[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 113 (Thursday, July 29, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H6442-H6444]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF STUDENT NONVIOLENT COORDINATING
COMMITTEE AND THE NATIONAL SIT-IN MOVEMENT--Continued
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as he may consume to the
gentleman who is the hero of the civil rights movement, a person who
personally experienced the times of which we are speaking, who is, I
believe, one of the founders of SNCC and a gentleman with whom we are
privileged to serve and to know in America, who helped make America the
country it is today and who is helping to move it forward to be the
country that it needs to be, the gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Lewis).
Mr. LEWIS of Georgia. I want to thank my colleague, my brother, and
my friend, Mr. Cohen, for introducing this resolution with me. I want
to thank the gentleman from Virginia, along with Chairman Conyers and
members of the Judiciary Committee, for bringing this resolution to the
floor tonight.
Mr. Speaker, it is fitting and appropriate that we pause to recognize
the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee, better known as SNCC. It grew
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out of the sit-in movement and the efforts of hundreds and thousands of
young people who were standing up by sitting in.
These young people put their bodies, their hearts, and their spirits
on the line to end racial discrimination and segregation in public
accommodations. We were working to liberate the soul of a nation. It
was the young people--black and white, Jewish and Christian, from the
North and the South--coming together as a circle of trust and a band of
brothers and sisters to change America forever.
As a young student in the Nashville Student Movement, people like Jim
Lawson taught us the philosophy and the discipline of nonviolent
resistance. He taught us the way of love. While we trained and learned
and prepared to sit in, the Greensboro sit-ins happened. That was the
spark that ignited the courage and the passion of students around the
Nation.
On the day of the first Nashville sit-in, 124 of us gathered at the
First Baptist Church, and we walked through downtown Nashville, two by
two, quiet and solemn, well-dressed and well-mannered. My group went to
Woolworth's. We sat at the counter, and we were told that we wouldn't
be served. The lunch counter was closed early, and they turned out the
lights, but we sat there all day, quietly--some of us reading, some of
us doing our homework. We sat in again and again that week. It was the
first time that I was arrested for civil disobedience. No sooner would
one group be arrested than another group would take our place at the
lunch counters.
Some of us were beaten, and the images of violence were broadcast
around the Nation. Soon, the jails were full. The process of
desegregation had begun. For months, all around the country, students
sat in and stood in. The sit-ins spread around the South like wildfire.
We marched; we sang; we prayed. Along the way, many were beaten,
jailed, and some even died in the struggle.
During that time, 126 student delegates from 58 sit-in centers and 12
different States came to the campus of Shaw University in Raleigh,
North Carolina. That was the first meeting of what would become known
as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, better known as SNCC.
SNCC did the hard, nitty-gritty work of organizing and mobilizing
people in the heart of the Deep South to attempt to register to vote.
From the sit-ins to the Freedom Rides, from Freedom Summer voter
registration drives to the March on Washington, SNCC was there.
By 1963, at 23 years old, I had been arrested 24 times. I had been on
the Freedom Rides. That year, I also became the chairman of SNCC.
SNCC was made up of people like Bob Moses and Bob Zelner, Julian Bond
and Charles Sherrod, Bernard Lafyette and Diane Nash, Ruby Doris Smith
and Fannie Lou Hamer, Howard Zinn and Ella Baker.
These young people, the students, carried the movement into the heart
of the Deep South, and America is a better place because of them and
the work of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. We hope that
they will inspire the next generation to continue to build the beloved
community. It is a society based on simple justice that values the
dignity and the worth of every human being.
I ask and urge all of my colleagues to join us in commemorating the
50th anniversary of the founding of SNCC and the sit-in movement.
Mr. Speaker, I would like to thank my staff for working on this
resolution, especially my legislative director, Michaeleen Crowell.
{time} 0030
Mr. FORBES. Mr. Speaker, I have had occasion before to listen to
Congressman Lewis address this topic. Each time I enjoy doing that, and
appreciate it wouldn't be appropriate for me to follow words after his,
and so I will continue to reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. COHEN. I yield 2 minutes to the gentlewoman from Houston, Texas
(Ms. Jackson Lee).
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Thank you very much to the manager of this
bill, and thank you for allowing me to rise to salute our colleague,
Congressman John Lewis, and the list of honorees that he listed just a
few minutes ago, part of the founding foundation of SNCC.
So many of us associated ourselves as we looked to this group of
young people who were willing to leave the comfort of classrooms around
America, college classrooms, and begin to stand alongside of those who
might have been considered elders in the movement.
