Fondly called the "first grandma," Robinson played a pivotal
role in helping care for her granddaughters, Malia and Sasha
Obama, during their early years at the White House.
"With a healthy nudge, she agreed to move to the White House
with Michelle and Barack. We needed her. The girls needed her.
And she ended up being our rock through it all," the family
statement read, adding she died "peacefully" on Friday morning.
Born in 1937 on Chicago's South Side, Robinson was one of seven
children. Her parents separated during her teenage years and she
witnessed the extreme highs and lows of race relations in the
United States.
Her father was not allowed to join a union or work for larger
construction firms due to the color of his skin and hence "grew
mistrustful of a world that seemed to have little place for
him," the family said its statement. Yet, her daughter and
son-in-law made it to the White House when Barack Obama became
the first Black U.S. president.
The glamour of the White House was never a great fit for
Robinson, according to the family.
Rather than hobnobbing with Oscar winners or Nobel laureates,
she preferred spending her time upstairs with a TV tray, in the
room outside her bedroom with big windows that looked out at the
Washington Monument, the family statement said. It added that
she made great friends "with the ushers and butlers, the folks
who make the White House a home."
Robinson got married in 1960 and had two children, including the
former first lady. She also worked as a teacher and a secretary,
the family said.
During her eight years at the White House, the family said she
would often sneak outside the gates to buy greeting cards at
nearby stores and sometimes other customers would recognize her
saying she resembled the first lady's mother.
"Oh, I get that a lot," she would smile and reply.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; editing by Diane
Craft)
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