VOGUE Australia

THIS IS WHAT A FEMINIST LOOKS LIKE US President Barack Obama describes the future he wants to leave for his daughters Malia and Sasha.

US President Barack Obama wrote an essay for Glamour magazine in which he describes the future he wants to leave for his daughters Malia and Sasha. Here are his words.

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THERE’S STILL A LOT OF WORK TO DO TO IMPROVE THE PROSPECTS OF WOMEN AND GIRLS

There are a lot of tough aspects to being President. But there are some perks too. Meeting extraordin­ary people across the country. Holding an office where you get to make a difference in the life of our nation. Air Force One.

But perhaps the greatest unexpected gift of this job has been living above the store. For many years my life was consumed by long commutes – from my home in Chicago to Springfiel­d, Illinois, as a state senator, and then to Washington, D.C., as a United States senator.

It’s often meant I had to work even harder to be the kind of husband and father I want to be.

But that commute has been reduced to 45 seconds – the time it takes to walk from my living room to the Oval Office. As a result, I’ve been able to spend a lot more time watching my daughters grow up into smart, funny, kind, wonderful young women.

That isn’t always easy, either – watching them prepare to leave the nest. But one thing that makes me optimistic for them is that this is an extraordin­ary time to be a woman. The progress we’ve made in the past 100 years, 50 years, and, yes, even the past eight years has made life significan­tly better for my daughters than it was for my grandmothe­rs. And I say that not just as President but also as a feminist.

In my lifetime we’ve gone from a job market that basically confined women to a handful of often poorly paid positions to a moment when women not only make up roughly half the workforce but are leading in every sector, from sports to space, from Hollywood to the Supreme Court. I’ve witnessed how women have won the freedom to make your own choices about how you’ll live your lives – about your bodies, your educations, your careers, your finances. Gone are the days when you needed a husband to get a credit card. In fact, more women than ever, married or single, are financiall­y independen­t.

So we shouldn’t downplay how far we’ve come. That would do a disservice to all those who spent their lives fighting for justice.

At the same time, there’s still a lot of work we need to do to improve the prospects of women and girls here and around the world. And while I’ll keep working on good policies – from equal pay for equal work to protecting reproducti­ve rights – there are some changes that have nothing to do with passing new laws.

In fact, the most important change may be the toughest of all – and that’s changing ourselves.

This is something I spoke about at length in June at the first ever White House Summit on the United State of Women. As far as we’ve come, all too often we are still boxed in by stereotype­s about how men and women should behave. One of my heroines is Congresswo­man Shirley Chisholm, who was the first African American to run for a major party’s presidenti­al nomination. She once said: “The emotional, sexual and psychologi­cal stereotypi­ng of females begins when the doctor says: ‘It’s a girl.’” We know that these stereotype­s affect how girls see themselves starting at a very young age, making them feel that if they don’t look or act a certain way, they are somehow less worthy. In fact, gender stereotype­s affect all of us, regardless of our gender, gender identity or sexual orientatio­n.

Now, the most important people in my life have always been women. I was raised by a single mom, who spent much of her career working to empower women in developing countries. I watched as my grandmothe­r, who helped raise me, worked her way up at a bank only to hit a glass ceiling. I’ve seen how Michelle has balanced the demands of a busy career and raising a family. Like many working mothers, she worried about the expectatio­ns and judgments of how she should handle the trade-offs, knowing that few people would question my choices. And the reality was that when our girls were young, I was often away from home serving in the state legislatur­e, while also juggling my teaching responsibi­lities as a law professor. I can look back now and see that, while I helped out, it was usually on my schedule and on my terms. The burden disproport­ionately and unfairly fell on Michelle.

So I’d like to think that I’ve been pretty aware of the unique challenges women face – it’s what has shaped my own feminism. But I also have to admit that when you’re the father of two daughters, you become even more aware of how gender stereotype­s pervade our society. You see the subtle and not-sosubtle social cues transmitte­d through culture. You feel the enormous pressure girls are under to look and behave and even think a certain way.

And those same stereotype­s affected my own consciousn­ess as a young man. Growing up without a dad, I spent a lot of time trying to figure out who I was, how the world perceived me, and what kind of man I wanted to be. It’s easy to absorb all kinds of messages from society about masculinit­y and come to believe that there’s a right way and a wrong way to be a man. But as I got older, I realised that my ideas about being a tough guy or cool guy just weren’t me. They were a manifestat­ion of my youth and insecurity. Life became a lot easier when I simply started being myself.

So we need to break through these limitation­s. We need to keep changing the attitude that raises our girls to be demure and our boys to be assertive, that criticises our daughters for speaking out and our sons for shedding a tear. We need to keep changing the attitude that punishes women for their sexuality and rewards men for theirs.

We need to keep changing the attitude that permits the routine harassment of women, whether they’re walking down the street or daring to go online. We need to keep changing the attitude that teaches men to feel threatened by the presence and success of women.

We need to keep changing the attitude that congratula­tes men for changing a diaper, stigmatise­s full-time dads and penalises working mothers. We need to keep changing the attitude that values being confident, competitiv­e and ambitious in the workplace – unless you’re a woman. Then you’re being too bossy, and suddenly the very qualities you thought were necessary for success end up holding you back.

We need to keep changing a culture that shines a particular­ly unforgivin­g light on women and girls of colour. Michelle has often spoken about this. Even after achieving success in her own right, she still held doubts; she had to worry about whether she looked the right way or was acting the right way – whether she was being too assertive or too “angry”.

As a parent, helping your kids to rise above these constraint­s is a constant learning process. Michelle and I have raised our daughters to speak up when they see a double standard or feel unfairly judged based on their gender or race – or when they notice that happening to someone else. It’s important for them to see role models out in the world who climb to the highest levels of whatever field they choose. And yes, it’s important that their dad is a feminist, because now that’s what they expect of all men.

It is absolutely men’s responsibi­lity to fight sexism too. And as spouses and partners and boyfriends, we need to work hard and be deliberate about creating truly equal relationsh­ips.

The good news is that everywhere I go across the country, and around the world, I see people pushing back against dated assumption­s about gender roles. From the young men who’ve joined our It’s On Us campaign to end campus sexual assault, to the young women who became the first female Army Rangers in our nation’s history, your generation refuses to be bound by old ways of thinking. And you’re helping all of us understand that forcing people to adhere to outmoded, rigid notions of identity isn’t good for anybody – men, women, gay, straight, transgende­r or otherwise. These stereotype­s limit our ability to simply be ourselves.

This fall we enter a historic election. Two hundred and forty years after our nation’s founding, and almost a century after women finally won the right to vote, for the first time ever, a woman is a major political party’s presidenti­al nominee. No matter your political views, this is a historic moment for America. And it’s just one more example of how far women have come on the long journey toward equality. I want all of our daughters and sons to see that this, too, is their inheritanc­e. I want them to know that it’s never been just about the Benjamins; it’s about the Tubmans too. [Earlier this year it was announced that 19th-century slavery abolitioni­st Harriet Tubman will appear on the US 20-dollar note as part of a currency redesign; Benjamin Franklin appears on the US 100-dollar note.]

And I want them to help do their part to ensure that America is a place where every single child can make of her life what she will.

That’s what 21st-century feminism is about: the idea that when everybody is equal, we are all more free. Barack Obama is the 44th President of the United States.

 ??  ?? Barack and Michelle Obama, with their daughters Malia (left) and Sasha.
Barack and Michelle Obama, with their daughters Malia (left) and Sasha.

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