[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 151 (Thursday, November 18, 2010)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1961]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EDITH SAVAGE-JENNINGS
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HON. RUSH D. HOLT
of new jersey
in the house of representatives
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Mr. HOLT. Madam Speaker, I rise today to commend Edith Savage-
Jennings, a paragon of the Civil Rights Movement whose accomplishments
on behalf of the movement are surpassed only by her humility about
them. ``It was just the work that was called for,'' she has said. As I
understand, she is currently working on a book to be entitled ``Behind
Closed Doors,'' she said, because that is where the most important work
on any movement is done.
Let me open the door for you, just a little, so you will come to know
and appreciate this paragon of the Civil Rights Movement as I do.
First, she started early--when she was 9. She would tell her mother she
was going to the library, but instead she would go to the Statehouse in
Trenton and watch the proceedings of the New Jersey Assembly from the
balcony. Despite getting in trouble for that fib, she persisted in her
efforts to learn and to lead.
When she was 13, movie theaters in Trenton were still segregated.
Black moviegoers--like Edith--were required to sit in the balcony. But
she went to the theater with several friends, including future Mayor of
New York, David Dinkins, and they sat downstairs. When asked to move to
the balcony, they refused. And she's been making history quietly, but
forcefully, ever since.
Whatever road the civil rights struggle took her down, she did her
best. In 1963, she was one of six woman asked by President Kennedy and
Attorney General Robert Kennedy to ferret out particular areas of
unrest in the struggle to desegregate schools in Mississippi. She
became one of the ``Wednesdays Women,'' who travelled in interracial
teams to Mississippi in 1964 to advance the cause of desegregation
through what you might call white-glove diplomacy. Accompanied by Helen
Meyner, wife of New Jersey Governor Bob Meyner, they landed in
Mississippi, only to be greeted by white men spitting on the floor in
front of them. ``They'd never seen a black woman and a white woman
travelling together,'' she said.
They continued on. On Wednesdays, they would bring supplies to rural
communities on the front lines of the struggle to end segregation. On
Thursdays, dressed in heels, pearls and white gloves, they would meet
white and black women for tea and cookies to discuss peaceful ways to
desegregate the elementary schools and to resolve the white women's
suspicions about the Civil Rights Movement. On this visit, as Mrs.
Meyner introduced herself, she shook everyone's hand. In another quiet
act of rebellion, Edith took off her white glove, and the women
wouldn't shake her hand. But the schools were desegregated.
Over the years, she has been praised and followed for her leadership
skills and prowess. She was introduced to Martin Luther King, Jr., in
1957 at a rally in Trenton because, the minister at Shiloh Baptist
Church said at the time, she's ``a great fundraiser.'' She became a
lifelong friend of the Kings. In 1964, she accompanied Fannie Lou Hamer
onto the floor of the Democratic National Convention, where she
delivered her famous ``I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired''
speech. She has visited the White House under five different
Presidents. She was close friends with Rosa Parks, and brought her and
many other civil rights leaders to Trenton. She's been a member of the
NAACP for life, and won more than 80 awards for her selfless, tireless
work. In 2005, her name was added to the Wall of Tolerance in
Montgomery, Alabama, to honor her 50 years of civil rights service.
Last year, she was inducted into the National Civil Rights Museum,
located at the hotel in Memphis where King was assassinated, and the
National Park Service Archives for Black Women's History in Washington
DC.
But her humility is one of her most endearing qualities. When
President Kennedy called her to action in 1963, she didn't believe it
was him. So he put his brother Bobby on the phone and said ``Bobby, say
hello to Mrs. Savage so she'll know I'm the President.'' When she was
inducted into the National Civil Rights Museum, among other personal
items she donated was a pair of red loafers she had worn in 1968 while
demonstrating in the rain and mud at the Poor People's Campaign
commemorating Martin Luther King, Jr. The shoes still bore the mud from
that day. ``I put them in a box [and] never pulled them out,'' she said
``but I saved them because to me they were part of a historical
situation.''
I am proud to say Edith Savage-Jennings has been a resident of
Trenton since the age of 2. At the mass in her honor after her
induction into the National Civil Rights Museum she said ``I want
people to know that no one does this alone.'' Even so, the particular
manner, the quiet resoluteness, and the tide of contributions of some
simply stand out. Edith Savage-Jennings is one such person.
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