Chicago Sun-Times

JARRETT’S ‘5 STAGES OF GRIEF’

Obama adviser recalls in memoir stunning nature of Trump’s win

- LYNN SWEET lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — Since the election of Donald Trump, Valerie Jarrett, the big sister, confidante and adviser to Barack and Michelle Obama — a relationsh­ip spawned in Chicago’s City Hall — has been “going through the five stages of grief, sometimes all five in the same day.”

That’s at the end of Jarrett’s memoir, “Finding My Voice, My Journey to the West Wing and the Path Forward,” released on Tuesday. The book is a mix of policy, politics and the personal, from her privileged upbringing to her painful divorce.

Jarrett’s book is rich in African-American and Chicago history even before a young Michelle Robinson, her fiance Barack and Jarrett all clicked at a fateful first dinner years ago.

Jarrett, 62, was born in Iran. Her parents, Barbara Taylor Bowman and James Edward Bowman, a doctor, moved there because opportunit­ies were limited in the U.S. for African-American physicians.

The Bowmans moved to England when she was 5 and a year later to Chicago.

Her mother co-founded the Erikson Institute in Chicago and is a nationally known early childhood educator. Jarrett’s late father was the first tenured AfricanAme­rican faculty member in medicine at the University of Chicago.

Jarrett’s maternal great-grandfathe­r, architect Robert Robinson Taylor, was the first black to attend the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Her grandfathe­r, Robert Rochon Taylor, worked with Julius Rosenwald, the Sears Roebuck executive, philanthro­pist and civil rights pioneer, and raised his family at what became known as the Rosenwald Courts Apartments at 46th and South Michigan Avenue, desperatel­y needed housing for African-Americans in segregated Chicago.

In 1941, Taylor became the first AfricanAme­rican

to chair the Chicago Housing Authority. His name, to the dismay of the family, was later slapped on the now demolished South Side CHA buildings that turned into high-rise segregated slums.

Jarrett, in the White House from Obama’s first day to his last, remains an adviser to the Obamas in their post-presidency.

She kicked off her book tour this week, selling her memoir at events featuring a conversati­on with a friend. It’s a format successful­ly used by Michelle Obama with her best-selling memoir, “Becoming”; Jarrett on occasion has been one of her interviewe­rs. Jarrett hits Chicago on Thursday.

On Thursday night, at KAM Isaiah Israel, 5039 S. Greenwood, Jarrett will discuss her life with her daughter, Laura, a CNN reporter, and Tina Tchen, Mrs. Obama’s White House chief of staff.

KAM is across the street from the Obamas’ Chicago home and down the block from the Bowman house. On Friday, she will be interviewe­d by longtime friend and neighbor John Rogers at the Union League Club, and later she talks with former first lady chief of staff Susan Sher at an event at 935 W. Wilson sponsored by Women & Children First bookstore.

Jarrett went to City Hall to work for Harold Washington, Chicago’s first African-American mayor, and decided to stay on with Mayor Richard Daley. That’s when, in 1991, Sher sent Jarrett Michelle Robinson’s resume.

Before taking Jarrett’s job offer, Michelle wanted her fiance to meet Jarrett. The rest is history.

In the book:

♦ When pressed to meet with Michelle’s fiance, Jarrett blurted out “Who the hell is your fiance, and why do we care what he thinks?” Michelle replied, “His name is Barack Obama and he thinks the mayor’s office could be a dangerous place to work.”

♦ “Possibly the strangest of my strange-bedfellow relationsh­ips was with Mark Holden, general counsel to Koch Industries,” with the Koches bankrollin­g GOP opposition to Obama. But they formed an alliance on criminal justice issues.

♦ Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Obama’s first chief of staff, “let off steam by screaming . . . He never actually yelled at me, but I found it hard to watch him make so many others squirm.”

♦ While going through menopause, Jarrett writes how Obama adjusted the temperatur­e in his car. “If I was riding with him and a hot flash exploded, he simply turned up the air conditioni­ng and handed me his handkerchi­ef, without saying a word or even looking in my direction. He just knew.”

♦ I make a cameo in the book, when Jarrett recounts Obama’s 2009 press conference where I asked about the arrest of Harvard’s Henry Louis Gates Jr. and what it said about race relations in America. In his reply, Obama said the police acted “stupidly.” “That one word drove the negative reaction. But the president had to answer Lynn Sweet’s question, and he gave his honest opinion, not some PR spin.”

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Valerie Jarrett at a reception honoring women mathematic­ians of America’s space program at the U.S. Capitol in Washington last week.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Valerie Jarrett at a reception honoring women mathematic­ians of America’s space program at the U.S. Capitol in Washington last week.
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