You know, there are many discussions about whether an entity or a
group is a movement. We've heard that of late over the last couple of
few years. But those of us who know the civil rights movement and know
about SNCC, know about the SCLC, we really understand what a movement
was and what it is.
Fifty years is appropriate to commemorate a group that sacrificed
themselves in the name of peace and nonviolence. Remember now, they
were young people, energized, active, dedicated young people, full of
energy, and certainly tempted by the violence that was around them. But
because of leaders like John Lewis, their president, they were able to
truly create a movement. They provided the legs and the genius of the
sit-in movement as they went around the places of the South.
You know, when you're young, you can sit for a long time. You have
the tenacity to be able to withstand the back-bending sitting that it
requires. You are able to draw upon your strength to not eat while
you're sitting at the counter because they were denying you that right.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentlewoman has expired.
Mr. COHEN. I yield the gentlewoman as much time as she needs.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. And so there was a special role, and I
thank the gentleman for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee,
and they have a very special place in history.
I'm very grateful that this great leader and hero who is amongst us
today, John Lewis of Georgia, was able to come to the floor, with the
help of his great staff, to give us the opportunity to commemorate
those who many may not know, but to realize that they truly were part
of a movement. They had a cause, a belief, a passion, a determination
and a commitment to the freedom of all people.
Thank you to the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and thank
you, John Lewis.
Mr. FORBES. Mr. Speaker, I continue to reserve the balance of my
time.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, I just want to reflect on why we're here. Mr.
Lewis and I brought this resolution because it's the 50th anniversary
of SNCC.
There were other civil rights organizations as well, the NAACP, there
was the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, there was CORE, and
there was SNCC. SNCC came about at a time when this country was ripe
for change and helped really light the fire that ignited a Nation to
see the injustices and bring about the change that came about in the
sixties.
When you think about what's happened in 50 years, that we're here on
the floor of the House of Representatives, Mr. Speaker, honoring the
founding of SNCC, an organization when it was founded and it was
exercising its purposes, it was sneered and jeered and disdained by
most people in America because they were upsetting America. They were
bringing about change that people didn't understand and people
resisted. And there were a lot of people that thought that the people
involved in these organizations should be jailed, they were un-
American, they were Communists, they were Socialists. That same
rhetoric that you sometimes hear today you heard 50 years ago about
these organizations that helped make America the more perfect Union it
is, and to bring about the liberties that we really should enjoy, that
Jefferson wrote about, but that were words on paper, not in practice.
The people that were involved with SNCC and these civil rights
organizations should be considered heroes and are heroes because they
made America. They made America what it should be, the land of
opportunity and justice and equality and liberty, and giving all people
rights, which we didn't have.
We had Jim Crow laws that were enforced by this Nation's laws, that
Brown v. Board of Education changed. But before that, we had separate
but equal, Plessy v. Ferguson, and it took
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the work of Thurgood Marshall and others to overturn that in the
courts, and later to overturn it in these Halls of this Congress in
1965 and 1964, civil rights laws, civil rights laws that,
unfortunately, caused the Democrats to lose their majorities and to
lose their hold on the South because they did what was right for this
country, and what that flag stands for and what this Nation stands for.
So we're here today to honor the people and the organizations that at
one time were sneered and disdained. But now we understand they were
right. And sometimes you have to look back at history to understand who
the heroes are and the direction this country goes in and where it
should be.
And so I respect Mr. Lewis. He was in the front line. He mentioned
being arrested 24 times. He was beaten; he was hit. He was in the face
of injustice in the picture of law and order, and stood up to it with a
moral law that was higher than the law of the State of Alabama, and he
made that law change.
And so it's fitting, appropriate, and proper that we honor those
heroes and the anniversary of that organization and that this United
States Congress pass this resolution.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. FORBES. Mr. Speaker, sometimes we have resolutions commending
certain events and certain organizations where a few words can actually
offer more respect than more. In this case, I think it's the life of
Congressman Lewis that really puts this resolution into perspective for
all of us. And once again, we just thank him for his service, thanks to
this resolution. We urge our colleagues to support it.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, I want to thank my staff, Ms. Reisha Phills,
who worked with me on this resolution with Mr. Lewis, and I yield back
the balance of my time and ask that we pass this resolution here
tonight.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion offered by the
gentleman from Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) that the House suspend the rules
and agree to the resolution, H. Res. 1566.
The question was taken.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. In the opinion of the Chair, two-thirds
being in the affirmative, the ayes have it.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 8 of rule XX and the
Chair's prior announcement, further proceedings on this motion will be
postponed.
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