[Congressional Bills 109th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 827 Introduced in House (IH)]
109th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 827
Honoring the life and accomplishments of Damu Amiri Imara Smith.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
May 19, 2006
Ms. Norton (for herself, Ms. Lee, Mr. Rangel, and Mrs. Christensen)
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on Government Reform
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Honoring the life and accomplishments of Damu Amiri Imara Smith.
Whereas Damu Smith is in the annals of American and world history for his
enduring work as a peace, civil rights, and environmental activist who
has left his signature on the major issues of his time;
Whereas in 1952, Damu Amiri Imara Smith was born LeRoy Wesley Smith in St.
Louis, Missouri to Sylvester and Vernice Smith;
Whereas Damu Smith took a field trip to Cairo, Illinois at the age of 17 to a
Black Solidarity Day rally which helped to ignite his life of community
service and activism;
Whereas at St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, where Damu Smith
studied political science, he served as President of the Organization of
Afro-American Students, led a protest and takeover of the school's
administrative offices to demand a Black studies program, and changed
his name to Damu Amiri Imara Smith;
Whereas in 1973, Damu Smith moved to Washington, D.C. to attend the Antioch
College Center for the Study of Basic Human Problems;
Whereas Damu Smith ardently and effectively lent his voice of advocacy to the
successful campaign for the Martin Luther King Jr. Federal holiday;
Whereas Damu Smith fought against apartheid in South Africa, especially as
Executive Director of the Washington Office on Africa and co-founder of
Artists for a Free South Africa;
Whereas Damu Smith toiled against social ills such as gun violence, police
brutality, and government injustice through his work with organizations
such as the United Church of Christ Commission for Racial Justice, the
National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, the National
Wilmington 10 Defense Committee, and the National Black Independent
Political Party;
Whereas in his capacity as Associate Director of the Washington Office of the
American Friends Service Committee, Damu Smith stood against the
proliferation of nuclear weapons and for the cause of peace;
Whereas Damu Smith's leadership on the environment included his tenure as
National Associate Director and national toxics campaigner for
Greenpeace USA;
Whereas Damu Smith was a founder of the idea of environmental justice and played
a central role in awakening African Americans and other people of color
and lower income Americans to the special importance of environmental
issues, which often affect those groups disproportionately;
Whereas Damu Smith founded and served as the executive director of the National
Black Environmental Justice Network, recognized as the first ever
national network of Black environmental justice activists, to fight
against contaminated water and toxic waste dumps in Black communities;
Whereas in 1991, Damu Smith coordinated the first National People of Color
Environmental Leadership Summit, which for the first time brought
together the civil rights and environmental movements;
Whereas Damu Smith, as the first coordinator for environmental justice for the
Southern Organizing Committee for Economic and Social Justice, focused
attention on the impact on the health and lives of poor and African
American communities in the area in Louisiana called ``Cancer Alley''
because of its toxicity from chemical dumping and other environmentally
detrimental corporate practices;
Whereas in 1999, Damu Smith coordinated the historic National Emergency
Gathering of Black Community Advocates for Environmental and Economic
Justice, lauded as the largest environmental justice conference ever
held;
Whereas in 1999, Damu Smith co-founded Black Voices for Peace to mobilize the
Black community with people of all races and nationalities to protest
United States military action in Iraq and elsewhere, and to campaign in
favor of redirecting billions in Federal funding to universal healthcare
and access, education, jobs, housing, environmental protection, equal
justice, and other fundamental issues;
Whereas Damu Smith co-hosted ``Spirit In Action'', a show dedicated to education
and activism, on WPFW 89.3 FM with Milagros A. Phillips; and
Whereas Damu Smith lived a life as full of meaning as his name: Damu, meaning
blood--``The blood that I am willing to shed for the liberation of my
people;'' Amiri, meaning leadership--``The leadership I must provide in
the service of my people;'' and Imara, meaning strength--``The strength
and stamina I have to maintain in the struggle;'': Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives honors and celebrates
the life of Damu Amiri Imara Smith and his accomplishments and
expresses condolences at his passing.
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