By Toby Harnden
The Daily Mail
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ushome/index.html
19 June 2012
Barack Obama with his grandparents Stanley Armour Dunham and Madelyn Dunham in New York in the 1980s.
A new biography of Barack Obama has
established that his grandfather was not, as is related in the President’s own
memoir, detained by the British in Kenya and found that claims that he was
tortured were a fabrication.
'Barack Obama: The Story' by David Maraniss
catalogues dozens of instances in which Obama deviated significantly from the
truth in his book 'Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance'. The
641-page book punctures the carefully-crafted narrative of Obama’s
life.
One of the enduring myths of Obama’s ancestry
is that his paternal grandfather Hussein Onyango Obama, who served as a cook in
the British Army, was imprisoned in 1949 by the British for helping the
anti-colonial Mau Mau rebels and held for several months.
Obama’s step-grandmother Sarah, Onyango wife, who
is still living, is quoted in the future President’s memoir, as saying: ‘One
day, the white man’s askaris came to take Onyango away, and he was placed in a
detention camp.
‘But he had been in the camp for over six
months, and when he returned to Alego he was very thin and dirty. He had
difficulty walking, and his head was full of lice. He was so ashamed, he refused
to enter his house or tell us what happened.’
In a 2008 interview, Sarah Obama claimed that
he was ‘whipped every morning and evening’ by the British. ‘They would sometimes
squeeze his testicles with metal rods. They also pierced his nails and buttocks
with a sharp pin, with his hands and legs tied together. He was lucky to
survive. Some of his fellow inmates were mutilated with castration pliers and
beaten to death with clubs.’
But Maraniss, who researched Obama’s life in
Kenya, Indonesia, Hawaii and the mainland United States, found that there were
‘no remaining records of any detention, imprisonment, or trial of Hussein
Onyango Obama’. He interviewed five people who knew Obama’s grandfather, who
died in 1979, who ‘doubted the story or were certain it did not
happen’.
This undermines the received wisdom that
Obama’s grandfather was a victim of oppression, an assumption that has in turn
fuelled theories that Obama harbours an animus towards Britain based on a
deeply-rooted rage about the way Onyango was treated.
John Ndalo Aguk, who worked with Onyango
before the alleged imprisonment and was in touch with him weekly afterwards said
he 'knew nothing' about any detention and would have
noticed if he had gone missing for several months.
Zablon Okatch, who worked with Onyango as a
servant to American diplomats after the supposed incarceration, said: ‘Hussein
was never jailed. I know that for a fact. It would have been difficult for him
to get a job with a white family, let alone a diplomat, if he once served in
jail.’
Charles Oluoch, whose father was adopted by
Onyango, said that ‘he did not have any trouble with the government in any
way'.
Dick Opar, a relative by marriage to Onyango
and a senior Kenyan police official, gave what Maraniss judged to be the most
authoritative word. ‘People make up stories,’ he said. ‘If you get arrested, you
say it was the fight for independence, but they are arrested for another
thing.
‘I would have known. I would have known. If he
was in Kamiti Prison for only a day, even if for a day, I would have
known.’
Maraniss also casts a sceptical eye on Obama’s
grandmother’s tales of racism in Kansas, doubting whether she was ever chastised
for addressing a black janitor as ‘Mister’ or ridiculed for playing with a black
girl.
Obama himself, Maraniss finds, deliberately
distorted elements of his own life to fit into a racial narrative. The author
writes that Obama presents himself in his memoir as ‘blacker and more
disaffected’ than he really was.
The memoir ‘accentuates characters drawn from
black acquaintances who played lesser roles his real life but could be used to
advance a line of thought, while leaving out or distorting the actions of
friends who happened to be white’.
In the forward to his memoir, Obama wrote that
‘for the sake of compression, some of the characters that appear are composites
of people I’ve known, and some events appear out of precise
chronology’.
But Maraniss writes that Obama’s book is
‘literature and memoir, not history and autobiography’ and concludes: ‘The
character creations and rearrangements of the book are not merely a matter of
style, devices of compression, but are also substantive.’
Writing about his schooldays, Obama created a
friend called Regina, a symbol of the authentic black American experience that
Obama yearns for.
Maraniss found, however, that Regina was based
on Caroline Boss, a white student leader at Occidental College. Regina was the
name of Boss’s Swiss grandmother.
The book also notes that Obama removed two
white roommates in Los Angeles and New York from his story. Obama himself told
Maraniss in a 90-minute interview that a racial incident involving a New York
girlfriend had in fact happened in Chicago.
A tale of the father of Obama’s Indonesian
stepfather Soewarno Martodihardjo being killed by Dutch soldiers as he fought
for Indonesian independence turns out to be ‘a concocted myth in almost all
respects’, Maraniss finds.
According to the book, both Obama’s father and
his paternal grandfather were abusive towards women and Maraniss finds that
Obama’s story that he was abandoned by his father when he was two was false – in
fact, Obama’s mother fled to Washington state a year earlier, possibly because
she was being beaten.
A character in Obama’s memoir called Ray,
portrayed as a symbol of young blackness, is in fact based on a fellow pupil who
was half Japanese, part native American and part black and was not a close
friend.
‘In the memoir Barry and Ray, could be heard
complaining about how rich white haole [upper class white Hawaiian] girls would
never date them. In fact, neither had much trouble in that regard.’
Obama notes of his own grandfather that he was
apt to create ‘history to conform with the image he wished for
himself’.
Maraniss, who also wrote an acclaimed
biography of Bill Clinton, suggests that throughout his life Obama himself,
following on from his forbears on both sides, has done the same
thing.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2161817/Obamas-grandfather-Stanley-Armour-Dunham-tortured-British.html#ixzz1yO7NBkqC
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