Finding my voice My journey to the West Wing and the path forward

Valerie Jarrett, 1956-

Book - 2019

"When Valerie Jarrett interviewed a promising young lawyer named Michelle Robinson in July 1991 for a job in Chicago city government, neither knew that it was the first step on a path that would end in the White House. Jarrett soon became Michelle and Barack Obama's trusted personal adviser and family confidante; in the White House, she was known as the one who "got" him and helped him engage his public life. Jarrett joined the White House team on January 20, 2009 and departed with the First Family on January 20, 2017, and she was in the room--in the Oval Office, on Air Force One, and everywhere else--when it all happened. No one has as intimate a view of the Obama Years, nor one that reaches back as many decades, as Jar...rett shares in Finding My Voice. Born in Iran (where her father, a doctor, sought a better job than he could find in segregated America), Jarrett grew up in Chicago in the 60s as racial and gender barriers were being challenged. A single mother stagnating in corporate law, she found her voice in Harold Washington's historic administration, where she began a remarkable journey, ultimately becoming one of the most visible and influential African-American women of the twenty-first century. From her work ensuring equality for women and girls, advancing civil rights, reforming our criminal justice system, and improving the lives of working families, to the real stories behind some of the most stirring moments of the Obama presidency, Jarrett shares her forthright, optimistic perspective on the importance of leadership and the responsibilities of citizenship in the twenty-first century, inspiring readers to lift their own voices."--Provided by publisher.

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Published
New York City : Viking [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Valerie Jarrett, 1956- (author)
Physical Description
xii, 305 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780525558132
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1. The Gift of Freedom
  • Chapter 2. Inheritance
  • Chapter 3. The Best Laid Plans
  • Chapter 4. It's a Girl!
  • Chapter 5. The Quiet Voice
  • Chapter 6. Change from the Ground Up
  • Chapter 7. My Best Hire Ever
  • Chapter 8. The Power of Each Voice
  • Chapter 9. Drinking from a Fire Hose
  • Chapter 10. Pinch Myself Moments
  • Chapter 11. The Fight of Our Lives
  • Chapter 12. Where's My Boom?
  • Chapter 13. We Can't Wait
  • Chapter 14. True North
  • Chapter 15. The Changing of the Guard
  • Chapter 16. The Long View
  • Acknowledgments
Review by New York Times Review

In these polarized times, even liberal book buyers, the kind whose nostalgia has fueled a cottage industry of books from former aides to President Barack Obama, have been split into two groups: those who care about Alyssa Mastromonaco's irritable bowel syndrome and those who do not. If you do not wish to learn that Obama's deputy chief of staff for operations got crippling diarrhea on several continents, and must eat a bland breakfast of muesli and carry Gas-X and ginger chews in her purse, then Mastromonaco's buoyant memoir/extended advice column, "So Here's the Thing...," may not be for you. But for young women with dreams of working in the White House, there's nothing bland about Mastromonaco's story. Her audiobook narration sounds like a quirky, successful girlfriend offering unsolicited, occasionally useful, always funny life and career advice. In addition to the I.B.S., she also suffers from "deliciously painful period zits" each month and tends to forget tampons (who among us?), describing herself as a "fly-bythe-seat-of-my-(stained)-pants kind of girl." Senior White House staff - they're just like us! Mastromonaco gets that her oversharing isn't for everyone. Scanning Amazon reviews of her first White House memoir, she reads responses like "Gross!" and "#TMI." But if there is one lesson to take away from "So Here's the Thing," it's that we should all lean in to #TMI. Co-written (but not ??-narrated) with Lauren Oyler in a breezy, engaging voice, the prose seems to be trying (maybe too hard) to emulate Nora Ephron, though it's unclear whether it's Mastromonaco or her co-author with the gift of gab. "So Here's the Thing," named after a habitual phrase Mastromonaco uses in meetings, weaves in requisite dollops of Obama hagiography. She devotes an entire chapter to "Why You Should Always Listen to Michelle Obama." Mastromonaco comes off as spunky and down-to-earth, describing how she went from babysitter and grocerystore bagger to political director for then-Senator Obama. And yet reading about her upbringing in Rhinebeck, N.Y., I started to think of some of Mastromonaco's dilemmas as Problems I Wish I Had: Her dad gifted her multiple cars well into adulthood, including a "hideously ugly teal Corolla" that she drove to work for Senator John Kerry. She stresses that her perfect husband, David