baltimoresun.com
Reverend Wright brings his anti-American crusade to Baltimore
Marta Mossburg writes that Obama's former pastor urges blacks  to disavow 
their country
Marta H. Mossburg 
3:04 PM EDT, June 21, 2011 
 
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Forget hope and change; victimization is in. Dropped by the president and  
dismissed as a racist by many Americans, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright still 
draws  crowds with his sometimes crotch-grabbing, always riveting soliloquies 
about  black oppression. 
The former pastor of Barack Obama drew thousands last week to the  
8,000-member Empowerment Temple in Baltimore City. Overflow lots at the church  
were 
filled, and five blocks on either side of the massive stadium-like stucco  
building in Park Heights — a part of town where Orthodox Jews mix sometimes  
uneasily with blacks — were wall to wall with cars. 
In this city where nearly 80,000 people left (along with 53,000 jobs) in 
the  last decade, it's easy to understand why his message resonates. 
For Mr. Wright, however, subjugation is a universal truth. Even the  
president, in Mr. Wright's mind, is not in control of his own destiny. 
"Barack Obama was selected before he was elected," said Mr. Wright, dressed 
 in black pants and a short-sleeved, African-style printed tunic. "Wall 
Street  selected him. GM, Ford and Chrysler selected him. When you are selected 
by them,  you are beholden to them." 
Referencing the Book of Exodus, he warned churchgoers to "Please remember  
that Pharaoh was black, so not all of your oppressors are white." A chorus 
of  "amen" and a phalanx of arms rose simultaneously into the air in 
agreement with  Mr. Wright. 
And he said faith was not a path to riches, repeatedly poking the 
expensively  dressed Empowerment Temple Pastor Jamal Bryant for driving a Range 
Rover. "Every  word that is in the Bible was written under six different types 
of 
[government]  oppression," he said. 
Mr. Bryant spent much of the hour-and-a-half interview with Mr. Wright with 
 his immaculately manicured right hand on his head, slouched deep in his 
seat.  
Mr. Wright spread the blame for black persecution around on lots of people  
and epochs. He hates Roman emperors for renaming months after themselves 
and  upsetting their proper numerical order; Michelangelo for painting Jesus 
as  white; U.S. public schools for teaching the American Revolution instead 
of  African history. In particular, he hates the term "Middle East," as it 
implies  Europe as the center of the world. 
And he hates Israel. "The state of Israel is an illegal, genocidal … 
place,"  he said. "To equate Judaism with the state of Israel is to equate 
Christianity  with [rapper] Flavor Flav." Laughter erupted from the mostly 
female 
audience on  that remark. 
His solution: "We need to help African-Americans see they are just Africans 
 born in another country." 
This could be achieved in part by requiring African-American students to  
study African history after school each day, just like Jewish children who  
receive a separate Hebrew education, he said. (Never mind that all of that  
education has not prevented cross-faith marriages and a weakening of the ties 
of  successive generations to Judaism.) 
And never mind that students today suffer not from an identity crisis but a 
 lack of basic skills. Studies show student self-esteem at an all-time 
high. But  at Baltimore City Community College, 80 percent of incoming students 
need  remedial education. Statewide, public two- and four-year institutions 
report 56  percent of students going directly from high school to college 
need some form of  remedial education in a state honored three years in a row 
as having the top  public education system by Education Week. 
Empowering the children of the Empowerment Temple to rise above their  
circumstances would mean fewer converts down the road, however. And it would  
shatter the myth of a black liberation theology that needs Baltimore and 
Detroit  and other crumbling cities to exist in order to be relevant. 
Mr. Wright's fiery rhetoric likely won't prompt any defections from the  
Barack Obama camp, either. As Daily Show "Senior Black Correspondent" Larry  
Wilmore recently said, "He [Obama] could lose the black vote. … If he can't 
get  a hold of this economy, then goodbye 96 percent, hello 94." 
But believing in an America that will never change is a lot easier than  
remaking it into one in which he would like to live. Mr. Wright said, "When 
you  say yes to politics, you say yes to compromise." What's worse is telling  
struggling single mothers with boyfriends, husbands and sons in prison and 
homes  in foreclosure that the only way out is to disavow America for an 
African dream  that has never existed and never will. 
Marta H. Mossburg is a senior fellow at the Maryland Public Policy  
Institute and a fellow at the Franklin Center for Government and Public  
Integrity.

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