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aprilie 10, 2026
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"Germans always like to think that they have a very liberal attitude towards Africans. But when you scratch the surface you can see that they they still carry around the prejudices of their childhood. In German fairy tales black people always appear as the bogey man. You don't forget things like that so easily."
"I felt a kinship with him automatically. I was very nervous and worried about not connecting immediately and then having to be in his homeābecause I was going to be staying with him. But when I met him it was so easy. We just started talking as though weād known each other always, and that was actually something really special."
"My brother is authentic. He really believes in what he is trying to do. So thereās no hidden agenda. In that sense, he really is an open book. And I think that authenticity, that passion, and the image and the driveāit resonates with people."
"If itās just about my brother, Iāll never be a role model."
"I work for my own foundation, called Sauti Kuu (Powerful Voices) Foundation, which I started about two years ago. The focus of the work is to teach young peopleāgirls, in particularāwho are from underprivileged backgrounds, that there are valuable resources they can use to improve their lives before they look outwardly to see whether someone will give them relief food or clothing or all of the other things we give them so often in the humanitarian world."
"I had really nobody in my family whom I could talk about these things with. This passion for making a difference, the passion for helping young people find out who they are, gain strength in their own identity, those were things I was struggling with as well. I realized very young that if I donāt do it myself, nobody can really do it for me. I think young people need to be helped toward that realization."
"I manage that because Barack Obamaās in his present situation as the president of the United States is a very new thing, and itās also something very temporary. Iāve been around for a lot longer, so Iāve already defined myself long before he became the president of the United States so in my own right I have my own identity. So in that sense I am able to, well, actually Iām learning, and I keep having to adjust to being Barack Obamaās sister, who is the president of the United States. But being me as Auma Obama, that is not an issue. Itās trying to accommodate the ānewā ā this new role that Iām received in, the attention I get, this visibility I get. In terms of my identity I think Iām pretty secure, as best one can be."
"I donāt get tired of being called Barack Obamaās sister because I am. I get tired of being called Barack Obamaās āhalf-sisterā because Iām not. In our culture heās just my brother, Iām his sister, so being called Barack Obamaās sister, I have no problem with that at all. I guess it becomes an issue when people see me as an extension of him and focus on that. So I guess this sense of āweāre inviting Barack Obamaās sisterā, āweāre speaking to Barack Obamaās sisterā to get closer to Barack Obama and find out more about him. To an extent it is justified, but thatās not all that Iām about, so Iām very conscious of that, and Iām conscious of making people aware of that and trying to make that clear that is part of the conversation."
"If Iām teaching young people to use their voices and be active in making their lives a success."
"You canāt do this or that because youāre a girl. Or, You have to do this because youāre a girl. I asked Why? Iām a human being first."
"Poverty is no excuse. Development aid has to be linked to economic development,"
"Once others hear your voice loud and clear, they realise you exist."
"It's special for us and for our children and for our communities because it tells every child that if you work hard you can do whatever you want in this world. You can make you future"
"I canāt believe that these young people are just trying to demonstrate for their rights and to tell them that we understand that they need to use their voices, and we are being tear-gassed. Weāre being teargassed! We have flags and banners, nothing else."
"How can you tear-gas your own people? Listen to them. Listen to these children; theyāre the future."
"He wanted to know everything about us, everything about my father everything about our family. I took him to so many relatives. It was part of finding about his own identity."
"I'm proud of our name because my brother has really carried our name up there ... it's made its mark in the world."
"Why am I taking part? Because I love to dance. And whether I can dance wellāI'm like those who sing in the shower. I think I can dance well, but weāll see in a few days if itās really the case."