Krone, was so much wealthier than she was (there are Mr. Big comparisons). Would her 14-pound cat and hodgepodge of knickknacks have a place in his elegantly decorated 3,000-square-foot home? "I mean, Crate & Barrel is nice but it's not that nice." It's not? If anyone should come off as privileged, it's Amber Tamblyn, an actor whose entire life, starting with a role on "General Hospital" when she was 11, has revolved around a tableau of Hollywood glitz. And yet in "Era of Ignition," Tamblyn recognizes on every page that being white, wealthy and cisgender makes her an inherently unreliable narrator. The admission of her own blind spots makes this manifesto of female empowerment all the more powerful. Tamblyn, who brings her forceful, theatrical voice to reading her own audiobook, doesn't hold back on deeply personal, often gripping anecdotes. But where Mastromonaco employs levity and aplomb to charm readers, Tamblyn writes with a gnawing, visceral directness to thrust them into action. Tamblyn opens with an instant gut punch, describing how, at 29, she told her husband that she was pregnant and planning to terminate. "I cannot remember any other time in my life when I had inflicted this type of pain on another person." When she was 21, an ex-boyfriend dragged her out of a club by her neck and vagina shouting, "This is mine." Tamblyn relayed the story on Instagram in 2016 when Trump was heard on tape bragging about groping women. The news media condemned Tamblyn's "sexual assault," and she "realized I had never called it that before, not even in my own head." What followed was an awakening. She realized that so many trials of her career had to do with her gender. At one point her agent urged her to lose weight (she was 5-foot-7 and 120 pounds), pointing to Nicole Kidman's body as the platonic ideal. It all seemed like Hollywood as usual until the 2016 election, when she says the current "era of ignition" kicked off. Tamblyn, a die-hard Hillary supporter, describes a scene at the Javíts Center on election night. Pregnant with her daughter, she sipped liquid Zantac as other celebrity supporters including Katy Perry and Amy Schumer downed chardonnay. As election night goes from bad to worse, Tamblyn has the "dark realization" that she would bring her daughter into a "world of deeply ingrained misogyny." Then came the Women's March and #MeToo stories. Tamblyn channeled her rage into helping found the Time's Up movement, her newborn baby inspiring her every step: "After having Marlow, I was thrust from my own self-centered wallowing into a sort of permanent projectile optimism." Tamblyn scoffs at the idea of a sisterhood: "Who hates women more than Donald Trump does? Other women." She is particularly hard on white feminists, including herself, whom she calls on to "accept that we are guilty of doing or saying something racist almost daily." To that end, Tamblyn turns chapters over to Meredith Talusan, a nonbinary transgender author, and to the poet Airea D. Matthews, whose languid voice explains the persistent alienation" felt by black women. That alienation is something that Valerie Jarrett, a close friend and longtime senior adviser to President Obama, grapples with in "Finding My Voice." Jarrett was born in Shiraz, Iran, where her father worked as a doctor. Back in Chicago, the fight for civil rights flared, but Jarrett lived in a lovely house in cosmopolitan comfort. "While black people in America were marching for the right to enjoy public pools and parks, our neighborhood had lush green spaces where I could run and play and a big blue swimming pool." Later she learns that her father moved the family the 7,000 miles from Chicago's South Side because of Jim Crow; he couldn't practice pathology in most American hospitals. Jarrett is such an Obama-era fixture that it's easy to forget she'd been a trailblazer well before that fateful resume of a promising young Harvard Law grad named Michelle Robinson landed on her desk in 1991. That interview, of course, led to Jarrett's introduction to Michelle's then-fiancé, Barack Obama, and a legendary political alliance (and friendship) was born. Not surprisingly, Jarrett devotes much of her story to this relationship, providing behind-the-scenes color (sometimes too much) on Obama's rise and a greatest-hits reel of his administration. She doesn't mince words, however, about the "general macho atmosphere" that permeated the West Wing in the early months of their tenure. It's obvious in Jarrett's narration that she isn't as comfortable with #TMI as Mastromonaco, nor as practiced a performer as Tamblyn, but that makes the intimate moments she does share, in a familiar yet professional voice, all the more evocative. Like the times Obama, sensing correctly that Jarrett was going through a menopausal hot flash, would crank up the A.C. in the car and silently hand her a handkerchief. "He just knew." Jarrett had charted an ideal path for herself - "law school, work, marriage, baby, bliss." Then her marriage to "Bobby" (Dr. William Robert Jarrett, who died in 1993) imploded. She was a single mom and a miserable, mediocre associate at a law firm. The separation and subsequent soul-searching ("my plans were crumbling around me") prompted her to leave the firm and climb into Chicago politics. The rest was history. Like Mastromonaco's story of hustling her way to the White House from bagging groceries, and Tamblyn's tale of enduring body shaming and industry abuse before discovering the activist within her, Jarrett's early struggles relay a similar life lesson. Her early, mistaken view was that "it was somehow a sign of strength if I had the self-control to never waver from my intended course." For all three authors, it was precisely the wavering that led them to where they are. AMY CHOZICK is a writer at large for The Times and the author of "Chasing Hillary."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

History may not give Jarrett all the credit she deserves. When pressed, most might identify her simply as First Friend, based on her long-standing relationship with both Michelle and Barack Obama. And while true, that's a pejorative that fails to address the numerous professional accomplishments that preceded her association with the Obamas. Stanford-educated and holding a law degree from the University of Michigan, Jarrett gave up her career track at Chicago white-shoe law firms to enter public service, working with Mayors Harold Washington and Richard M. Daley to manage key city agencies. Jarrett's quiet determination, unparalleled work ethic, and deep commitment to a city rich with family roots won her respect at a time when, as a newly divorced single mother, she needed it most. Revisiting her illustrious career, from inner-city Chicago to the White House and beyond, Jarrett reveals the life-changing events that, though perilous at the time, enabled her to become a virtuoso corporate and philanthropic leader, and a valued presidential adviser.--Carol Haggas Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this insightful political insider memoir, Jarrett, a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama, tells of her career in the government. Raised in a prominent black family in 1960s Chicago, Jarrett graduated from Stanford and the University of Michigan Law School, and returned home to work in private practice. Realizing that public service was her calling, Jarrett took a job in the office of Mayor Harold Washington ("the chance to work with incredibly talented public servants gave me a purpose and satisfaction I'd never felt before"). As Mayor Richard Daley's deputy chief of staff in 1989, Jarrett hired Michelle Robinson, fiancée of Barack Obama, and the three forged a close-knit friendship; Jarrett later agreed to chair Obama's Senate race finance committee and to be an advisor for his presidential bid. After Obama's election, she became his senior adviser and writes proudly about how satisfying it was to have been part of an administration that addressed such issues as health care and passed a bill to allow "openly gay men and women in the military." Along the way, she includes such memorable moments as when a speechless Michael Jordan learned he would be awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Jarrett movingly captures life as a public servant in this detailed, well-told memoir (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

Jarrett's brisk, even-tempered memoir follows the former senior adviser to President Barack Obama from a childhood spent first in Iran and then in Chicago through her experiences during Obama's two terms in office.The author's parents moved to Iran in 1955 because her father knew that as a black physician, he would have better opportunities there than in the United States. She was born there the next year, and five years later, the family returned to Chicago, where her mother's large extended family lived. After law school and a stint in corporate law, she began working in Chicago city government. In 1991, while she was working as Mayor Richard Daley's deputy chief of staff, she hired a young Michelle Robinson, then Barack Obama's fiancee. She went on to become friends with Robinson and Obama and worked on Obama's campaign before serving in the White House. Jarrett also shares her personal struggles: escaping a difficult marriage, raising a daughter on her own, overcoming a fear of public speaking, enduring menopause, and experiencing the pressure "to work twice as hard and be twice as good as white people." Her close relationship with the Obamas allows for an intimate view of events on the campaign trail and life in the White House. Her account of her years in the administration shifts smoothly between her own work life, including the mentoring of young female staff members, and a broader consideration of the administration's goals. She gives special consideration to the challenges of passing the Affordable Care Act, and while she clearly chooses her words carefully, her frustration with what she sees as the recalcitrant Republicans in Congress sometimes breaks through. Throughout, she emphasizes the importance of communication among people of differing political views and the necessity of change based in local communities rather than imposed on a national level.A modest and insightful addition to a growing shelf of books by insiders from the Obama administration. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1   The Gift of Freedom   My earliest memories are of my childhood in Iran, and they are all wonderful . Like everyone, I've no doubt blurred my actual child‑ hood memories with stories recounted by my parents and my own vivid imagination, but my recollection of my first five years is that they were perfect. I was born in Shiraz, a city over four thousand years old, known for its beautiful gardens and for being the home of artists, scholars, and poets during the height of the Persian Empire. My mother recently reminded me that it actually snowed in the win‑ ter, but all I can remember is blue skies and warm, bright sunshine. The gated community where we lived was actually a compound for the fami‑ lies of the thirty or so doctors who worked at the hospital, many who came from all over the world. We lived in a comfortable two‑bedroom bungalow surrounded by trees and flower beds. There was a park with tennis courts and a huge swimming pool. Every year, we'd plant a Christ‑ mas tree in a patch of nearby woods and cut it down in December. We even had a small zoo on the compound, with mountain sheep, goats, a bear, and a jackal, which was allowed to roam free around the compound and was known to take toys and hide them from time to time. I felt I had all I could possibly want or need in that special place. Even at the age of three or four, I was free to wander around the com‑ pound as I chose, always under the watchful eye of Saroya, my nanny and our family's housekeeper and cook. Saroya was small, barely five feet tall, and always gentle and kind. She had a son of her own, whom she left with her mother during the day while at work. We were always joined on these walks by our Belgian shepherd, Dovuum, whom I nick‑ named Doddy. Once time I fell down in the street. A passerby saw me crying and approached me to see if I was OK, only to have Doddy snarl and keep him at bay. Someone ran to find Saroya and she came, whisked me up in her arms, and took me home, with Doddy following dutifully behind. They were my protectors. The pool was my favorite place of all. My mother taught me to swim before I could walk, and I loved diving and splashing about in the deep end for hours and hours. My parents had a good friend, Tom, whose real name was Thelma. She headed the Iran‑America Society and her husband, Dale, was an engineer with Point Four, an American foreign assistance program. Tom did all sorts of activities with me, like taking me to a local preschool. She encouraged me to practice English with the young Iranian students who were trying to learn the language. But I would speak only in Farsi--an early sign of my long‑standing desire to be like everyone else. It was in the pool, though, that Tom and I had the most fun. She'd put me on her shoulders, then she would climb on Dale's shoulders, and Dale would slowly walk down into the deep end until we were all well submerged, then I would pop up to the surface, laughing and coughing from swallowing water. Once Doddy, always my bodyguard, spotted our circus act and tried to rescue me by diving in the water. Chaos ensued, as dogs were strictly forbidden in the pool. Outside the compound, my parents and I often explored the city and the surrounding countryside. My best friend was Roshan Firouz, an American‑Iranian girl about my age. Her parents, Narsi and Louise, were my parents' best friends, and we were always running around to‑ gether at one of the two Firouz farms, Big Lou and Little Lou, both named after Louise and their relative size. Roshan was scrappy and forever coaxing me into mischievous adventures. They had a huge don‑ key, Laura, and we'd climb up on her and ride her around and play endless games of make‑believe, with all the different farm animals as the characters in our stories. My parents and I traveled all over, but one of our favorite day trips was to the ancient Persian city of Persepolis, where I'd climb up and down the old stone stairs, run circles around the columns, and hide among the monuments. Either we'd pack a picnic lunch for the day or my parents would take me to a hotel nearby for a treat. An afternoon entertaining myself among the ruins, topped off by a delicious dinner prepared by Saroya back home, made for a day I still treasure. Saroya did all our shopping and made all our meals. While kids my age in America were eating hot dogs, Oreos, and peanut‑butter‑and‑ jelly sandwiches, I was devouring her lamb, rice pilaf, and the cool cu‑ cumbers and yogurt of mast‑o‑khiar . She cooked with saffron, cumin, and dried barberry, spices we'd buy when she took me