Los Angeles Times

Barack Obama on activism, policing

Former president talks legacy and value of listening in discussion about his memoir.

- By Dorany Pineda

According to former President Obama, police reform begins with reimaginin­g the role of law enforcemen­t.

“What does it mean for a community to be safe?” Obama asked during a Los Angeles Times Community Book Club conversati­on that aired Wednesday. “For most of our history, policing in the African American community has meant just keeping a lid on things and keeping control and maintainin­g barriers and boundaries rather than actually serving those communitie­s.”

The 44th president was joined by filmmaker Ava DuVernay (“Selma,” “A Wrinkle in Time”) for a talk about his bestsellin­g memoir, “A Promised Land,” which tells the story of Obama’s journey from a young man with political aspiration­s to the watershed moments of his first presidenti­al term.

The conversati­on was recorded April 15, five days before former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty of murder for the death of George Floyd. But it was a timely remark.

In discussing police reform as well as broader issues of activism and racial justice, the former POTUS acknowledg­ed, “I am no longer the young upstart,” but as someone who “ran my stage of the race” he still had some advice that might be worth heeding.

Obama reminded viewers that most criminal and law enforcemen­t issues are determined at the state and local rather than federal level. It’s important to vote in local races, he said, and to be “clear and strategic” about who is a state’s or district attorney.

“They’re the ones who are going to decide whether or not to prosecute a police officer who’s used excessive force,” Obama said. “Who’s writing the collective bargaining agreement between the police union and that municipali­ty? Because that will often determine what the rules are, in terms of training, accountabi­lity and so forth.”

The advice came in answer to a question from DuVernay about building on the work of one’s predecesso­rs, based on a passage in “A Promised Land” in which Rev. Otis Moss Jr. described himself and other civil rights veterans as “the Moses generation” in contrast to Obama’s “Joshua generation.”

“Perhaps you can learn from some of our mistakes,” Moss had told him. “But ultimately it will be up to you, with God’s help, to build on what we’ve done.”

Obama’s second piece of advice to activists? Frame issues in ways that appeal to broader coalitions.

“If we are going to change in fundamenta­l ways how policing operates in this country in most jurisdicti­ons that are not Black or brown, you are going to need to persuade people who aren’t reading James Baldwin and don’t plan to,” he said. “You’re going to have to persuade them that this is the right thing to do.”

During the event, two local high school students were invited to ask Obama a question.

Tariq Stone, a senior at Inglewood High School, wanted to know what the most important step is in bridging the rifts dividing the nation.

“I don’t think that you are ever going to completely overcome our difference­s,” Obama began. “We are a big, complicate­d, noisy, multiracia­l, multiethni­c, multirelig­ious democracy. And that’s part of what sets America apart as this great experiment.”

But he did offer a few suggestion­s. “One thing that I think we can do is work to see each other’s humanity and understand that we all are deserving of dignity and respect and that we all can abide by a certain process for resolving those difference­s.”

He also stressed the value of actively listening and learning about people’s histories. He credited that technique with helping him win the Democratic caucuses in Iowa, a “heavily white rural state” with “very few folks who looked like me,” while running for his first presidenti­al term.

A diverse group of young organizers — Black, Jewish, Asian — planted themselves in small Iowa towns asking residents what was important to them, what issues frustrated them and how the government had let them down.

That listening created bonds and trust, he recalled, “and it’s on the basis of that trust that people started listening to what I stood for.”

Grace Lee, a junior at Buena Park High School, asked: “What is the one thing that you’d like to be remembered for?”

Obama said it was difficult to say just yet. “It’s hard to get the kind of distance you need for perspectiv­e because part of what we have to do is to sit back and see: How’s this all going to play out? And that I may not know for another 20 years.”

But if he had to choose, he hopes he modeled a message of inclusion and showed how to tackle pressing problems without scandal or self-interest.

And he’s proud to have inspired young activists to confront issues like climate change and systemic racism.

“When you see people picking up the baton and doing great work and you think, ‘All right, maybe I sparked some of that’ — that feels pretty good.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Los Angeles Times ?? FILMMAKER Ava DuVernay, left, moderated the Los Angeles Times Community Book Club discussion with former President Barack Obama about his memoir “A Promised Land,” which is the first of two volumes.
Photograph­s by Los Angeles Times FILMMAKER Ava DuVernay, left, moderated the Los Angeles Times Community Book Club discussion with former President Barack Obama about his memoir “A Promised Land,” which is the first of two volumes.
 ?? GRACE LEE, ?? editor in chief of the Buena Park High School newspaper, asked Obama about his legacy.
GRACE LEE, editor in chief of the Buena Park High School newspaper, asked Obama about his legacy.
 ??  ?? TARIQ STONE, a senior at Inglewood High School, had a question about bridging the nation’s divisions.
TARIQ STONE, a senior at Inglewood High School, had a question about bridging the nation’s divisions.

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