Donald Manes and Ann Dunham: Difference between pages

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{{redirect|Anne Dunham|the British equestrian|Anne Dunham (equestrian)}}
'''Donald R. Manes''' ([[January 18]], [[1934]] - [[March 13]], [[1986]]) was a controversial [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] politician from [[New York City]]. He served as [[borough president]] of the [[New York City]] [[borough (New York City)|borough]] of [[Queens]] from 1971 until just before his suicide in 1986.<ref name=NYT19860315>Meislin, Richard J. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9A0DEFDF1E39F936A25750C0A960948260 "MANES'S DEATH: A FRANTIC CALL, A FATAL THRUST"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', [[March 15]], [[1986]]. Accessed [[December 11]], [[2007]].</ref>
{{Infobox Person
| name = Ann Dunham
| image = BarackMom.JPG
| image_size = 133px
| caption = Photo of Ann Dunham, circa 1971
| home_town = [[Wichita]], [[Kansas]]
| birth_date = {{birth date|mf=yes|1942|11|29|mf=y}}
| birth_place = [[Fort Leavenworth, Kansas]], [[US]]
| birth_name = Stanley Ann Dunham
| death_date = {{death date and age|mf=yes|1995|11|7|1942|11|29|mf=y}}
| death_place = [[Honolulu, Hawaii]], [[US]]
| occupation = [[Rural development]]
| spouse =[[Barack Obama, Sr.|Barack Obama (Sr.)]] <br>(1961–1964) (divorced)<br>[[Lolo Soetoro]] <br>(c. 1967–1980) (divorced)
| parents = [[Madelyn and Stanley Dunham]]
| children = [[Barack Obama]]<br> [[Maya Soetoro-Ng]]
| nationality = American
| religion =
| education = [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]], [[Master of Arts (postgraduate)|M.A.]], [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]]<ref name="TIME1">{{cite news |author=Amanda Ripley |title=The Story of Barack Obama's Mother |url=http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1729524,00.html |date=[[2008-04-09]] |work=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |accessdate=2007-04-09 }}</ref>
| alma_mater = [[University of Hawaii]]
| doctoral supervisor = Alice Dewey
| death_cause = [[Ovarian cancer|Ovarian]] and [[uterine cancer]]
| resting_place = [[Pacific Ocean]]}}
'''Stanley Ann Dunham Soetoro''' <!--Note that the correct name is "Stanley", not "shirley" which has been misreported on the net; see Obama's Memoirs and main article about him-->(November 29, 1942 &ndash; November 7, 1995), known as '''Ann Dunham''', and later as '''Ann Sutoro'''<!-- spelling Sutoro is correct here- it is the Americanized spelling --><ref name="TIME1" /> was an [[anthropology|anthropologist]] who specialized in [[rural development]]. Born in [[Kansas]], Dunham attended high school near [[Seattle, Washington]], and spent most of her adult life in [[Hawaii]]. She was the mother of United States [[Senator]] and presidential candidate [[Barack Obama]].<ref name=freespirit>{{cite news |first=Janny |last=Scott |title=A Free-Spirited Wanderer Who Set Obama’s Path |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/14/us/politics/14obama.html |work=[[New York Times]] |date=[[2008-03-14]] |accessdate=2008-03-21}}</ref> Dunham died of [[ovarian cancer]] in 1995.


==Early life==
Elected at age 37, the Brooklyn-born Manes was the youngest borough president in Queens history. During his term, Manes turned his position from merely a ceremonial role into a more proactive political job.
Ann Dunham was born in [[Fort Leavenworth, Kansas]]<ref name=KansasRoots>
{{cite news|url=http://www.topix.net/content/kri/2008/02/kansas-roots-show-in-obama-say-relatives| title=Kansas roots show in Obama| author=Fred Mann| work=[[The Wichita Eagle]]| publisher=via [[Topix]]| date=2008-02-02| page=1B| accessdate=2008-04-01}}
</ref> (some say [[Wichita, Kansas]]),<ref>http://www.wargs.com/political/obama.html</ref> while her father was in the military.<ref>
{{cite news| url=http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS234607+29-Jan-2008+BW20080129| title=Gov. Kathleen Sebelius Endorses Barack Obama| date=2008-01-29| accessdate=2008-04-01| publisher=[[Reuters]]| author=Obama Press Office}}
</ref> She was named after her father,<ref name=KansasRoots/> who reportedly gave his daughter and only child his name because he had wanted a boy; however, she was referred to as "Ann."<ref name=notjustagirl>{{cite news|url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-0703270151mar27,0,14968,full.story | title=Obama's mom: Not just a girl from Kansas: Strong personalities shaped a future senator | author=Tim Jones | publisher=''[[Chicago Tribune]]'' | date=2007-03-27 | accessdate=2008-01-22}}</ref>


