Chicago where she would meet Barack Obama. And Michelle Obama may in time serve as a role model for young people who dream of achieving success.



WILLIAM F. O’BRIEN is an Oklahoma City attorney.

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