President Obama launched his boldest efforts yet to remedy the dismal plight of young minority men and boys on Thursday, delivering a very personal message in which he urged Americans of all races and political affiliations to help create stronger pathways to success for this historically marginalized group.
“The plain fact is there are some Americans who in the aggregate are consistently doing worse in our society, groups that have had the odds stacked against them in unique ways that require unique solutions, groups who’ve seen fewer opportunity that have spanned generations,” Obama said during an event to launch his “My Brother’s Keeper” initiative. “By almost every measure the group that is facing some of the most severe challenges in the 21st century, in this country, are boys and men of color.”
“We’ve become numb to the statistics. We’re not surprised by them, we take them as the norm. We just assume this is an inevitable part of American life instead of the outrage that it is,” he said, reciting a litany of disparities in academic success and incarceration for young minority men.
Obama’s remarks on Thursday were at once personal, relating his own experiences as a young man of color being raised by a single mother, who didn’t know his father, didn’t always take school seriously and experimented with drugs.
“I made bad choices. I got high without always thinking about the harm it could do. I didn’t always take school as seriously as I should have. I made excuses. Sometimes I sold myself short,” Obama said.
“I repeat my story now because I firmly believe every child deserves the same chances that I had and that’s why we’re here today to do what we can in this year of action to give more young Americans the support they need ot make good choices, overcome obstacles and achieve their dreams.”
While the president has been chided in the past for his avoidance of taking racial issues head on, he proved again to be his most resonate when speaking openly and honestly about his own life experience. His remarks were at once personal and pointed, weaving in the kind of bootstrap responsibility that he often uses when addressing young black men and their lot in life (and been criticized for).
He urged young minority men to drop the excuses and not allow naysayers to dash their confidence. And parents to turn off the television and spend more time helping their kids with their homework.
Among the young men standing with the president were members of a group called “Becoming a Man,” whom Obama met during a trip to a Chicago high school last year. During that trip Obama opened up about his own struggles growing up, saying that his experience differed only in that he grew up in a more forgiving community.
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In the months after his meeting with the young men of “Becoming a Man,” the president set out to take action. He used his power to convene to pull together philanthropists, business leaders and community groups to pledge their support in resources to help knock down key barriers in between young men of color and greater successes.
A slew of major philanthropic foundations—including the Annie E. Casey Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, The Atlantic Philanthropies, The California Endowment, The Ford Foundation, The John and James L. Knight Foundation, The Open Society Foundations, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, The W.K. Kellogg Foundation and The Kapor Center for Social Impact— have already invested $150 million in support of the initiative. Over the next five years, these foundations will seek to invest another $200 million along with additional investments the group hopes to secure from other philanthropists and businesses.
“None of this is going to be easy. It’s not a one-year proposition. It’s not a two year-proposition. It’s going to take time,” Obama said. “We’re dealing with complicated issue that run deep in our history, run deep in our society and are entrenched in our mines.”
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Over the next three months, the foundations will work with the administration to coordinate these investments.
Shawn Dove, manager of The Open Society Foundation’s Campaign for Black Male Achievement, said Thursday’s launch was significant and historic.
“I think it’s a significant day in the history of America, that a standing president would make a stand and manifest his mantra, opportunity for all, specifically in lifting up black men and boys. When we look at the history of this country and the history specifically of black men and boys in America, it certainly is a historic day,” Dove said.
The funding, Dove admits, will not undo or reverse immediately a dismal state that has been centuries of institutional racism and oppression in the making, but continues to sew the seeds of sustainability for such efforts.
“This is a significant leap in getting unlikely partners involved on this issue, and the ability of the president from his platform to say, this is a national domestic priority. What it also does is take this issue out of the blocks of this being a black American problem, and puts it in the framing of, we can’t succeed as a country if a large portion of our population is marginalized and doesn’t have access to opportunities,” he said.
The 10 initial funders of the initiative, in an open letter signed by the group, said “It is in the nation’s best interest to remove the hurdles that prevent so many of our promising young people from becoming productive members of society.”
“Our country cannot afford for them to fail,” the letter continued.
Many of the initial 10 funders— billionaire former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg’s group, Bloomberg Philanthropies joined this week— have for years been working with young minority men in various capacities. But “My Brother’s Keeper” has galvanized these philanthropic organizations, some of most powerful and in the nation, around a common cause.









