Sometimes a historic moment arrives like an IMAX
movie: a big, loud, jarring event that bends the arc of history.
Other times, though, it sneaks up on people. It
seems modest at the time, but only later do Americans realize it marked a
turning point -- that something new had burst onto the national stage and the
old rules no longer applied.
Did President Barack Obama have such a moment this
week when he wept openly about children killed by gun violence?
Some say yes, and that Obama's tears were more
radical than people realize. Most people know the backdrop: While announcing
executive orders Tuesday to strengthen gun control laws, Obama halted as
the cameras clicked. He tried to regain his composure, but then the tears
flowed as he talked about 20 schoolchildren murdered by a gunman at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in 2012.
Some commentators later said the moment was
remarkable because Obama is known for his apparent Spock-like emotional
detachment.
But the moment was more than remarkable; it was revolutionary,
several historians and political scientists say.
"This is the most emotion an American
president has ever shown on camera," says Jerald Podair, an associate
professor of history at Lawrence University in Wisconsin. "I can almost
guarantee that when there is some sort of collage shown of this president's
presidency, this one moment will be in there."
Obama didn't just get weepy, Podair and others
say. He introduced something new to American public life on three levels:
spiritual, political and presidential.
He showed the 'power of powerlessness'
Remember the Hollywood movie "Air Force
One"? In the 1997 film, a group of Russian terrorists hijack the
President's plane while he's aboard. But they messed with the wrong President.
The commander-in-chief, played by Harrison Ford, takes back control of Air
Force One, trading punches and getting into gunbattles with the terrorists.
The hit movie reinforced the notion of the
action-hero President, a powerful man who knows how to "git 'er
done." It's why some historians talk with undisguised admiration about the
mean streak of President Andrew Jackson, who once killed a man for insulting
his wife; the frontier-honed strength of the towering Abraham Lincoln; or even
the Machiavellian cunning of Lyndon Johnson, who once said he couldn't trust a
man "unless I have his pecker in my pocket."
But Obama was inspired by a new script when he
wept openly before a White House audience, says Meg Mott, a political science
professor at Marlboro College in Vermont.
Obama is the first U.S. president to come out of
the African-American tradition, where pastors and congregations are encouraged
to be publicly open about their pain, and even failures, Mott says. She noted
the political context of Obama's tears: He was admitting that he couldn't get
gun control legislation passed even after Sandy Hook because the issue had
become so polarized.
"He is supposed to be the most powerful
person in the world," Mott says. "He is the leader of the free world.
But he's crying as if to say there's nothing I can do but accept and admit the
powerlessness of my situation."
That's not what American political leaders have
traditionally done, she says. Most of them have long been defined by white
Protestant sensibilities: Pain is best kept private; a little sniffle here and
there and maybe a welling up in public, but that's it.
"Most of our white Protestant leaders have
made it a point of pride to keep their feelings buttoned up," Mott says.
Obama is different. He comes out of the black
church tradition, where leaders don't hide how they feel. His appreciation for
the black church and its most famous leaders is well known. He keeps a bust of
the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in the Oval Office. He invoked King's phrase,
"the fierce urgency of now," in his White House gun control speech.
And, like a black preacher feeling the moment, he departed from his text to
improvise during that speech.
In the black church tradition, leaders are
expected to show emotion, even pain. When King delivered his last speech the
night before he was killed -- in which he said, "I've been to the
mountaintop" -- his eyes appeared to tear up as he admitted to the audience
that he might not live much longer.
During worship services in black churches, it's
not uncommon to hear people publicly "testify" about their hardships
or cry out for help. There's a moral authority in powerlessness -- being able
to forgive, show mercy and "keep on keeping on" though the situation
seems hopeless.
Obama "has experienced that power, the power
of powerlessness," Mott says.
Perhaps the only national political leader to
approach Obama's moment of naked vulnerability was a politician who knew
something about suffering. His name was Robert Kennedy.
Kennedy's moment came in Indianapolis in 1968. He
was running for president and had stopped in a black community to speak when he
learned that King had been assassinated. Fearing a riot, he stepped onto the
back of a flatbed truck and broke the news to the shocked crowd.
He then invoked his suffering by referring to the
assassination of his brother, President John F. Kennedy:
"For those of you who are black and are
tempted to ... be filled with hatred and mistrust of the injustice of such an
act against all white people, I would only say that I can also feel in my own
heart the same kind of feeling," he said. "I had a member of my
family killed, but he was killed by a white man."
There was no riot in Indianapolis that night. Two
months later, Bobby Kennedy was assassinated.
"He had to stop Indianapolis from
exploding," Mott says. "Rather than telling the crowd that I can
solve this problem because I'm a Kennedy, he said we can work together because
I know what it's like to lose someone shot by white people."
A black man becomes ordinary
Presidents aren't just political leaders. They're
paternal figures. George Washington was called "the father" of our
nation. Lincoln was known as "Father Abraham." These intimate
designations speak to the close bond many Americans have traditionally forged
with their presidents.
Obama, though, has long struggled to be accepted
as "one of us" because he is so different from his Oval Office
predecessors. Some critics have tried to turn his uniqueness into a political
liability. The accusations -- of being a socialist, of not hailing from
"real America," the birther conspiracies -- all convey a suspicion
that Obama is an interloper in the White House.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani gave voice to
that suspicion last year when he declared at a dinner that "I do not
believe that the President loves America."