to Vakil Bazaar in the old city. I loved to smell all the fragrant and colorful spices heaped in copper pots and burlap sacks. Traveling the world as an adult, par‑ ticularly when visiting different bazaars and markets throughout the Middle East, the familiar smells always take me back to those early years and make me smile. To this day I still love all Persian food (except eggplant), but my fa‑ vorite dish is any kind of rice. No meal in my home is complete without a serving of rice. After we moved back to America, it took me until high school to develop a taste for a good hot dog at a baseball game, and it was only a few years ago that my daughter convinced me to try peanut butter. Not bad. I'm often asked why I was born in Iran. My father once said I should tell people, "Because that's where my mother was at the time of my birth." But that answer never seems to satisfy anyone, particularly bor‑ der guards and customs officials. The truth about why we were in Iran is somewhat complicated, but what it boils down to is really quite simple: we were there because my father was black, and he needed a job. I arrived in this world just as America's civil rights movement was gaining momentum. The rights and opportunities for which black peo‑ ple were marching and fighting in the United States my parents and I already enjoyed in Iran. While black families were often confined to redlined slums, we had a lovely house in a cosmopolitan neighborhood. While black people in America were marching for the right to enjoy public pools and parks, our neighborhood had lush green spaces where I could run and play and a big blue swimming pool, where people stared only when my dog jumped in the pool with me. While black students in the United States had just begun to be bused into hostile white neighborhoods to integrate the schools, I attended an excellent school with loving teachers, filled with kids from all over the world. My father, Jim Bowman, had always wanted to be a doctor. He grew up in Washington, DC, in the 1930s and '40s. In DC in that era, his life experiences were determined by the color of his skin, including where he could attend school. Living in DC, however, meant he was relatively fortunate. The son of a prominent dentist in the city's small black middle class, he was able to attend Dunbar High School, the pre‑ mier high school in Washington, and perhaps the country, for black Americans at the time. As oppressive and unjust as segregation was, it did mean that black scholars with PhDs from Harvard and other Ivy League schools often had no choice but to teach at the high school level, at high schools like Dunbar. So at a time when few black children had access to quality schools, my father's education was first‑rate--and the lessons stuck. His grammar was impeccable, and he corrected mine throughout my life, even when it made me sound ridiculous. I used to ring the doorbell when we visited my grandmother, and when she said, "Who is it?" I wasn't allowed to say, "It's me." I had to say, "It is I." All that was missing was " Hark! " Graduating at the top of his class at the age of sixteen, my father went on to Howard University, the famous historically black university in DC and his own father's alma mater. He went there as an under‑ graduate and for medical school. Had my dad chosen a different career, he might have found more doors opened to him, but as the civil rights movement began making inroads across the color line, medicine would prove to be one of Jim Crow's most tenacious holdouts. Which is unsur‑ prising, given the intimate nature of doctor/patient relationships and the pervasive racist myths about black people and disease that kept us from sharing swimming pools, let alone hospitals, with white people. Desegregation in health care didn't begin in earnest until the passage in 1965 of Medicare and Medicaid, programs that threatened to strip federal funding from any hospital that engaged in racial discrimination. When he graduated from medical school in 1947, he joined DC's Freedmen's  Hospital  for a one‑year residency. During that year his mother, only thirty‑eight years old, died in Freedmen's from hyperten‑ sion while he was on duty. In a quiet moment of openness, he once shared with me how helpless and guilty he felt that he could not save her. From Freedman's he was offered a huge opportunity: a residency at Chicago's prestigious St. Luke's Hospital. He was the hospital's first, and only, black resident. After attending only black schools, he was thrilled to break the color barrier, but even then the door opened only partway. He wasn't allowed to live with his white colleagues in the resi‑ dents' quarters adjacent to the hospital. He had to find room and board on the black side of town, five miles away from the hospital, and travel by bus or streetcar--a very long and tiring commute after a thirty‑six‑ hour shift. He was also instructed to enter the hospital through the back door. This he refused to do. He showed up on his first day and