Time for Jeremiah Wright T.V. to come to an end
Categories: African-American, Politics and Elections, Religion and Faith
Written By: Shawn Williams
On Friday, Dr. Jeremiah Wright gave an insightful interview with Bill Moyers that I thought helped to better explain the basis for some of the “controversial” comments that he made which had been taken out of context. Sunday night, CNN gave Dr. Wright a forum to express himself uncut and unedited as he spoke at an NAACP banquet. And then on Monday, all hell broke loose.
To step back for a moment, Sunday morning at my church, I could hear the hurt and betrayal Dr. Wright felt for all of the entities who canceled his speaking engagements after the Fox News ambush. Dr. Wright listed the Urban League as well as a number of black colleges who had uninvited him. It must hurt to see those you’ve spent a career advocating for turn their back on you due to nothing that you have done.
But now we are at a new place and playing by a new set of rules. It is my belief that the media laid a trap for Dr. Wright on Monday. A trap which he sprung very much to their liking. I heard Dr. Wright answer questions posed to him before the National Press Club on Monday. In real time it didn’t sound all that bad. But in reality he was creating a whole new set of sound bites for Barack Obama’s opponents to use against him.
There’s not doubt people are mad. Black folks are upset with Dr. Wright for choosing now as the time to fight this battle and launch into this conversation. I understand the frustration. As Tavis Smiley and many politicians have found out, the African-American community doesn’t appreciate anyone who may slow the momentum of Obama’s White House run.
The timing is no doubt odd. I get that. But don’t lose sight of the true disconnect here. As Father Michael Pfleger mentioned in a recent interview, Dr. Wright’s sermons were delivered in a family atmosphere that a church congregation provides. The words have a whole different feel outside of the church house, especially in the antiseptic unforgiving land of television.
Though Dr. Wright had been off the scene since the madness broke out, there was a slow process of healing and understanding going on behind the scenes. A website popped up called The Truth About Trinity United Church of Christ. It was there that I learned that Dr. Wright was an ex-Marine, having cared for President Lyndon Johnson during a hospital stay. It was The Truth About Trinity where I saw a picture of Dr. Wright and President Bill Clinton. Wright was at the White House at a prayer breakfast during Clinton’s time of need.
Bloggers have been working behind the scene, disseminating the information to those who seek to get a better understanding. Of course there will always be people who will never change their view. But the conversation was moving to a place where all parties were beginning to at least engage one another.
People had found a 21st century means of combating the 20th Century attack that had been launched against the good Reverend Wright. A 21st century strategy is the only path to victory, as a draw will not do in this case.
Dr. Wright is going to have to trust those around him to take up his cause. None of us want to have to call on others to fight our battles. But at this point that’s what he is going to have to do. Barack Obama has further distanced himself from his former pastor as was to be expected.
What’s most important here is the outcome. Not so much a Barack Obama presidency, which I believe is still wholly possible. But the deliverance of African-Americans from our status in this nation, and the hope of reconciling this nation’s past with its present and future.
In a sense, Barack Obama was right. The Jeremiah Wright we see on the T.V. screen is not the man that most of us know. It’s because the man who speaks five languages and has four earned degrees cannot be comprehended in that medium. That medium does not understand what “Unashamedly Black and Unapologetically Christian” means.
The Dr. Wright that most of us know is the one who stands boldly in the pulpit proclaiming the Word of God. We know him as a teacher of African history. Others know him as a father figure with a brilliant smile and gentle demeanor.
The man we see on T.V. is none of that. And as long as the powers that be pull the strings we will never have the chance to see the Jeremiah Wright we’ve all come to love so much. I’m saddened by what this is doing to Obama’s presidential bid, but it pains me even more to see Dr. Wright allow the media to further distort his legacy. He did not ask for this burden, nor does he deserve it. And he doesn’t have to bear it alone.
So now is the time. The time for Dr. Wright to put this conversation on hold, and allow the people of America -all of its people- to get back to the issue that is at hand. He should trust that those he has groomed for a time such as this -Barack Obama, Frederick D. Haynes III, Rev. Otis Moss, III- can pick up where he has left off, and further the cause he has worked so diligently towards.
A friend of mine shared a proverb with me once. He said “the truth spoken out of season bears no fruit.” This is not the season.








April 30th, 2008 at 7:01 am
I do agree that Dr. Wright should not respond or defend himself any longer in main stream media. It will never help him or Obama. Main stream media will always spin anything said. Although painful for Obama he had to distance himself from Dr. Wright. The spectacle on Monday was the final straw. He never should have gone into the Lion’s Den on Monday at the National Press Club. It looked bad. We will all have to see how much this will hurt Obama. This entire situation is sad.
April 30th, 2008 at 8:37 am
Shawn,
I agree with you. It is time to focus back on the election. Hillary Clinton is focused on “jobs, jobs, jobs!” If something major does not happen to change the discussion, this could cost him Indiana and talking to someone actively involved in North Carolina, the gap is closing and if he wins be a small percentage and losses Indiana, it is going to be a wide open race. This must go away NOW!
April 30th, 2008 at 10:11 am
I hope that you will consider the idea that there are people like me, who have watched not soundbytes but literally hours of Wright speaking, and still think that he is wrong and divisive.
It is possible for someone to disagree with you without being stupid, ignorant or evil. And I mean that both ways.
April 30th, 2008 at 2:17 pm
Reverend Wright has defended himself well and he said much that needs to be said. If he has more to say then he should speak. To do other wise is to let the white media win, for they are the ones driving the “scary black man” images.
For Obama to turn his back on Reverend Wright is shameful. He is placeing power and ambition over truth and justice. Reverend Wright hasn’t changed. Obama sat in the pew at Trinity for a reason. He dedicated his book to Reverend Wright for a reason. By castigating Reverend Wright, Obama has chosen the road of dishonour and fear. Obama’s only hope is to explain what it was that drew him to Trinity and Reverend Wright. If he choses that difficult road then in the end he may succeed but if he continues to go down the road of fear then he is lost.
As Reverend Wright pointed out, Obama is a pollitician and he will do as polliticians must do.
What should not happen is the silencing of one of the the most accomplished members of our community.
Samuel
April 30th, 2008 at 3:27 pm
One would think after 36 years of following Jesus that Rev. Wright—who has four degrees and speaks 5 languages– would not fall prey AGAIN to a crooked and circus-oriented press.
Nevertheless, Rev. Wright’s inflated ego took center stage and out came the hot air. It was painful to watch a man of God come off like a prideful self-centered fool. Not only has he lowered himself, but he has hurt Obama, the African-American community and the Black Church that he claimed to be defending. He needs to check himself because his spiritually sick ego is in the way.
May 3rd, 2008 at 5:17 pm
Judging from the views of this anonymous editorial and the opinions of those who have written back in response, I imagine that my comments won’t be too well received. But when the Reverend Wright story first broke, we were all told that you couldn’t just listen to the short “sound bites”, but you needed to hear him in a longer context. O.K., so now we have heard him in a full speech twice, before the NAACP and the National Press Club, and now we’re told that we simply cannot comprehend him in the medium of TV, as this is somehow unfair to him. I have heard more than enough from Dr. Wright, and I have concluded (as have many others) that he is an egotistical, divisive, and separatist man, who truly s European-Americans and the United States of America. And as for Obama, he was a faithful follower of Wright until it later became politically necessary to toss him aside. Obama tried to case himself as the great “uniter”, but he has instead been uncovered as a great liar!