"He doesn't love you. And he doesn't love
me," Giuliani said. "He wasn't brought up the way you were brought up
and I was brought up through love of this country."
That claim, though, won't carry the same sting in
the wake of Obama's tears over the death of American schoolchildren, says
Podair, the Lawrence University historian.
Here was a black man weeping over the murder of
white children. Though Obama also invoked black children struck down by
violence in Chicago in his speech, Podair noted that the moment the President
broke down is when he cited the shootings of children at a predominantly white
elementary school.
At that moment, Podair says, Obama stopped being
the Oval Office interloper with the funny name.
"When he cries very movingly on camera, and
he's crying over white children, he is now the father-in-chief," Podair
says. "They are his children. He is clearly shedding tears over white
children who he considers his children as well. It's a major moment."
The moment is also major because of how America
has traditionally viewed black men, Podair says. They have long been viewed as
"The Other" -- the Great Criminal Menace, the Great Athlete, the
Great Entertainer.
But Obama was just a man and a father when he
cried, Podair says. Any ordinary person could relate to what he was feeling.
And for a black man to be ordinary in America is,
well, extraordinary, Podair says.
"He's not 'The Other' anymore," Podair
says. "He's us, and in many ways, that's Obama's greatest triumph."
Redefining presidential masculinity
It was one of George Washington's greatest
moments. And it took place away from the battlefield.
American troops were on the verge of mutiny in the
waning days of the Revolutionary War. They were angry because Congress had
failed to deliver back pay and pensions. About 500 officers organized a meeting
to discuss whether troops should seize control of the new government.
Washington heard of the meeting, showed up and
asked for permission to speak. He told the troops they had legitimate claims
and that Congress would eventually honor its promises. Then he did something
unexpected. He opened a letter to read but hesitated. No one knew what was
wrong until Washington pulled out a pair of spectacles that many officers never
knew he owned.
"Gentlemen," he said, "you must
pardon me, for I have grown not only gray but blind in the service of my
country."
The officers were disarmed. Some openly wept.
Their anger turned to shame. Mutiny over. Washington's appearance lasted about
15 minutes, but it saved American democracy.
He demonstrated that a president could survive by
showing emotional vulnerability, if he did it the right way, says William G.
Howell, a presidential historian and political science professor at the
University of Chicago.
"He was conveying vulnerability borne of
great sacrifice," says Howell, author of the forthcoming book,
"Relic: How Our Constitution Undermines Effective Government -- and Why We
Need a More Powerful Presidency."
Historically, politicians feared expressing too
much emotion like athletes feared knee injuries: They could end their careers.
The late Sen. Edmund Muskie's presidential
campaign was doomed in 1972 when he allegedly cried while publicly defending
his wife from a newspaper attack during a New Hampshire campaign stop. And
former Democratic candidate Howard Dean's Oval Office ambitions were doomed by
his infamous "scream" during a raucous campaign event.
Obama, however, showed that a politician could
both publicly cry and show strength at the same time, Howell says.
"Presidents get in trouble when they appear
to be on their heels or aloof or disaffected. This was the antithesis of
that," Howell says. "This is not a president out of control. This is
a president who is conveying dogged resolution."
Amid his tears, Howell says the President made a
subtle argument. He said that just as the Constitution gave Americans the right
to bear arms, it also gave them the right to peaceful assembly, life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness -- rights that were robbed from victims of gun
violence.
"He's vulnerable plus determined. He's
expressing anger but staking out constitutional rights," Howell says.
"It seems incredibly heady, but there is this deep expression of heart
that's being conveyed as well."
How the President acts has an impact beyond
politics, says Podair, the Lawrence University historian.
He says American men often get their cues on
masculinity from presidents. Theodore Roosevelt's "strenuous life" --
his emphasis on hunting, adventure, being "in the arena" -- inspired
American men who feared they were going soft as more of them moved to cities at
the turn of the last century. John Kennedy inspired an entire generation of men
to stop wearing hats in public, and his wry, detached demeanor shaped masculine
culture in the early 1960s, Podair says.
"Most presidents put their stamp culturally
on their times," Podair says. "They tell people, 'This is how to be a
man. This is how to dress. This is how to act."
Obama did the same for politicians and men when he
wept this week, Podair says.
"Men are allowed to cry now. And now
presidents are allowed to cry."
Obama's tears may fade from the news cycle. But
he's already suggested the moment won't fade from his memory. During a town
hall meeting on guns hosted by CNN, he said he was surprised by his tears. He
also said he will continue to push for more gun control, regardless of the
political costs.
"It's the only time I've ever seen Secret
Service cry on duty," Obama says of his visit to Newtown, Connecticut,
after the Sandy Hook shooting. "It continues to haunt me. It was one of
the worst days of my presidency."
Tuesday may turn out to be one of the more
unforgettable days of his presidency. A president showing he's not an
all-powerful action hero, a black man weeping over white children, a politician
changing the rules about public tears -- perhaps something new did take place
this week.
Obama's critics have long said he is a radical,
someone new to America, someone who is different from his Oval Office
predecessors.
At least this week, they were right.
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