Path to Power
DuBois was born in Bar Harbor, Maine. His stepfather was an itinerant minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, so he spent much of his childhood on the move.
He lived in Cambridge, Mass., as a young child. But he was mostly raised in Nashville, Tenn., and considers it his hometown. He attended high school in Xenia, Ohio.
DuBois wanted to go to a big city for college, so he returned to New England to attend Boston University. There, as a 17-year-old freshman, he became involved in social activism after he was “struck by the injustice” of the acquittal of four New York City police officers who had shot and killed unarmed Guinean immigrant Amadou Diallo.
DuBois stood for hours on a busy Boston plaza as a vigil to Diallo. He was approached by fellow BU student Eugene Schneeberg, who invited DuBois to a nearby church affiliated with the United Pentecostal Council of the Assemblies of God, a small, predominantly African-American denomination.
"Initially, I was not interested in reintegrating myself in a Christian community, because I figured I knew it all, growing up in the church," DuBois said. "But what I didn't really know was how to have a personal relationship with Jesus."
DuBois was eventually named associate pastor at the church, Calvary Praise and Worship, and occasionally filled in as preacher.
DuBois earned his bachelor’s degree in political science in 2003, and went on to Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School, where he received his master’s in public affairs in 2005.
He moved further south to Washington, D.C., to enroll in law school, going part-time to Georgetown University. At the same time in 2004, he worked as an intern in Rep. Rush Holt’s (D-N.J.) office and then as a fellow in Rep. Charles B. Rangel’s (D-N.Y.) office.
Obama Connection
Then, DuBois heard Obama’s keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, and one line impressed him: "We worship an awesome God in the Blue States."
"I had been struggling with whether I should go into ministry or politics,” DuBois told the Boston Globe, “and I felt that God was leading me to find a way to do both, but I didn't know any politician that got that intersection right," DuBois said. "That phrase jarred me."
After hounding Obama’s staff, DuBois was hired as a legislative correspondent in Obama’s Senate office in May 2005. DuBois never completed his law degree, leaving instead to work on the 2008 Obama presidential campaign.
In 2008, at the age of 25, DuBois was appointed director of religious affairs for the Obama campaign. He orchestrated a program that reached out to people of faith on a scale unheard of for a Democratic candidate at the time. His efforts included hundreds of town hall meetings and house parties on the subject of faith in America.
"I think you're going to see a lot of folks who have never voted for a Democrat before really give Senator Obama a hard look," DuBois told the Boston Globe.
Courtesy David Brody / Christian Broadcasting Network