Her parents, [[Madelyn and Stanley Dunham|Stanley Armour Dunham]] (born on March 23, 1918, raised in [[El Dorado, Kansas]], died February 8, 1992&mdash;buried in the [[Punchbowl National Cemetery]]) and [[Madelyn and Stanley Dunham|Madelyn Dunham]] (née Madelyn Lee Payne) (who was born in 1922 and raised in [[Augusta, Kansas]] and is still living in [[Honolulu, Hawaii]]), met in [[Wichita, Kansas]], and married on May 5, 1940.<ref name=sungene>
He was re-elected four more times, and was a delegate to the [[1980 Democratic National Convention]].
{{cite web| url=http://www.suntimes.com/images/cds/MP3/obamatree.pdf| work=[[Chicago Sun-Times]]| page=2B| date=2007-09-09| accessdate=2008-04-01| title=A Special Report: The Obama Family Tree|}}
</ref>


After the [[Pearl Harbor attack]] her father joined the Army and her mother worked at a [[Boeing]] plant in Wichita.<ref name=KansasRoots/> At the end of [[World War II]] she moved with her parents to [[California]], [[Texas]], and [[Seattle, Washington]], where her father was a furniture salesman and her mother worked for a bank. The family moved to [[Mercer Island, Washington]], in 1956 so that 13-year old Ann could attend the [[Mercer Island High School|Mercer Island high school]] that had just opened,<ref name=notjustagirl/> where teachers Val Foubert and Jim Wichterman taught the importance of challenging [[societal norm]]s and questioning authority. Dunham took the lessons to heart; "She felt she didn't need to date or marry or have children." A classmate remembers her as "intellectually way more mature than we were and a little bit ahead of her time, in an off-center way."<ref name=notjustagirl/>. One high school friend described her as: "If you were concerned about something going wrong in the world, Stanley [Ann] would know about it first ... We were liberals before we knew what liberals were." Another called her "the original feminist."<ref name=notjustagirl/>
Manes's popularity plummeted in late 1985, when he was criticized over two of his pet projects he wanted to build in Queens's largest public park, [[Flushing Meadows-Corona Park]]. One proposal was for a [[Grand Prix motor racing|Grand Prix]] auto racetrack in the park, where the [[1939 New York World's Fair]] and the [[1964 New York World's Fair]] had been held. Local community leaders lamented the idea, which became the first major project of his that was opposed.


==Move to Hawaii and first marriage==
Also that year, Manes worked to build a domed football-baseball stadium in the park, but it was opposed by local businessmen in the [[Flushing, Queens|Flushing]] area. When Queens couldn't secure a football franchise, the plan died.
In 1959 Dunham's parents moved to [[Hawaii]] to pursue further business opportunities in the new state. She soon enrolled at the [[University of Hawaii at Manoa]], where she studied [[anthropology]]. She met [[Barack Obama Sr.]], a student from [[Kenya]] and the school's first African student, in a [[Russian language]] class at the University.<ref name=freespirit /> When they became engaged, both sets of parents opposed the marriage, with Obama's father in particular objecting. Nevertheless, the couple married on February 2, 1961 in [[Maui]], [[Hawaii]], after discovering she was pregnant.<ref name=notjustagirl/><ref name="TIME1" />
[[Image:Barack-obama-mother.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Ann Dunham and Barack Obama]]
On August 4, 1961, at age 18, she gave birth to her first child, named [[Barack Obama|Barack Hussein Obama II]].


