NewMediaJournal.us
www.NewMediaJournal.us
Return
to Article
Kindle Compatible
Paul R. Hollrah, O.E.
The Summer of 1981
October 6,
2009
On
Page 118 of Barack Obama’s memoir, Dreams from My Father, he
tells of his arrival in New York to attend Columbia University and of
the events that took place during that summer...the summer of 1981.
While
still in Los Angeles, before leaving Occidental College, he’d heard of a
vacant apartment on 109th Street in the Spanish Harlem section of Upper
Manhattan. He arranged to sublet the apartment and he tells of dragging
his luggage through the airport, through Times Square and the subways,
and along 109th Street, all the way from Broadway to Amsterdam Avenue.
When
he arrived at the apartment just after 10:00 PM, there was no one at
home. He tells of waiting on the front stoop until well past midnight,
and, not having enough money to rent a room in a cheap hotel, he crawled
through a hole in a fence across the street, found a garbage-strewn
alley, made a pallet with his luggage, and went to sleep. He awakened
the next morning with a white hen pecking at some garbage near his feet.
The
only person he knew in New York was an illegal alien named Sadik, a
Pakistani he’d met in Los Angeles who had overstayed his tourist visa
and who supported himself by waiting tables in restaurants and bars.
They met for breakfast, and when Obama explained that he was unable to
get into the apartment he’d sublet, Sadik invited him to stay with him
until he could work out his housing difficulties.
Obama
was able to sublet another apartment, but when his utilities were turned
off he learned that the people who held the lease had failed to pay the
rent and had absconded with his deposit money. And since his friend,
Sadik, had lost his lease as well, the two of them found an apartment
and moved in together.
Obama
tells us that, in the weeks following his arrival, he was like a large
"lab rat” exploring the byways of Manhattan, with Sadik as his guide.
Experiencing the true flavor of New York, he tells of offering his seat
to a middle-aged woman on a subway, and how a burly young man beat the
woman to the seat. And he tells of a stroll through Bloomingdale’s where
he was impressed by the price tags on the winter coats. He wrote, "Like
a tourist, I watched the range of human possibility on display, trying
to trace out my future in the lives of the people I saw, looking for
some opening through which I could reenter.”
Then
his life took an unexpected turn. He writes, "It was in this humorless
mood that my mother and sister (Maya Soetoro) found me when they came to
visit during my first summer in New York,” and that, "They stayed with
Sadik and me for a few nights, then moved to a condominium on Park
Avenue that a friend of my mother’s had offered them while she was
away.”
Obama
explains, "That summer I had found a job clearing a construction site on
the Upper West Side, so my mother and sister spent most of their days
exploring the city on their own. When we met for dinner, they would give
me a detailed report of their adventures...I would eat in silence until
they were finished and then begin a long discourse on the problems of
the city and the politics of the dispossessed.” He says, "I instructed
my mother on the various ways that foreign donors and international
development organizations like the one she was working for bred
dependence in the Third World.”
It
sounds as if Obama was an absolute joy to be around. The "dog-eat-dog”
environment of the streets of New York must have been a welcome
departure from their evenings with Obama.
But
wait a minute. How can this be?
Although Obama fails to mention it in either of his memoirs...not in
Dreams from My Father and not in The Audacity of Hope...he
traveled to Indonesia and Pakistan during the summer of 1981. In an
April 6, 2008 speech in San Francisco...the same speech in which he
referred to rural Pennsylvanians as "bitter” people who "cling to guns
or religion…” he explained, offhand, the value of his trip to Pakistan,
vis-à-vis his knowledge of foreign affairs. He said, "I knew what Sunni
and Shia was (sic) before I joined the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.”
When
questioned about that trip, Obama’s campaign press secretary, Bill
Burton, confirmed to the New York Times, and others, that Obama
had visited his mother and his sister in Indonesia during the summer of
1981 and that, after leaving Indonesia, he’d spent three weeks in
Pakistan, traveling with a Pakistani friend from Occidental College,
Wahid Hamid. According to Burton, Obama stayed in Karachi with the
family of another Pakistani friend, Mohammed Hasan Chandoo. Obama has
never mentioned the Pakistan trip again.
