WND/ By Aaron Klein
Editor’s
note: In 2008, WND thoroughly vetted Barack Obama’s radical background.
Many of those original exclusive reports, almost entirely ignored by
the establishment news media, currently are being utilized four years
later by some media outlets in the lead up to this year’s presidential
election. From now until Election Day, WND will present original
investigations into Obama and his radical ties with bonus updates.
Although the Washington Post this past week featured an extensive
profile of Mitt Romney’s high school days, which alleged the
presidential hopeful engaged in bullying, the news media has yet to
probe important aspects of Obama’s early education that may evidence
later radical ties.
In 2009, WND exposed Obama’s attendance
in a church Sunday school that espouses far-left politics and served as
a sanctuary for draft dodgers from the Students for a Democratic
Society during the time Bill Ayers was a leader in that organization.
WND had caught up with Rev. Mike Young, pastor of First Unitarian
Church of Honolulu, who affirmed the congregation where Obama attended
Sunday school as a boy has “always” been involved in political activism.
“The Sunday school has always been and to this day still is involved in political activism,” said Young.
“We are involved in community organizing, helping churches in foreign
countries, social justice issues, like making sure inmates get dinner,”
said Young, speaking from Hawaii.
While Obama’s membership as an adult in the controversial Trinity
United Church of Christ has received widespread media attention, almost
nothing has been reported about his Sunday school attendance at First
Unitarian, a far-left activist church that may have helped provide the
president’s initial political education.
Andrew Walden, publisher and editor of the Hawaii Free Press, dug up
newspaper clippings from that period as well as print editions of “The
Roach,” an SDS publication describing the group’s draft-dodging
activism, including at the Unitarian church.
The SDS connection to Obama’s boyhood church is instrumental. During
the 2008 presidential campaign, Obama notoriously brushed off Ayers’
extremism as irrelevant since most of the Weathermen radical’s violent
actions were carried out when Obama was a kid.
“This is a guy [Ayers] who lives in my neighborhood … the notion that
somehow as a consequence of me knowing somebody who engaged in
detestable acts 40 years ago – when I was 8 years old – somehow reflects
on me and my values doesn’t make much sense,” Obama said in 2008.
Obama, however, likely learned values during his Sunday school days at the First Unitarian in the early 1970s.
After living from age 7 with his mother and step-father in Indonesia,
where he was enrolled as a Muslim under the name “Barry Soetoro” in
public schools, Obama was sent back to Hawaii at age 11 in 1971 to
reside with his grandmother. His mother moved back to Hawaii in 1972 and
stayed there until 1977, when she relocated again to Indonesia, the
world’s most populous Muslim nation.
In his autobiography, “Dreams from My Father,” Obama recounts on page
17 moving to Hawaii and being enrolled in the Unitarian church.
When Obama’s maternal grandmother died in November 2008, the memorial
service, attended by the then-presidential candidate, was held in
Honolulu’s Unitarian church.
First Unitarian Church of Honolulu |
According to an account in the Tampa Tribune, when Young reminded
Obama at his grandmother’s memorial service that he attended the
church’s Sunday school as a kid, Obama’s eyes lit up, and he turned to
his wife, Michelle, and said, “Hey, that’s right. This is where I went
to Sunday school.”
Young recounted to WND in 2009 how the bathrooms for the main
sanctuary were in full use after the service. Obama said he had to use
the restroom, so Young directed Obama and his secret service detail to
instead utilize the upper floor facilities, located at the church’s
Sunday school operations.
“When he returned,” Young recalled, “I asked Obama if the Sunday
school looked familiar. He said it didn’t, but I explained to him we
recently remodeled.”
Notorious hotbed of far-leftist activism
Young came to the Honolulu church in 1995. He claimed to WND the
church and Sunday school is non-partisan. However, just as it is now,
during Obama’s attendance in the early 1970s, the church was a hotbed of
far-leftist activism.
The church notoriously granted sanctuary to U.S. military deserters
recruited by the SDS. The deserters’ exploits at the church were front
page news for months in 1969, including articles in the New York Times.
Eventually, the police raided the church as well as another nearby
Honolulu worship house, Crossroads, that was also providing sanctuary to
draft dodgers.
Aside from its early connections to the SDS, Young confirmed to WND
his church was instrumental in founding the League of Women Voters and
activating a local branch of the American Civil Liberties Union.
The church is still active is liberal politics. It reportedly helped
to launch the Save Our Constitution effort to fight the constitutional
amendment on same-sex marriages. In 2003, the church sponsored a Death
with Dignity poll that collected a 72 percent response in favor of
end-of-life legislation.
In February 2003, the Unitarian church celebrated its 50th
anniversary at a ceremony replete with “Liberal Religion for 50 Years”
T-shirts.
The Honolulu Star-Bulletin reported bumper stickers on cars outside
the church gave insight into its members’ beliefs: “No War.” “If you
want peace, work for justice.” “An eye for an eye makes the whole world
blind.”
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