In an interview, Senator Obama referred to his mother as "the dominant figure in my formative years... The values she taught me continue to be my touchstone when it comes to how I go about the world of politics."<ref name=notjustagirl/>
One of the biggest controversies came in late 1985, when Manes wanted to wire the borough for cable television. Manes rejected a proposal by the Queens-based Ortho-O-Vision company to place cable lines in the borough, and instead awarded contracts to mega-companies [[Warner Communications]] and [[Time-Life]], as well as a cable firm owned by [[Percy Sutton]]. Local communities were outraged by the fact he passed over a local firm for large national companies.


Obama Sr. left Ann and their son in 1963, when he began studying at [[Harvard University]] in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]]. Dunham filed for divorce in [[Honolulu, Hawaii]] in January 1964; Obama did not contest it and the divorce was granted.<ref name="TIME1" /> The senior Obama obtained a masters degree in economics at Harvard and in 1965, returned to Kenya, where he obtained a position in the Kenyan government. Friends report that, later in life, he "was drinking too much" and became bitter and frustrated.<ref name=notjustagirl/> He was killed in an automobile accident in 1982.<ref>
==Downfall and suicide==
{{cite news| author=Muliro Telewa| title=US election makes waves in Kenya| work=[[BBC News]]| date=2004-08-20| accessdate=2008-04-01| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3581746.stm}}
</ref>


==Second marriage==
Shortly after his inauguration for a fifth term, Manes attended a dinner party for the new [[Israel]]i consul at Borough Hall in [[Kew Gardens, Queens|Kew Gardens]] on [[January 9]], [[1986]]. He left in his own car and was followed by his chauffeur up [[Queens Boulevard]]. He was later found in his car in the early morning hours of [[January 10]]; his wrists were slit and he was bleeding profusely. He initially claimed that two men had carjacked and attacked him, but later recanted the statement, saying he had attempted [[suicide]].
A few years later, Dunham met an Indonesian student, [[Lolo Soetoro]] (ca. 1936-1987), at the [[East-West Center]] on the University of Hawaii campus.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/20/magazine/20wwln-Q4-t.html| title=Questions for Maya Soetoro-Ng: All in the Family| work=[[New York Times]]| date=2008-01-20| accessdate=2008-04-01| author=[[Deborah Solomon]]}}
</ref> They married in 1967 and moved to [[Jakarta, Indonesia]], after the unrest surrounding the ascent of [[Suharto]],<ref name=freespirit /> where he worked as a government relations consultant with [[Mobil Corporation]], the U.S.-based international petroleum company.<ref name=NewAmMedia>[http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=ae5895fc29971b172938790be94ab107 ''Secrets of Obama Family Unlocked'', [[New America Media]].]</ref><ref name=LATimes>{{cite news | first = Paul | last = Watson| title = As a child, Obama crossed a cultural divide in Indonesia | url = http://articles.latimes.com/2007/mar/15/nation/na-obama15 | publisher = ''Los Angeles Times'' | date = 2007-03-15 | accessdate = 2008-06-21}}</ref>


Soetoro and Dunham had a daughter, [[Maya Soetoro-Ng|Maya Kassandra Soetoro]], on August 15, 1970.<ref name=sungene/>
In the following weeks, more facts came to light that sent the residents of Queens into shock. It was alleged that Manes had used political appointments and favors as the source of large kickback schemes involving personal bureaucratic fiefdoms such as the [[New York City Parking Violations Bureau]]. Zoning franchises and cable TV franchises were being investigated, and some of Manes’s appointees and associates were indicted or forced to resign. Manes himself stepped down as borough president in February.