So
the question arises, which version are we to believe: the version
contained in his memoir, Dreams from My Father, or the version
his press secretary provided following his April 2008 speech in San
Francisco? In other words, if Obama arrived in New York, say, during the
first week of June, had housing problems, explored Manhattan like a "lab
rat,” lived for a time with a friend, spent time with his mother and
sister during their stay in New York, and worked as a laborer on a
construction site on the Upper West Side, how did he find the time or
the money to embark on an around-the-world trip to Indonesia and
Pakistan by the middle of July?
The
Los Angeles Times once referred to Obama as "the magic Negro.” Is
it possible they were right, or is Obama simply challenging Bill Clinton
for the title of "unusually good liar?”
By
his own admission, it is now well established that Obama did travel to
Indonesia and Pakistan during the summer of 1981, but that trip raises
some serious questions. Aside from the question of how he went from
being flat broke to financing an around-the-world trip in just four
weeks, it would be interesting to know how he managed to squeeze so much
into such a short period of time. But now it appears we may be one step
closer to having definitive answers to part of the mystery.
Jack
Cashill, a recognized authority on intellectual fraud, is the author of
numerous books, including Hoodwinked:
How
Intellectual Hucksters Have Hijacked American Culture,
in which he details the 20th century history of American intellectual
fraud.
In
addition to his own exhaustive examination of Barack Obama’s memoirs,
Dreams from My Father and The Audacity of Hope, which
have led him to believe that Obama’s terrorist friend, Bill Ayers, is in
fact the principal author of Dreams from My Father, Cashill
reviews a new best-seller by Christopher Andersen, the author of
28 books, including best-sellers on the Clintons; Diana, Princess of
Wales; and Caroline Kennedy.
The latest Andersen book to catch Cashill’s eye is titled
Barack and Michelle: Portrait of an American Marriage.
Writing in the October 1, 2009 edition of
WorldNetDaily,
Cashill tells us, "The headline
of the
USA
Today review captures the message Andersen hoped to bring to
the market, ‘A glowing Portrait’ of the Obamas' rock-solid marriage.”
However, according to Cashill, Andersen then threw the reviewers an
"unexpected curve.”
Cashill tells us, "In a lengthy and detailed section on the Obama’s
financial struggles in the early 1990s, Andersen relates how at the
urging of Michelle, a ‘hopelessly blocked’ Obama turned to ‘friend and
neighbor’ Bill Ayers to help him with his much acclaimed 1995 memoir,
Dreams from My Father.”
He
continues,
"Andersen’s
details are specific. The Obamas were convinced of ‘Ayers’s proven
abilities as a writer.’ Barack particularly liked the novelistic style
of
To
Teach, a 1993 book by Ayers. Obama hoped to use a comparable
style for his own family history. The problem was that although he had
taped interviews with many of his relatives, he could not find it in
himself to write the book.”
According to Cashill, "The key sentence in Andersen’s account is the one
that follows: ‘These oral histories, along with his partial manuscript
and a trunk load of notes were given to Ayers,’ ” and, ‘Thanks to help
from veteran writer Ayers, Barack would be able to submit a manuscript
to his editors at Times Books.’ ”
What does literary investigator Cashill conclude from all this? He says,
"To a book reviewer or to a political editor, this revelation should
matter hugely. Throughout the 2008 campaign, Obama insisted that he
barely knew Ayers. He was just some guy in the neighborhood. Obama was
lying.”
If Andersen’s account is correct, that Obama experienced a bad case of
writer’s block and was unable to complete his memoir...after having
spent his advance money...and that he and Michelle dumped his notes, his
taped interviews, and his own partially-completed manuscript on Bill
Ayers, then it is all but certain that the Dreams from My Father
account of Obama’s summer of 1981 in New York is pure fiction, a product
of Bill Ayers’ imagination, and that his own inadvertent admission of
spending much of the summer of 1981 in Indonesia and Pakistan is the
version that is "straight from the horse’s mouth.”
Whatever
the truth of the matter, Obama has an obligation to set the record
straight. If his first memoir is not his own work, in spite of his many
claims that it is, then the American people deserve to know. They
deserve to know who it is that now occupies the Oval Office. And given
the destructive nature of his plans for America, the sooner we learn the
truth of all this, the better.
About Paul R. Hollrah, O.E.
Paul R. Hollrah is a
freelance writer. He is a member of the Civil Engineering Academy of
Distinguished Alumni at the University of Missouri - Columbia and a
Senior Fellow at the Lincoln Heritage Institute. He currently resides in
Tulsa, Oklahoma.