The speech Michelle Obama delivered on the first night of the convention was phenomenal! I was blown away by her confidence as she approached the podium, with the sounds of Stevie Wonder’s “I Was Made To Love Her” playing in the background. I know now where Barack gets his mean swagger from. She was just stunning.
She raptured the people with a candid sense of just who the Obama family really was and where they’d come from, making it clear that neither of them were brought up with a silver spoon in their mouths.
“What struck me when I first met Barack was that even though he had a funny name, even though he’d grown up all the way across the continent in Hawaii, his family was so much like mine,” the First Lady hopeful said.
“He was raised by grandparents who were working class folks just like my parents and by a single mother who struggled to pay the bills, just like we did. Like my family, they scrimped and saved so that he could have opportunities they never had.”
Sound familiar?
It does to me. Sounds like my family and the families of so many other people I know who are scratching to survive but refuse to throw in the towel. But like her husband, Michelle dispatched a message of hope— reinforcing that “America should be a place where you can make it if you try.”
And I think that was Michelle’s point— to paint a picture of her husband and their family identical to the image of the typical American. Her words were transparent and far-reaching.
“I come hear as a daughter raised on the south side of Chicago by a father who was a blue-collar city worker and mother who stayed home with my brother and me,” she said.
“I come her as a wife who loves her husband and believes he will be an extraordinary president. I come here as a mom whose girls are the heart of heart of my heart and the center of my world. They’re the first thing I think about when I wake up in the morning and the last thing I think about when I go to bed at night.”
Talk about a tug on the heartstrings. And I know she didn’t mention race — which was probably a good idea, given the context and the audience— but I will. Michelle’s speech was evidence that Black families are still as strong as they were 200 years ago when they were brought to America as slaves, and husbands and wives and children were separated by evil spirited masters who thrived off the breaking of the bond of Black families.
The Obama family is representative of the fact that Black love has the power to endure all things and that when we band together, we accomplish anything we set our minds to.
I got all choked up when Michelle brought out her girls, Natasha and Sasha, to say goodnight to their father in Kansas City via satellite. And from the screen, he blew a kiss to the three leading ladies in his life. The screen went Black and Michelle and the girls exited the stage to Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely.”
…I thought that was so fitting.
—AFRO FLY GIRL