In Indonesia, Dunham enriched her son's education with [[correspondence course]]s in English, recordings of [[Mahalia Jackson]], and speeches by the Rev. Dr. [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] When the young Obama asked to return to Hawaii for high school rather than stay in Asia with her, she agreed, despite the decision being painful for her.<ref name=freespirit /> Madelyn Dunham's job as a vice-president at The Bank of Hawaii helped pay the steep tuition at Punahou School,<ref>
The scandal became nationwide news and a continuing top story in New York. Manes, now facing the prospect of indictment on corruption charges, stayed in seclusion until March. On the night of March 13th he took a phone call from his psychiatrist, who discussed with Manes (and his wife on an extension phone upstairs) additional psychological care. Shortly before 10 p.m. the psychiatrist was called away from the phone and, while on hold, Manes reached into a kitchen drawer, pulled out a large kitchen knife and plunged the eight-inch blade into his heart. His daughter screamed for her mother, who came down to find Manes on the floor in a pool of blood. Marlene Manes pulled the knife from his heart as the daughter frantically called 911. Donald was pronounced dead at the scene.<ref name=NYT19860315/>
{{cite book| title=Obama: From Promise to Power| author=David Mendell| publisher=HarperCollins| year=2007| isbn=0-06-085820-6}}
</ref> with some assistance from a scholarship.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://www.punahou.edu/page.cfm?p=601| title=A Kid Called Barry: Barack Obama '79| work=Punahou Bulletin| journal=[[Punahou School]]| author=Carlyn Tani| date=Spring 2007 | accessdate=2008-04-01}}</ref>


In the 1970s, as Dunham wished to return to work, Soetoro wanted more children. "He became more American," she once said, "as she became more Javanese."<ref name=freespirit /> Ann Dunham left Soetoro in 1972, returning to Hawaii and reuniting with her son Barack for several years. Soetoro and Dunham saw each other periodically in the 1970s when Dunham returned to Indonesia for her fieldwork<ref name=freespirit /> but did not live together again. They divorced in 1980.<ref name=tiger>{{cite news | author=Scott Fornek | url=http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/obama/familytree/545455,BSX-News-wotreegg09.stng | title=Lolo Soetoro: 'A piece of tiger meat' | work=[[Chicago Sun-Times]]| date=2007-09-09 | accessdate=2008-01-22}}</ref>
Less than three years later, on [[November 17]], [[1988]], Morton Manes, Donald Manes's twin brother, attempted suicide in the same manner.


==Later life==
Donald Manes was followed in office by Deputy Borough President [[Claire Shulman]], who served until 2002.
Dunham was not estranged from either ex-husband, and encouraged her children to feel connected to their fathers. She returned to graduate school in Honolulu in 1974, while raising Barack and Maya. When Dunham returned to Indonesia for field work in 1977 with Maya, Barack chose not to go, preferring to finish high school in America. <ref name=freespirit />


Having been a [[Weaving|weaver]], Dunham was interested in village industries, therefore moved to [[Yogyakarta]], the center of [[Java]]nese [[handicrafts]].<ref>Sutoro, Ann Dunham, and Roes Haryanto. 1990. "KUPEDES Development Impact Survey." BRI Briefing Booklet. Jakarta.</ref> In 1992 she earned a Ph.D. in [[anthropology]] from the [[University of Hawai'i]], under the supervision of Prof. Alice Dewey, with a dissertation titled ''Peasant blacksmithing in Indonesia: surviving and thriving against all odds.''<ref>
==References==
{{cite paper |last=Dunham |first=S. Ann |title=Peasant blacksmithing in Indonesia : surviving against all odds |publisher=University of Hawaii| url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/65874559 |date=1992 }}</ref> Dunham then pursued a career in [[rural development]] championing women’s work and [[microcredit]] for the world’s poor, with Indonesia’s oldest bank, the [[United States Agency for International Development]], the [[Ford Foundation]], [[Women’s World Banking]], and as a consultant in Pakistan. She mingled with leaders from organizations supporting Indonesian [[human rights]], [[women's rights]], and grass-roots [[Economic development|development]].<ref name=freespirit />
{{Reflist}}


In 1994, Ann Dunham was diagnosed with [[ovarian cancer]] and [[uterine cancer]]; she moved back to Hawaii to live near her widowed mother.<ref name=freespirit /> She died there in 1995 at the age of 52.<ref>
{{start box}}
{{cite news |url=http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOOwMgWY_VIA&refer=home |first=Kim |last=Chipman |title=Obama Drive Gets Inspiration From His White Mom Born in Kansas |work=Bloomberg |date=2008-02-11 }}
{{succession box|title=[[New York City Council|New York City Council, 15th District]]|before=[[Julius Moskowitz]]|years=1966&ndash;1971|after=[[Morton Povman]] }}
</ref><ref name=mccormick>
{{succession box |
{{cite news |url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/obama/chi-obama_adsep21,0,7546153.story?coll=chi-news-col |title=Obama's mother in new ad |first=John |last=McCormick |work=[[Chicago Tribune]] |date=2007-09-21 }}
before= [[Sidney Leviss]]|
</ref>
title= Borough President of [[Queens County, New York|Queens]] |
Following a memorial service at the University of Hawaii, Barack and his half-sister, [[Maya Soetoro-Ng]], spread Ann's ashes in the [[Pacific Ocean]] on the south side of [[Oahu]].<ref name=freespirit />
after=[[Claire Shulman]] |

