NYT/AP: Sister: Obama's Success Rooted in Hawaii
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: February 14, 2008
HONOLULU (AP) -- Millions of voters look at Barack Obama and see a future president. Maya Soetoro-Ng looks at her big brother and sees a father figure. Soetoro-Ng, who is nine years younger than Obama, said her mother divorced her father when she was 9, making Obama, her half brother, the father figure in her life. He toured colleges with her, showed her New York and Chicago and gave her her first novels. ''He let me know the world was large, and that I should get to know as much of it as possible,'' said Soetoro-Ng, who has been campaigning for her brother in advance of Tuesday's Democratic caucuses in Hawaii.
Obama's parents -- Barack Obama Sr., a black man from a poor village in Kenya, and Ann Dunham, a white woman whose parents grew up in Kansas -- met at the University of Hawaii and married in Honolulu. After the marriage failed, a 6-year-old Obama left Hawaii to spend four years in Indonesia with his mother and Indonesian stepfather, Lolo Soetoro. In 1971, when he was 10, Obama's mother sent him back to Honolulu to stay with his maternal grandparents.
Soetoro-Ng, who teaches history at the private LaPietra Hawaii School for Girls and night classes at the University of Hawaii, said her brother is a private man who deals with questions about his identity and other struggles in ''a very personal way.'' ''He's good though about grappling with them and moving on,'' she said in a recent phone interview. ''Today he is a man very comfortable with himself and peaceful with his sense of self.''
Obama honed his ability to appeal to a diverse group of people in the Hawaiian islands, a crossroad of cultures from throughout the Pacific, said Soetoro-Ng. ''Hawaii is the place that gave him the ability to ... understand people from a wide array of backgrounds,'' she said. ''People see themselves in him ... because he himself contains multitudes.'' His family's own diversity played no small part in developing that skill, she said.
Obama still returns almost every Christmas to visit family, indulge in local sushi, body surf at a beach on the southeastern coast of Oahu and look for sea turtles, Soetoro-Ng said. His parents and grandfather have died, and his grandmother is in poor health but has been following the presidential race closely on television, she said. ''Hawaii really is a sanctuary for him -- a safe place where he can just relax, where things are in many respects unchanged,'' Soetoro-Ng said. In his 1995 memoir, ''Dreams from My Father,'' Obama wrote about growing up with the island's unique food and culture: poi and roast pig, choice cuts of aku for sashimi and spearfishing off Kailua Bay. Living in his grandparents' downtown apartment, he attended the prestigious Punahou School and drove to parties at Army bases....
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Obama-Hawaii.html