The Obama Library Skeptics
Mixed feelings on Chicago's South Side
by Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux
In the northwest corner of Washington Park, a 370-acre expanse on Chicago's South Side, there's an arboretum that could, one day, be home to Barack Obama's presidential library. In August, I drove by with Cecilia Butler, the longtime president of the Washington Park Advisory Council. "I hope, if the library goes here, they'll find some funds to move those trees," said Butler, gesturing toward a 150-year-old stand of Burr oaks. "But maybe the trees should be the least of my worries."
In May, the South Side scored a long-awaited victory when the Barack Obama Foundation announced that one of two city green spaces-Washington Park or Jackson Park-would be home to Obama's presidential library and foundation offices. (An exact location will be selected this winter.) The news capped a yearlong search that, to many Chicagoans, was too competitive for comfort. To them, the South Side, where the president once worked as a community organizer and the first lady grew up, was the only logical choice.
But in the neighborhoods of Woodlawn and Washington Park, which border the two locations, excitement is tempered with concern. That's in no small part because the library is being built in partnership with the University of Chicago, an institution with which the surrounding communities have a tense history. (Full disclosure: I'm pursuing a master's degree at the university's divinity school.) "Around here, Obama is everyone's hometown hero, there's no question about that," says Joel Hamernick, executive director of Sunshine Gospel Ministries, a faith-based nonprofit in Woodlawn, where about one-third of households live below the poverty line-and which, like Washington Park, lacks basic amenities such as grocery stores. "The problem is that the foundation is really dealing with two different hometowns: the university and the community. So far, they've mostly been talking to the university, and that in itself sends a message."