walked through the front door like all the white doctors. Word spread through the black staff. The next morning many of them were waiting out front when he arrived, and they all walked in together. Nobody objected. Chicago was like that. It had a patchy attitude toward segregation. Some things were allowed, some weren't. Marshall Field's, the famous department store, was a classic example. Black people could shop at Marshall Field's, but they couldn't work there. It was a checkered land‑ scape that my mother's family had learned to navigate. Being one of the most politically connected black families of the time, they'd managed to carve out a measure of status and access unavailable to most black Chicagoans. They were second‑class citizens nonetheless, and their relative degree of freedom existed in a very narrow lane. For my mother, Barbara, there was no equivalent to Dunbar High School; in Chicago, all black schools offered second‑rate educations. Fortunately, her father, Robert Rochon Taylor, was a leading figure in Chicago business and civic circles, even outside the black community. He came to prominence through the city's real estate, banking, and insurance industries, which led to his appointment as the first black chairman of the Chicago Housing Authority in 1941. Thanks to his prominence, he was able to obtain special permission for my mother and her older sister Lauranita to leave their all‑black neighborhood and travel to the then white neighborhood of South Englewood to go to its all‑white elementary and high schools. That put her on a path to attend the Northfield School for Girls, an elite prep school in Massachusetts, which in turn opened the door for her to enroll at the small, predo‑ minantly white, all‑female Sarah Lawrence College in the Bronx, New York. During trips home from college--and after my dad flubbed a blind date with her sister--my mom and dad started dating and soon fell in love. After my dad proposed and my mom accepted, they knew they first had to get past her father, who had strong opinions on priorities for his family. And so, in a story that he would retell many times over the years, my dad came up with an ingenious strategy to get his way. Over a game of bridge one evening with my grandparents, my dad took an extra long time to study his hand, and then, when he finally played his card, he casually tossed in, "By the way, Barbara and I are getting married." It was classic Jimmy Bowman: deliciously provocative with perfect comic timing. But this was no joking matter. A bit flabbergasted, my grandfather finally replied, "But, you know, Barbara has to finish col‑ lege first." "That's  good," my dad said, "because I can't  afford to pay her tuition." And so my parents were married on June 17, 1950, two weeks after Mom graduated from Sarah Lawrence. My dad finished his residency that same year, but despite his sterling credentials, he still enjoyed limited job prospects. In most major cities, even the segregated, Jim Crow hospitals that served black patients were often white owned and refused to hire black doctors and nurses. Like Marshall Field's, you could shop there but you couldn't work there. With few options to choose from, my father accepted the position of chair of pathology at Chicago's Provident Hospital. Established in 1891, it was the first black‑owned‑and‑operated hospital in the United States and, as such, one of the only places that would hire him. While at Howard my father had joined the Army ROTC, graduat‑ ing as a second lieutenant, and as the Korean War escalated in 1953, the army called him up and stationed him at an army hospital in Colorado, where he and my mom lived for two years. Upon being honorably dis‑ charged in 1955, he told my mother he didn't want to return to Provi‑ dent or, as he put it, "anything that smacked of segregation." He applied to the Public Health Service, which offered him a job in Liberia. But the ambassador to Liberia, who was a friend of my parents, told them, "Do not, under any circumstances, come here." It simply wasn't safe. Then, when it seemed like Provident would be the only viable option, a white colleague of my father's was offered a job as the chair of pathology at the Nemazee Hospital, a newly constructed facility just staffing up in Shiraz, Iran. He declined the position but passed along the contact in‑ formation to my dad. Iran, which is a little over seven thousand miles from the South Side of Chicago, had certainly never been on my parents' radar. But after many lengthy discussions, my parents decided that it would be the ad‑ venture of a lifetime, a chance for them to be alone together away from all that was familiar, including the racism and discrimination they'd endured their entire lives. So my father applied, and received an offer. When they announced to family and close friends that he was considering the job, nobody was shocked since many knew they were going abroad, but my grandparents wanted to keep the family close and this was too far away. However, my