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Obama hails importance of family on Father's Day

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Published Date: 21 June 2009
US PRESIDENT Barack Obama urged men to become better fathers than his own as he launched a series of events to mark Father's Day.
In what has now become something of a Father's Day ritual, Obama sought to promote fatherhood by revealing how he came to understand its importance from its absence in his young life.

In a question and answer session at the White House, he told
audiences that he got little more than a basketball, his first name and his ambition from his father.

Barack Hussein Obama Sr, a Kenyan goat herder-turned-intellectual who clawed his way to scholarships and Harvard, left his family behind to get his schooling in the US, where he started another family. He then left his second wife and two-year-old Barack Jr to return to Africa with another woman.

After stints working for an oil company and the government, he fell into drink and died in a car crash when his son was 21 and a student at Columbia University.

"I don't want to be the kind of father I had," the president is quoted as telling a friend in a new book.

Obama is now appealing to men to be better fathers – reflecting years of worry about the fabric of black families and single mothers – but his message applies to everyone.

Meanwhile, British troops serving in the remotest parts of Afghanistan will receive Father's Day messages from their children within hours rather than weeks this year thanks to new technology.

Five "e-bluey" systems have been installed in isolated forward operating bases (FOBs) across Helmand Province, allowing families to send photos and greetings to their loved ones more quickly and easily than ever before.

Messages are sent electronically, then printed out in the FOB and delivered straight to the troops – by contrast, it can take weeks for hand-written letters to reach far-flung camps.

Bombardier Benjamin Stickland, from Tidworth, Hampshire, who is currently based in Musa Qala, said it was "particularly special" to keep in touch with his wife Stella and children Emily, six, Caleb, two, and Logan, 10 months, on occasions such as Father's Day.

"The introduction of the e-bluey system in the FOBs has made it so much easier to keep in touch with loved ones and that's the sort of thing that really raises morale when you're out on operations," he said.

Emily wrote in her Father's Day e-bluey message: "Dear Daddy, I miss you and can't wait to have you back. Lots of Love, Emily. xxxxx xxxxx."

The e-bluey system also allows troops on the frontline to write messages which are printed back in the UK within hours, sealed in an envelope and posted to their families.

Sergeant Dean Jackson-Smith, from Colchester, Essex, is the master chef with 2 Rifles Battle Group in FOB Jackson, based around the town of Sangin. He said receiving an e-bluey from his family – wife Lyndsey-Joanne, 25, and sons Louis, five, and Bobby, one – was "like being a kid and getting a birthday card with £10 in it".

"I'm really forward to getting home and doing normal dad things – taking them swimming and being a full-time dad again rather than a part-time one," he added.

Shelby Dawson, 14, from Middlesbrough, sent a Father's Day e-bluey to her stepfather, Bombardier Richard Lunn, of 40 Regiment Royal Artillery.

She said: "I send loads of them anyway. He sends them back as well – I think he likes to check up on me really! They're really easy to use, even my mum can use them."

Lunn, who is based at FOB Inkerman, near Sangin, said: "The e-bluey system feels more personal than just an e-mail and yet is still nearly as fast to receive and has the ability to have a picture of your loved ones attached that you can keep."

More than a million e-blueys have been sent in the past year, of which three-quarters went to troops on operations.

British service personnel deployed overseas still have access to the traditional "bluey", a free air mail letter so-called because of its colour.



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  • Last Updated: 20 June 2009 7:40 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Barack Obama
 
1

King Richard IV,

Brisbane 21/06/2009 01:06:18
Obama says "all he got was an name and a basketball" from his dad. You lucky,lucky ba$tard,what I've give to have a basketball! Growing up in the streets of Leith we would have to make do with a dolls head or a shrunken scull from a neighbouring village (Granton).Bloody favoritism etc, etc.
2

,

21/06/2009 01:14:34
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3

2dogs in D.C.,

21/06/2009 02:56:52
#1-:-)
4

Finlang,

Hong Kong 21/06/2009 03:24:32
#1 King Richard IV

Raised in coastal NE Scotland we were similarly "privileged". A' my faither gied me was a skelpit èrse fir nae reason. I became a better faither as a result, though, nae thanks t' him. Bullies rule, eh?
5

Jim A,

21/06/2009 03:39:08
#1 King Richard IV, "Growing up in the streets of Leith we would have to make do with a dolls head or a shrunken scull from a neighbouring village (Granton).Bloody favoritism etc, etc"

Luxury, you lucky lucky ba$tard.
6

Jim A,

21/06/2009 03:40:54
Oh and Happy Fathers day to all the Dad's out there.

(Fathers Day, nine months before mothers day).
7

Carolyn 1,

21/06/2009 04:27:09
I was reading today about the history of New School University in New York City. It had offered a full scholarship to Barack Obama's father, -the scholarship would have provided for him and his family. But Mr. Obama, the senior, turned it down and went to Harvard alone, divorced his wife leaving them behind in Hawaii.
It's sad, but a lot of families had the same situation of a single Mom making up for the missing Dad
8

,

21/06/2009 04:30:26
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9

,

21/06/2009 04:55:31
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Let's have the truth,

Australia 21/06/2009 10:53:20
Yes, Obama was lucky. When I was growing up our father used to thrash me and my eleven brothers and sisters to sleep every night with his leather belt.

Although, on fathers day it only lasted for half an hour.
11

,

21/06/2009 13:49:03
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12

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21/06/2009 15:12:43
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,

21/06/2009 16:17:28
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,

21/06/2009 19:19:02
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Carolyn 1,

21/06/2009 20:21:18
My comment at #11 was removed, What a surprise.

Jock@8
Still trying to dig up more dirt on Obama as usual."

No. I was reading about New School University -The school is a progressive university with an international policy think tank. I found it very interesting that they offered a scholarship to Barack Obama's father and also money for his family.

The school was founded by professors from Columbia after WWI, and during the 1930s gave jobs and sanctuary to scholars and professors under totalitarian regimes, hence why it's called university in exile. Being from Kenya the New School must have recognized future talent in Mr. Obama in that area.

Mr. Obama, the senior, decided to attend Harvard instead, despite a lower scholarship; this seems to me to be an choice made by an interesting individual, but not acknowledged. For example, did he disagree with some of the progressive policy, or was he not interested in international policy...

It can be said, that even if he wasn't raised by his father, Barack Obama, the son, followed in his fathers footsteps when he attended Columbia and then Harvard.

As to why you think Obama's father's choice of education is "dirt" I have no idea.
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22/06/2009 01:50:37
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22/06/2009 11:25:18
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