So I guess for the last eight years, you've had a cigarette constantly in your mouth. Well now you can have a pack and a smile and relax.
‘All Things Are Possible’
Chicago's Journey: From Washington to Obama.
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
On Election Night, some Chicagoans literally danced in the streets, more than a few with tears in their eyes. This hard-nosed, high-stepping city proudly donned its latest moniker: hometown of the first black man elected president of the United States.
It surely beats "Beirut on the Lake." That was the embarrassing nickname the national press gave this city in the 1980s for its racially charged turf wars. To recall those years, it is startling to see the distance traveled by Chicago—and America.
Some 25 years ago, a black man running for mayor of Chicago, Harold Washington, was hooted down the stairs of a Roman Catholic church by a mob of angry whites. Washington won the election in a squeaker. But in five wards on the city's Northwest Side, he carried a scant 5 percent of the vote. When he took office, he was challenged at almost every turn by a rebellious group of aldermen led by Edward R. Vrdolyak. The Council Wars made Chicago a national spectacle for its hostilities over race and the blunt bigotry voiced by whites about black politicians.
Chicago enjoys a loftier image these days, as its residents talk giddily about a new Western White House in Obama's Hyde Park neighborhood on the South Side. Today those five Northwest Side wards that snubbed a black mayoral candidate all went for Obama. The city's white mayor, Richard M. Daley, was an early cheerleader of the Obama candidacy. Even his campaign manager, David Axelrod, is a former Chicago Tribune reporter. The sort of bigotry preached by some of the bare-knuckled white politicians a generation ago has fallen into disrepute. Vrdolyak, incidentally, pleaded guilty earlier this week to his part in a kickback scheme.
Larry Edwards, a 60-year-old rabbi and native Chicagoan, stood on the grounds at Grant Park, the site of the Obama victory party, and remembered the day of rage in 1968, when the police cracked heads of protesters outside the Democratic National Convention across the street at the Hilton Hotel.
On this election night, some young people carried Obama signs in one hand and the American flag in the other. A black woman wore a T shirt that declared THIS IS THE DREAM REALIZED!
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next Page »