parents had made up their minds. And so he accepted the job, and off they went. The day my parents boarded the plane for Iran, a country on the other side of the world, they didn't speak a word of the language, knew not a soul, and knew nothing about the nation or its government be‑ yond what they learned from the Encyclopedia Britannica--nothing about its people or its customs. All they knew about this strange and exotic place was that it was willing to give a black doctor an opportu‑ nity far better than any available to him in the country where he was born. Which is how, on November 14, 1956, after a "very challenging la‑ bor" and a "risky high‑forceps delivery"--as my mother frequently de‑ scribed it during my youth, much to my embarrassment--I entered this world, the second baby born at Nemazee Hospital. I was always relieved that they'd practiced on one other baby first.   Had I merely spent those first five years of my life in Iran, that would have been adventure enough for a lifetime. But from there my father's career really took off. Trained as a pathologist, at Namazi he became interested in genetics, and in particular in favism, a genetic blood disorder that produces an allergic reaction to fava beans. It's caused by an enzyme deficiency and, being hereditary,  is common among certain ethnic groups in Iran. What followed was a lifelong study of inherited blood diseases throughout the Middle East, Africa, Mexico, and America. His work in common enzyme deficiencies later proved important to the larger field of inherited diseases and minority health. Starting in Iran, and many summers of my youth in the years to come, we traveled the world collecting blood samples for genetic testing. We went to remote deserts, dense cities, rural villages, isolated rainforest jungles--the constant blur of new places, people, customs, and food all seemed perfectly normal to me. My parents left me with babysitters every now and then, but mostly I was by their side, perfectly content to label blood vials and give out Band‑Aids for hours anywhere from Africa's jungles to rural communities in Mexico. My mom likes to tell a story that happened when I was nine years old and we were in Ghana. She'd given me a little money to spend on the trip. She looked out her hotel window to see me squatting with the street vendors selling tourist trinkets. Having learned in Iran, I could stay in that position with the best of them. And bargain, too. I returned an hour later, hap‑ pily carting an armload of souvenirs  I'd secured with my excellent ne‑ gotiating skills--skills that would later serve me well in the political worlds of Chicago and Washington, DC. We went everywhere and did everything. While I was still in dia‑ pers, we drove from London to Shiraz. In Russia my father made me try caviar, which I loved, and took me to Lenin's tomb, which I absolutely did not. In Egypt I delighted in riding camels past the Sphinx and the Great Pyramid, and in India I was mesmerized by snake charmers and water buffalo under the towering spires of the Taj Mahal. In Uganda our plane touched down in the middle of a military coup, after curfew, and my parents had to convince armed soldiers to wave us through numerous checkpoints to reach our hotel. In the villages of the Yucatán, I brushed my teeth with soft drinks and ate peppers so hot they seemed to set my mouth on fire, which I then tried to wash down with a big swig of Coca‑Cola. Which I then learned is something you should never, never do. One story, which became an oft‑repeated tale about my dad, took place in Mexico City. We awoke in the middle of the night to find our hotel swaying like a ship at sea--an earthquake! My mother swept me up in her arms and ran for the lobby, calling back to my father to hurry up. "I'm right behind you," he said. It was madness, people running down the stairs into the lobby in their underwear, screaming in fear. My mother and I waited in the lobby a good twenty minutes and only then, right after management had given the all clear, did my father ap‑ pear, having taken the time to neatly dress in his robe, pajamas, and slippers, casually emerging without an ounce of concern. I think he might have even taken the time to shave. The next morning the park‑ ing lot was empty. All of the tourists had decided to abandon their plans and evacuate. My parents simply laughed. A mere earthquake, even one that left electrical wires dangling in the street, would not intimidate them. I always knew my father as confident, fearless, and cheerful--a glass‑half‑full type of person. But before living in Iran, that natural exuberance had always been dimmed  by the brutal realities of Jim Crow, by the limitations on what he would be permitted to achieve, the constant blatant and subtle reminders  that he was considered "less than" because he was black--a belief that he had internalized,  as so many marginalized people do, even though it wasn't true. But after his experience in Iran, and certainly by the time we started