
Image credit:Mitchell Siporin
Tonight, I can't read Langston Hughes' Let America Be America Again without crying. When Hughes uses "America" twice in the title of his poem, he uses the word to signify a promise and a betrayal. Tonight my tears come not through the joy of a Democrat elected to the White House nor, it must be said, from one gin and tonic too many. For me, tonight is painfully familiar; the betrayal can’t be far off.
Growing up under nearly two decades of Conservative rule in the UK (Margaret Thatcher 1979-1990 and John Major 1990-1997), I remember when the British electorate put Tony Blair 1997-2007 in power. Having voted Green in the 1997 British Election, I came to America on the day that Blair's Labour Party came to power. I wasn't around to see the day when, I'm told, people smiled at one another on the London Underground - a sign of unrefined joy if ever there were.
But Blair's Britain turned to ashes. And I've no doubt that the Obama presidency will disappoint the vast majority of those who voted for him - he will not redistribute as forcefully, nor demilitarise as vigorously, nor change quite as hopefully as he offered.
Despite all that, tonight is still a promise partially delivered. In Britain it would have been, and still is, impossible to imagine a native-born person of colour winning the highest office in the land. It couldn't happen anywhere in Europe. When the United States elects a person of colour, one who grew up without the benefit of inheritance or patrimony, that's a clear sign of transformation, even if it's ultimately an egalitarianism among the bourgeoisie. That said, of course, this wee table from CNN is rather telling.

As we'll soon discover though, in any person's vision of how the future might be, there are always exclusions. In Hughes' poem, it's women. It won't be long before we find out who Obama's forgotten are. And it's as well to understand that Hughes' full promise will be fulfilled not when there's one Barack Obama, but where there are millions. To get from here to there, though, we'll still need to to celebrate the fall of tonight's a very real barrier (even as another is erected).
Let America Be America Again
by Langston Hughes
Let America be America again.
Let it be the dream it used to be.
Let it be the pioneer on the plain
Seeking a home where he himself is free.
(America never was America to me.) ... read more »
Raj's blog | 35 comments
Posted on 5 November, 2008 - 07:54