years=1971&ndash;1986 |
==Religion==
}}
Dunham's best friend in high school has said that she "touted herself as an atheist, and it was something she'd read about and could argue."<ref name=notjustagirl/>
{{end box}}

Maya Soetoro-Ng, when asked if her mother was an atheist, said, "I wouldn't have called her an atheist. She was an agnostic. She basically gave us all the good books — the [[Bible]], the Hindu ''[[Upanishad]]s'' and the Buddhist scripture, the ''[[Tao Te Ching]]'' — and wanted us to recognise that everyone has something beautiful to contribute."<ref>
{{cite news| title=Obama’s ‘Muslim past’ back on the agenda| url=http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/uselection,568,obamas-muslim-past-back-on-the-agenda,13523| work=[[The First Post]]| date=2008-01-21}}
</ref> "Jesus, she felt, was a wonderful example. But she felt that a lot of Christians behaved in un-Christian ways."<ref name="csmonitor"/>

In his 1995 memoir ''[[Dreams from My Father]]'' Barack Obama wrote, "My mother's confidence in needlepoint virtues depended on a faith I didn't possess... In a land [Indonesia] where fatalism remained a necessary tool for enduring hardship... she was a lonely witness for secular humanism, a soldier for New Deal, Peace Corps, position-paper liberalism."<ref>
{{cite news| url=http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/archive/barackobama| work=[[Chicago Reader]]| title=What Makes Obama Run?| date=1995-12-08| accessdate=2008-04-01| author=Hank De Zutter }}</ref> In his 2006 book ''[[The Audacity of Hope]]'' Obama wrote, "I was not raised in a religious household... My mother's own experiences... only reinforced this inherited skepticism. Her memories of the Christians who populated her youth were not fond ones... And yet for all her professed secularism, my mother was in many ways the most spiritually awakened person that I've ever known."<ref>
{{cite news| work=''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]''| url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1546298,00.html| title=Book Excerpt: Barack Obama| author=Barack Obama| date=2006-10-15}}
</ref> Religion for her was "just one of the many ways — and not necessarily the best way — that man attempted to control the unknowable and understand the deeper truths about our lives," Obama wrote.<ref name="csmonitor">{{Cite web|url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0716/p01s01-uspo.htm|title=Barack Obama: Putting faith out front|accessyear=2008|accessmonthday=June 1|publisher=The Christian Science Monitor|author=Ariel Sabar |work=July 16, 2007 edition }}</ref> In 2007 Obama described his mother as "a Christian from Kansas." "I was raised by my mother," he continued. "So, I’ve always been a Christian."<ref>
{{Cite news| url=http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2007/12/22/531492.aspx| date=2007-12-22| title=Obama Asked about Connection to Islam| author=Aswini Anburajan| publisher=[[MSNBC]]| work=First Read}}
</ref><ref>
{{cite news |first=Saul |last=Michael |title=I'm no Muslim, says Barack Obama |work=[[New York Daily News]] |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2007/12/23/2007-12-23_im_no_muslim_says_barack_obama.html |date=2007-12-23 |accessdate=2008-01-04}}
</ref> Also in 2007, he said in a speech, "My mother, whose parents were nonpracticing Baptists and Methodists, was one of the most spiritual souls I ever knew. But she had a healthy skepticism of religion as an institution."<ref name="TIME1" />

==2008 presidential campaign ad==
A photograph of Dunham holding a young Obama was included in a 30-second television advertisement called "Mother".<ref name=mccormick/> Obama says in the ad, which focuses on his calls for health care improvements, that his mother spent her final months "more worried about paying her medical bills than getting well."<ref name=mccormick/>