to travel the world for his research, he had emerged from the cloud of his own limi‑ tations. He was liberated. He was no longer defined by the color of his skin. He was no longer a "colored" doctor. He was simply a doctor, a respected chief pathologist, a published academic. His self‑confidence had grown along with his reputation. He'd ex‑ perienced success based on merit and hard work, just as my mother had years earlier by the time she graduated from college, and thanks to both of them I grew up believing that was possible. It's easier to be what you see. My parents were my role models, and they gave me the early im‑ pression that my potential in life was limited only by my willingness to work hard, combined with a bit of luck. My mom and dad had taken me across the color line and around the world, showing me what was possible, so that I could dare to imagine any kind of life I wanted. It was only years later that I truly understood how lucky I was. The freedom of mind that I had always known, and that had taken my fa‑ ther thirty‑odd years to achieve, was the same freedom that brave little children my own age had risked their lives to attain--children like Ruby Bridges, who at age six in 1960 was the first black child to deseg‑ regate the all‑white William Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans. I met Ruby Bridges fifty‑one years later when President Obama invited her to the White House to view the famous Norman Rockwell painting of her walking to school, hair perfectly combed and wearing a starched white dress, escorted by large armed guards. I told Ruby in the Oval Office that I was in awe of her courage and bravery at such a young age, and that she had fought for a freedom that I took for granted. I had been given that freedom as a gift, from birth. Even after mov‑ ing to the South Side of Chicago, where the laws and social customs still tried to curtail opportunities for black people, I was already free-- and no one could take that away from me.   The segregation my parents had left behind in 1955 was still alive and well in 1961. Still, they were homesick. My mother's father had died when I was only six months old, and we'd missed the funeral. My mother was very close with her family, and she wanted me to know them. They always knew we'd leave Iran eventually. It just so happened that I was the one who hastened their decision along. Iran may have been a magical place for me, as the child of a Western doctor, but that certainly didn't mean Iran was a magical place for ev‑ eryone. Mohammad  Reza Shah, the last shah of Iran, had pursued many modernizing reforms, among them the improvements  to the health care system that had built the hospital that brought us there. But he was simultaneously a brutal dictator who established the SAVAK, the secret police force that terrorized dissidents and disappeared people at will. Iran also had massive inequalities of wealth and a rigid caste system. Those who were wealthy were very wealthy and lived very well. Those who were poor lived in unspeakable conditions. I can vividly remember seeing people with severe disabilities  begging  on the streets, shunned by society and with no means of support and no place to go. Those in the lowest caste who were lucky enough to have jobs often worked as ser‑ vants, and it was socially acceptable to abuse and beat them and treat them as less than human. They generally accepted it as their lot, grate‑ ful to have any employment or income at all. Saroya was a member of that class. Twenty‑eight years old, she had only a sixth‑grade education. I loved her dearly, but as I neared age five, I showed a sign that I had begun to internalize the mores of Iran's caste system as my own. My mother walked into the house one afternoon to see me giving Saroya a swift kick, as hard as I could, probably because she'd told me I couldn't do what I wanted to do, though I don't remem‑ ber exactly why. Horrified, my mother immediately swooped in, gave my rear end a swat, and yelled, " No! " Now it was Soroya's turn to be horrified. She turned to my mother and said, "Why did you do that?" "Because she kicked you!" "No, no," Saroya said, "it's fine." "No," my mother replied, "it's not fine." Saroya then went on to explain that it was OK for us to kick her and beat her whenever we liked. She knew that was her place. She was grate‑ ful that we let her work in our home, and she was scared we would think that she thought she was above her station. My parents had never adopted Iran's social norms as their own, and they'd always treated everyone with respect, no matter their standing. Having grown up under Jim Crow in America, for them to see their daughter behaving the way I had was totally unacceptable. That night, as we sat down to dinner, my mother turned to my father and said, "I think it's time for us to leave Iran." Excerpted from Finding My Voice: My Journey to the West Wing and the Path Forward by Valerie Jarrett All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.