In the nine years before the Senate campaign began, Barack Obama announced this sensational, insensitive and influential memoir that became the best seller of the New York Times when it was reissued in 2004. "My Father's Dream" is a story of Mr. Obama's efforts to understand the power to make him himself the son of a black African father and a white Americans mother. A small small village in Africa
Mr. Obama started talking about him in New York, where he heard that his father, a man like a myth than a man, was killed in a car accident. This news caused a series of memories since Barack recalled an abnormal history of his family: his mother's family moved from a small town in Kansas to the Hawaiian Islands, a promising young Kenyan student with his mother Love was love that was cultivated by the young innocence and the spirit of integration in the early 1960s and when Barack was 2 years old, the father left Hawaii and the reality of race and power was reproduced . Awakening of fear and doubt exists not only in the bigger black-and-white world, but also within himself
Barrack moved to Chicago as a community organizer. He wanted to understand his desire to shape his power and her father's legacy. So in the fierce political and ethnic conflict, he worked hard to overturn the desperation of the city center. When he understood the value of the community, the need to heal the old wounds, and the possibility of belief in adversity, his story is integrated with the story of the people he works.
Balak's journey was totally circulated in Kenya where he finally encountered the African side of his family and faced a painful truth in his father's life. Traveling in a country full of cruel poverty and tribal conflict, Barak is inevitably associated with brothers and sisters who live in the sea as he is necessarily supported by the spirit of patience and hope - And by accepting their common struggle he can finally adjust split inheritance
Explicit meditation about the meaning of American identity, "My Father's Dream" may be one of the most inspiring portraits of one of the important leaders of the United States. People in scattered countries
The photo is the photo on the left side of the cover: Habiba Akumu Hussein and Barack Obama, Sr. (President Obama's grandmother and his father are small boys). The picture is the picture on the right side of the cover: Stanley Dunham and Ann Danum (President Obama's grandfather and his mother as a young girl)
"My dream from my father" tells the story of Mr. Obama's family - he was born in Hawaii in 1961, a mother of white men from Kansas, and a father of black from Kenya. As Obama wrote in his introduction, this book is also a "boy looking for his father and looking for his viable meaning as a black American." After his college graduation as his white grandparent, organizer of the Chicago community, after his father died in 1982, he went to Kenya as a young man to meet relatives of Africans.
In this article we compare and contrast the father's dreams in the two works in order to draw lessons that all parents and children should know. "My Father's Dream" published in 2004 depicts the life of the 44th President of the United States. When he was elected as a member of the Senate, the novel was said by the president himself. In his story, Mr. Obama explains how his father's ambition and role model helped shape and fulfill his dreams. This story is the story of a young Barack Obama Sr. as a smart, intelligent and naughty student.
My father's dream is a beautifully spoken and astonishing story inspired by the family history of his writer's department. Mr. Obama is the son of an African black farmer from Kenya, the mother of an American white man from the Midwest, and when his father left the family was two years old. A few years later, after many changes Obama received a call from Nairobi saying that his father died in a car accident. Many Americans' comments on 'My Father's Dream' show the special elegance of Obama's prose, its honesty and freshness. Intentionally or unintentionally, Mr. Obama put his book on the tradition of political prose literature, which dates back to another American language master: Abraham Lincoln (Mr. Obama is the Senate from Lincoln's hometown of Illinois, He is an assembly member.)