==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{Barack Obama}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Manes, Donald}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dunham, Ann}}
[[Category:1934 births]]
[[Category:1942 births]]
[[Category:1986 deaths]]
[[Category:1995 deaths]]
[[Category:Jewish American politicians]]
[[Category:American anthropologists]]
[[Category:Queens borough presidents]]
[[Category:American educators]]
[[Category:Politicians who committed suicide]]
[[Category:American expatriates in Indonesia]]
[[Category:Suicides by sharp instrument]]
[[Category:American feminists]]
[[Category:New York political scandals]]
[[Category:English Americans]]
[[Category:Americans of Irish descent]]
[[Category:Deaths from ovarian cancer]]
[[Category:People from Honolulu, Hawaii]]
[[Category:People from Wichita, Kansas]]
[[Category:University of Hawaii alumni]]
[[Category:Deaths from uterine cancer]]
[[Category:Obama family]]
[[Category:Cancer deaths in Hawaii]]

Revision as of 23:08, 12 October 2008

Ann Dunham
File:BarackMom.JPG
Photo of Ann Dunham, circa 1971
Born
Stanley Ann Dunham

(1942-11-29)November 29, 1942
DiedNovember 7, 1995(1995-11-07) (aged 52)
Cause of deathOvarian and uterine cancer
Resting placePacific Ocean
NationalityAmerican
EducationB.A., M.A., Ph.D.[1]
Alma materUniversity of Hawaii
OccupationRural development
Spouse(s)Barack Obama (Sr.)
(1961–1964) (divorced)
Lolo Soetoro
(c. 1967–1980) (divorced)
ChildrenBarack Obama
Maya Soetoro-Ng
ParentMadelyn and Stanley Dunham

Stanley Ann Dunham Soetoro (November 29, 1942 – November 7, 1995), known as Ann Dunham, and later as Ann Sutoro[1] was an anthropologist who specialized in rural development. Born in Kansas, Dunham attended high school near Seattle, Washington, and spent most of her adult life in Hawaii. She was the mother of United States Senator and presidential candidate Barack Obama.[2] Dunham died of ovarian cancer in 1995.

Early life

Ann Dunham was born in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas[3] (some say Wichita, Kansas),[4] while her father was in the military.[5] She was named after her father,[3] who reportedly gave his daughter and only child his name because he had wanted a boy; however, she was referred to as "Ann."[6]

Her parents, Stanley Armour Dunham (born on March 23, 1918, raised in El Dorado, Kansas, died February 8, 1992—buried in the Punchbowl National Cemetery) and Madelyn Dunham (née Madelyn Lee Payne) (who was born in 1922 and raised in Augusta, Kansas and is still living in Honolulu, Hawaii), met in Wichita, Kansas, and married on May 5, 1940.[7]

After the Pearl Harbor attack her father joined the Army and her mother worked at a Boeing plant in Wichita.[3] At the end of World War II she moved with her parents to California, Texas, and Seattle, Washington, where her father was a furniture salesman and her mother worked for a bank. The family moved to Mercer Island, Washington, in 1956 so that 13-year old Ann could attend the Mercer Island high school that had just opened,[6] where teachers Val Foubert and Jim Wichterman taught the importance of challenging societal norms and questioning authority. Dunham took the lessons to heart; "She felt she didn't need to date or marry or have children." A classmate remembers her as "intellectually way more mature than we were and a little bit ahead of her time, in an off-center way."[6]. One high school friend described her as: "If you were concerned about something going wrong in the world, Stanley [Ann] would know about it first ... We were liberals before we knew what liberals were." Another called her "the original feminist."[6]

Move to Hawaii and first marriage

In 1959 Dunham's parents moved to Hawaii to pursue further business opportunities in the new state. She soon enrolled at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, where she studied anthropology. She met Barack Obama Sr., a student from Kenya and the school's first African student, in a Russian language class at the University.[2] When they became engaged, both sets of parents opposed the marriage, with Obama's father in particular objecting. Nevertheless, the couple married on February 2, 1961 in Maui, Hawaii, after discovering she was pregnant.[6][1]

File:Barack-obama-mother.jpg
Ann Dunham and Barack Obama

On August 4, 1961, at age 18, she gave birth to her first child, named Barack Hussein Obama II.

