VIEWPOINT

Michelle Hits Her Stride

The first lady's diverse approach to diversity.

Aude Guerrucci / AFP-Getty Images
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There have been plenty of un-veiling ceremonies for new statues at the U.S. Capitol. But when Michelle Obama peeled the cover off the bronze bust of abolitionist Sojourner Truth last week, the moment was heavy with symbolism. Truth is the first African-American woman to be honored with a statue in the Capitol. In a way no first lady before her ever could have done, Obama connected the dots between herself and the black feminist pioneer. "Now many young boys and girls like my own daughters will come to Emancipation Hall and see the face of a woman who looks like them," she told the gathering. "I hope that Sojourner Truth would be proud to see me, a descendant of slaves, serving as the first lady of the United States of America."

It was just the kind of scene I'd been hoping for when Barack Obama won the presidency last fall. I knew that Michelle Obama was already changing the way we see ourselves as African-American women. But I also hoped she would begin to knock down ugly stereotypes and educate people about American black culture. What's remarkable now—just over that much-hyped 100-day mark—is how quickly and decisively Michelle has taken on the issues that matter most to us.

From the start, Michelle never shied away from being an African-American role model. "I think it's clear that Michelle Obama is very comfortable in her own skin,'' says Debbie Walsh, director of the Center of American Women in Politics at Rutgers University. "She's not sending a message that I'm the first lady who just happens to be African-American. She's saying I'm an African-American first lady. There is a difference, and she's not afraid to show that.''

One place that difference is already showing up: the White House guest list. When Michelle held a daylong program for Women's History Month in March, white celebs Sheryl Crow and Fran Drescher were among the invited "role models." But "I would say that 80 percent of the women role models were African-American," says Debra Lee, chairman and CEO of BET Holdings, who was asked to speak. "And that was just amazing to be a part of because these women are just not given that type of recognition enough."

While black stars like WNBA champ Lisa Leslie and singer Alicia Keys fanned out to talk to students at D.C. schools, Michelle herself headed to Anacostia High School, one of the city's most troubled. Michelle shared her own modest background and described the ridicule she faced from neighborhood kids for "acting white" when she got good grades. "To have her sit right before us like that and seem so real and sincere was like a movie or something," says La Tisha Butler, 17. "We were all tripping because she said getting good grades wasn't acting white … I could tell she really cared about us. It wasn't just some speech."

Later that night, more than 150 girls—also mostly minorities—were invited back to dinner at the White House, where they were paired up with women like actress Debbie Allen, black female astronaut Mae Jemison and Rutgers University basketball coach Vivian Stringer. "I can only imagine as a young black girl what that would have meant to me to see and hear all those women tell me I could be what I wanted," says Stringer, who juggled coaching games in the NCAA playoffs to attend.

There are few photo-ops that show the first lady with anything but a diverse group. "Mrs. Obama's agenda has always been to include everyone and make sure the White House is open to all people," says Katie McCormick Lelyveld, Michelle's press secretary. "We make a point at each event to make sure you see all types of faces of people with different types of stories. It's exactly the same thing she did on the campaign trail.''

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: THE neo-RAVEN @ 05/22/2009 1:00:34 PM

    DAMN! It's good to see that racist red necks are still around. Is there a trailer park manual you nasty pedophiles pass around to each other--besides little boys and your children? You phucking honk-keys say the same dum a$$ $hit. You whine about black people whinning. Just how ignorant are you a$$ holes?
    You are hated where ever your filthy race goesrace goes. A race of murdering savages, serial killers, mass murders, spree killers, pedohiles, in-breeding mistake that GOD will soon fix.

    NO WHITIES IN THE 22 CENTURY. Good riddance to a dying, pathetic race of animals.
    Oh, and YOU people are the MINORITES.

  • Posted By: notroubleatall1963 @ 05/15/2009 10:48:22 PM

    Michelle is my biggest inspiration these days - she and Rachel Maddow! I love these women - they're both fantastically well educated, charming, funny, charismatic, beautiful...

    I am a HUGE fan of Michelle Obama's - and she has inspired me to think outside the box in my own social and cultural life!

  • Posted By: barbara45 @ 05/15/2009 9:34:45 AM

    great comment, she represents the entire population not a small segmernt of it.

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