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Magic of 2008 didn’t last, but it left its mark

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How fresh and undefended the newly anointed president seemed, despite the bulletproof glass, invisible via TV, that flanked him as he walked onto the Grant Park stage with his wife and young daughters to meet all those upturned faces, all those tears.

At last.

“This is the highlight in Chicago’s history to have the first African-American president hail from Chicago and have a president from Chicago,” Mayor Daley told a New York Times reporter, with his unique eloquence.

The country seemed liberated, however momentarily, from its racist roots. And however much that moment belonged to the whole world, it belonged, just a fraction more, to Chicago.

And then time, as it does, passed.

When I pulled the old newspapers out the other day, I noticed that they’d begun to yellow and stiffen with age. The story they told, of liberation and opportunity, in Chicago and beyond, seemed dated, too, though the headline that begins “Harsh economic, political realities” could just as easily be written today.

Meanwhile, racism lives on, everywhere, and Barack Obama doesn’t live here anymore.

He rarely visits his South Side house, and when he brings his election night party back to town this week, he and it won’t feel as personal to Chicago.

This time, win or lose, he’ll greet the news from inside the black lakeside fortress known as McCormick Place. We the people will not be there, not in the all-comers way people were there last time to enjoy a freewheeling outdoor fiesta, perched on the edge of history, with a fabulous skyline view.

On Election Night 2012, the typical will replace the magical.

As for the “fresh and progressive new light” Obama’s election cast on Chicago?

The Chicago that the media broadcast to the world lately is one that, for all its glories, is still shadowed by struggling schools, political scoundrels and young people killing young people in impoverished, mostly black, neighborhoods. In other words, a city that looks a lot like it did before the election of Chicago’s own.

That’s not to say that Chicago and Obama no longer matter to each other. Not as much, but they do.
Go to Valois, the Hyde Park cafeteria-style restaurant Obama used to frequent, and you can find plenty of Obama enthusiasts ordering from the giant poster labeled “President Obama’s Favorites.”

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