In an interview, Senator Obama referred to his mother as "the dominant figure in my formative years... The values she taught me continue to be my touchstone when it comes to how I go about the world of politics."[6]

Obama Sr. left Ann and their son in 1963, when he began studying at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dunham filed for divorce in Honolulu, Hawaii in January 1964; Obama did not contest it and the divorce was granted.[1] The senior Obama obtained a masters degree in economics at Harvard and in 1965, returned to Kenya, where he obtained a position in the Kenyan government. Friends report that, later in life, he "was drinking too much" and became bitter and frustrated.[6] He was killed in an automobile accident in 1982.[8]

Second marriage

A few years later, Dunham met an Indonesian student, Lolo Soetoro (ca. 1936-1987), at the East-West Center on the University of Hawaii campus.[9] They married in 1967 and moved to Jakarta, Indonesia, after the unrest surrounding the ascent of Suharto,[2] where he worked as a government relations consultant with Mobil Corporation, the U.S.-based international petroleum company.[10][11]

Soetoro and Dunham had a daughter, Maya Kassandra Soetoro, on August 15, 1970.[7]

In Indonesia, Dunham enriched her son's education with correspondence courses in English, recordings of Mahalia Jackson, and speeches by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When the young Obama asked to return to Hawaii for high school rather than stay in Asia with her, she agreed, despite the decision being painful for her.[2] Madelyn Dunham's job as a vice-president at The Bank of Hawaii helped pay the steep tuition at Punahou School,[12] with some assistance from a scholarship.[13]

In the 1970s, as Dunham wished to return to work, Soetoro wanted more children. "He became more American," she once said, "as she became more Javanese."[2] Ann Dunham left Soetoro in 1972, returning to Hawaii and reuniting with her son Barack for several years. Soetoro and Dunham saw each other periodically in the 1970s when Dunham returned to Indonesia for her fieldwork[2] but did not live together again. They divorced in 1980.[14]

Later life

Dunham was not estranged from either ex-husband, and encouraged her children to feel connected to their fathers. She returned to graduate school in Honolulu in 1974, while raising Barack and Maya. When Dunham returned to Indonesia for field work in 1977 with Maya, Barack chose not to go, preferring to finish high school in America. [2]

Having been a weaver, Dunham was interested in village industries, therefore moved to Yogyakarta, the center of Javanese handicrafts.[15] In 1992 she earned a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Hawai'i, under the supervision of Prof. Alice Dewey, with a dissertation titled Peasant blacksmithing in Indonesia: surviving and thriving against all odds.[16] Dunham then pursued a career in rural development championing women’s work and microcredit for the world’s poor, with Indonesia’s oldest bank, the United States Agency for International Development, the Ford Foundation, Women’s World Banking, and as a consultant in Pakistan. She mingled with leaders from organizations supporting Indonesian human rights, women's rights, and grass-roots development.[2]

In 1994, Ann Dunham was diagnosed with ovarian cancer and uterine cancer; she moved back to Hawaii to live near her widowed mother.[2] She died there in 1995 at the age of 52.[17][18] Following a memorial service at the University of Hawaii, Barack and his half-sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, spread Ann's ashes in the Pacific Ocean on the south side of Oahu.[2]

Religion

Dunham's best friend in high school has said that she "touted herself as an atheist, and it was something she'd read about and could argue."[6]

Maya Soetoro-Ng, when asked if her mother was an atheist, said, "I wouldn't have called her an atheist. She was an agnostic. She basically gave us all the good books — the Bible, the Hindu Upanishads and the Buddhist scripture, the Tao Te Ching — and wanted us to recognise that everyone has something beautiful to contribute."[19] "Jesus, she felt, was a wonderful example. But she felt that a lot of Christians behaved in un-Christian ways."[20]

