Who was barack obama mother?
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US President Barack Obama's Mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, Grew Up in Ponca City, Oklahoma
US President Barack Obama's Mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, Grew Up in Ponca City, Oklahoma
by Hugh Pickens, February 6, 2009
David Maraniss writes in his book "Into the Story: A Writer's Journey Through Life, Politics, Sports and Loss" that "of all the relationships in Obama's life, none was deeper, more complex, and more important than that with his mother." Although Obama lived under the same roof with his mother, Madelyn Dunham, for only twelve years, "her lessons and judgements were always with him."[1] In addition. Obama has repeate
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Five Unordinary Facts About President Obama's Mother
May 12, 2012 -- intro: This Mother's Day, as Sasha and Malia Obama present their mom with handmade gifts at the White House, the stark contrasts between President Obama's family now and his family as a child growing up in Hawaii could not be more apparent.
Whereas the president and the first lady have been married for 20 years, his mother and father were married for four. Throughout the first decade of his daughters' lives the family has lived in two cities, Chicago and Washington, D.C. By the time he was 10, Obama had lived in two countries.
While Obama has put down the strongest of roots, his mother opted for wings, never staying in one place, let alone one country, for long.
"I never imagined that an American president would have a mother who had done the things that she did," Janny Scott, who wrote a biography of Obama's mother, told The New York Times.
And in her biography, "A Singular Woman," Scott quoted the president. His mother had given him, he said, "a sense of unco
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Ann Dunham
American anthropologist, mother of Barack Obama (1942–1995)
Not to be confused with the equestrian Anne Dunham.
Stanley Ann Dunham (November 29, 1942 – November 7, 1995) was an American anthropologist who specialized in the economic anthropology and rural development of Indonesia.[1] She was the mother of Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States.
Born in Wichita, Kansas, Dunham studied at the East–West Center and at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa in Honolulu, where she attained a Bachelor of Arts degree in anthropology (1967),[2] and later received Master of Arts (1974) and PhD (1992) degrees, also in anthropology.[3] She also attended the University of Washington in Seattle from 1961 to 1962. Interested in craftsmanship, weaving, and the role of women in cottage industries, Dunham's research focused on women's work on the island of Java and blacksmithing in Indonesia. To address the problem of poverty in rural villages, she created microcredit programs while working as a consultant for the United States Agenc
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