The Obama Presidency ON THE COVER Faces In The Crowd Local Jews witness history at Barack Obama's inauguration. Robin Schwartz Special to the Jewish News W hen our new president looked out at the vast crowd during his Jan. 20 swearing- in ceremony, it must have been a blur. A sea of roughly two million people of all shapes, sizes, colors, races, creeds and religions poured across the National Mall in Washington, D.C., amid heavy security. They watched and cheered as Barack Obama took the oath of office to become our 44th president and the first African American President of the United States. Among those standing in the cold, wav- ing American flags and even shedding a few tears were four members of the Schram family of West Bloomfield. Zack Schram, 30, an attorney with the Senate Subcommittee on Investigations, hustled for tickets in the weeks leading up to the big event, scoring four seats together in the "purple section" so his parents, Judi and Brad, and sister, Alison, could join him. "The overall experience was exhilarat- ing and absolutely unforgettable," said Judi Schram. "We were transfixed on the pageantry we were viewing in the dis- tance and on the larger-than-life video screen looming above us. We were all moved beyond description." Her husband was struck by the diverse mix of people surrounding him and the electric energy that rippled through the crowd. "It was like Woodstock without the mud," said Brad Schram. "I could really sense an air of empowerment that's contagious for many people who felt isolated and out of the mainstream for so many generations. As a Jew, who has always been reminded that I was in a minority and never 'part of the club, I really related to the overwhelming sense of pride." For Zack, who worked on the Obama campaign out of the candidate's national headquarters in Chicago, it was an opportunity to savor victory and the fruits of his labor. "When our new president said, We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals, a cathartic, emotional cheer met his words;' Zack recalled. "When he said to tyrants, cknow that your people will judge you by what you build, not what you destroy; I looked at the gleaming Capitol, decked in red, white and blue bunting, and marveled at the democracy we have built:' Spirit Of Cooperation Elsewhere in the crowd, Lisa and Hannan Lis of Farmington Hills, who helped arrange a Detroit fundraiser for Obama when he was running for president, were busy snapping photos in every direction. Their online album is filled with images of everything they could see from their vantage point: police officers on alert, bundled up onlookers, marching bands performing, news reporters working, the presiden- tial limo streaking by with the Obama family smiling and waving inside, and the long motorcade down Pennsylvania Avenue. "Everyone felt a tremendous feeling of closeness and unity," said Hannan Lis. "It was a remarkable feeling to be Faces on page Al2 January 29 2009 All