In his 1995 memoir Dreams from My Father Barack Obama wrote, "My mother's confidence in needlepoint virtues depended on a faith I didn't possess... In a land [Indonesia] where fatalism remained a necessary tool for enduring hardship... she was a lonely witness for secular humanism, a soldier for New Deal, Peace Corps, position-paper liberalism."[21] In his 2006 book The Audacity of Hope Obama wrote, "I was not raised in a religious household... My mother's own experiences... only reinforced this inherited skepticism. Her memories of the Christians who populated her youth were not fond ones... And yet for all her professed secularism, my mother was in many ways the most spiritually awakened person that I've ever known."[22] Religion for her was "just one of the many ways — and not necessarily the best way — that man attempted to control the unknowable and understand the deeper truths about our lives," Obama wrote.[20] In 2007 Obama described his mother as "a Christian from Kansas." "I was raised by my mother," he continued. "So, I’ve always been a Christian."[23][24] Also in 2007, he said in a speech, "My mother, whose parents were nonpracticing Baptists and Methodists, was one of the most spiritual souls I ever knew. But she had a healthy skepticism of religion as an institution."[1]

2008 presidential campaign ad

A photograph of Dunham holding a young Obama was included in a 30-second television advertisement called "Mother".[18] Obama says in the ad, which focuses on his calls for health care improvements, that his mother spent her final months "more worried about paying her medical bills than getting well."[18]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Amanda Ripley (2008-04-09). "The Story of Barack Obama's Mother". Time. Retrieved 2007-04-09. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Scott, Janny (2008-03-14). "A Free-Spirited Wanderer Who Set Obama's Path". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-03-21. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ a b c Fred Mann (2008-02-02). "Kansas roots show in Obama". The Wichita Eagle. via Topix. p. 1B. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  4. ^ http://www.wargs.com/political/obama.html
  5. ^ Obama Press Office (2008-01-29). "Gov. Kathleen Sebelius Endorses Barack Obama". Reuters. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Tim Jones (2007-03-27). "Obama's mom: Not just a girl from Kansas: Strong personalities shaped a future senator". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2008-01-22. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  7. ^ a b "A Special Report: The Obama Family Tree" (PDF). Chicago Sun-Times. 2007-09-09. p. 2B. Retrieved 2008-04-01. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  8. ^ Muliro Telewa (2004-08-20). "US election makes waves in Kenya". BBC News. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  9. ^ Deborah Solomon (2008-01-20). "Questions for Maya Soetoro-Ng: All in the Family". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  10. ^ Secrets of Obama Family Unlocked, New America Media.
  11. ^ Watson, Paul (2007-03-15). "As a child, Obama crossed a cultural divide in Indonesia". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-06-21. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  12. ^ David Mendell (2007). Obama: From Promise to Power. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-085820-6.
  13. ^ Carlyn Tani (Spring 2007). "A Kid Called Barry: Barack Obama '79". Punahou School. Retrieved 2008-04-01. {{cite journal}}: More than one of |work= and |journal= specified (help)
  14. ^ Scott Fornek (2007-09-09). "Lolo Soetoro: 'A piece of tiger meat'". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2008-01-22.
  15. ^ Sutoro, Ann Dunham, and Roes Haryanto. 1990. "KUPEDES Development Impact Survey." BRI Briefing Booklet. Jakarta.
  16. ^ Dunham, S. Ann (1992). "Peasant blacksmithing in Indonesia : surviving against all odds". University of Hawaii. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  17. ^ Chipman, Kim (2008-02-11). "Obama Drive Gets Inspiration From His White Mom Born in Kansas". Bloomberg.
  18. ^ a b c McCormick, John (2007-09-21). "Obama's mother in new ad". Chicago Tribune.
  19. ^ "Obama's 'Muslim past' back on the agenda". The First Post. 2008-01-21.
  20. ^ a b Ariel Sabar. "Barack Obama: Putting faith out front". July 16, 2007 edition. The Christian Science Monitor. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  21. ^ Hank De Zutter (1995-12-08). "What Makes Obama Run?". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  22. ^ Barack Obama (2006-10-15). "Book Excerpt: Barack Obama". Time. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  23. ^ Aswini Anburajan (2007-12-22). "Obama Asked about Connection to Islam". First Read. MSNBC.
  24. ^ Michael, Saul (2007-12-23). "I'm no Muslim, says Barack Obama". New York Daily News. Retrieved 2008-01-04.