Obama, whose mission was all about fitness during her time in the White House, said she noticed white families packing up their bags and heading for other parts of the city and state of Illinois to be away from black people.

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With her brother, New York Knicks executive Craig Robinson, by her side, Obama said their family was doing everything they were supposed to do and sometimes better. “As we moved in, white folks moved out, because they were afraid of what our families represented,” she said during the Chicago event.

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In 2010, Chicago had the fifth-highest combined racial and economic segregation in the nation and the 10th-highest black and white segregation, according to a 2017 study from Chicago-based Metropolitan Planning Council. Chicago is now ranked the fourth-most segregated city in the country, USA Today Money reported in July.

White flight reduced the city’s capital for schools, infrastructure and other community resources, something Obama noticed when she was growing up. She said she felt a sense of injustice as a child because she could see and feel that people were running from families like hers. She noted that she and her brother had friends of all races when they first moved in.

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“There were no gang fights; there were no territorial battles. Yet one by one, they packed their bags, and they ran from us. And they left communities in shambles,” she said during her time of plugging the Obama Presidential Center to be built in Jackson Park, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

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The former first lady said she’s still noticing patterns of white flight in Chicago as immigrant families arrive.

“You were running from us, and you’re still running, because we’re no different than the immigrant families that are moving in, the families in Pilsen, the families that are coming from other places to try to do better,” she said to applause.

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Chicago, which is in the second-most-populous county in the country, is seeing an increase in its Asian and Hispanic populations and a decrease in white and black populations, the Chicago Sun-Times reported in June.

Obama, whose physical appearance was criticized during her husband’s term in office, said differences in skin color and hair texture divide countries and are “artificial things that don’t even touch on the values that people bring to life.”

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In 2015, Obama spoke to graduates at historically black Tuskegee University, where she mentioned racist assumptions and the insults that she and her husband faced before and during his presidency. The uphill battle that she said the graduates were likely to face because of their race was a “heavy burden to carry.”

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The criticism the Obamas experienced still had a positive outcome, she said at Tuesday’s summit.

“Being the first black first family gave America and the world an opportunity to see the truth of who we are as black people, as others: That we are just as and oftentimes better than many of the people who doubt us,” she said in a BBC video.

Donald Trump Jr. heard about the first lady’s remarks and, in a tweet Wednesday, made a pointed reference to Martha’s Vineyard, a community known for its affluence.

The Obamas in September were in the process of buying a 29-acre estate on the Massachusetts island that had a $14.85 million price tag, according to Forbes magazine.