[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 48 (Tuesday, April 5, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H2298]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING GERALDINE FERRARO
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
New York (Mrs. Maloney) for 5 minutes.
Mrs. MALONEY. Mr. Speaker, I rise with the New York delegation to
honor the memory and many contributions of one of our favorite
daughters, Geraldine Ferraro. Last Thursday, New Yorkers poured out in
great numbers to honor her at her funeral. Her three children--Donna,
Laura, and John, Jr.--spoke eloquently and movingly in support and love
of their late mother. And at the funeral and speaking in a eulogy
beautifully for her, Vice President Mondale, Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton,
Congresswoman Jane Harman, Senator Mikulski, and former President
Clinton.
It would have thrilled her to see four women precede a President in
eulogizing and speaking about her, two of whom were Secretaries of
State, because it was her life that helped inspire and move women
forward in our national life, not only in politics but in every area--
business, finance. All areas of American life, Geraldine Ferraro
inspired with her life and her historic run for Vice President of the
United States.
With her passing, America lost a leader who was as wise as she was
warm; a trailblazer who broke down barriers for women. For women
everywhere, not just in the United States but across the world,
Geraldine Ferraro was a champion and a heroine. For me, personally, she
was a dear, dear friend and a mentor.
What seemed to non-New Yorkers as a feisty and fast-talking woman
seemed to us as just another mom from Queens. She inspired us with her
personal story.
The daughter of Italian immigrants, raised by her seamstress mother
after her father died at 8, she became a public school teacher, a
lawyer--one of just two women in her law class--and a Member and leader
of Congress, elected in 1978. She also, after her historic run, became
a commentator on television, a delegate to the United Nations. She
headed the World Conference in Beijing in 1995, and I was proud to be
part of her delegation at the World Conference on Women.
Last August, on her 75th birthday, we renamed the Post Office in Long
Island City in her honor. It used to be in her district; it is now in
mine. And I was honored to be able to author the legislation and work
with my New York colleagues and others to pass it. And she was so
thrilled at that naming to see so many of her friends, not only from
New York and her district but across the country, come in one place to
honor her.
Later that day, which happened to also be Women's Equality Day, she
rang the bell at the New York Stock Exchange in honor of the progress
for women.
I know that a post office is only the start of the memorials to this
wonderful, charming, talented trailblazer who continued blazing trails
her entire life. I met with her shortly before she died, and she had a
list of constituents she wanted helped and causes she wanted completed.
We do stand on her shoulders and women like her who came before us.
I will never forget, as an eager, young delegate to the 1984
Democratic National Convention, and I can tell you firsthand that
Geraldine Ferraro thrilled us when she took the stage as the first
woman ever nominated by a major political party to be its candidate for
Vice President of the United States.
{time} 1030
It was absolutely electrifying. She changed my life, and she changed
the lives of women everywhere. She changed the aspirations of women and
how they view themselves.
I will never forget being on the floor. Many of the men gave their
delegate card to the women delegates who were part-time delegates. So
the floor was filled with women. People were handing out cigars saying,
``It's a woman.'' And when she went to the floor, there was literally
applause for over 10 minutes.
I shall miss her dearly and shall honor her passing by redoubling my
efforts to complete her unfinished work to pass the ERA. It is time to
enshrine in our Constitution the high principle of gender equality that
Geraldine Ferraro so courageously stood for in her life.
Geraldine, we will miss you, we honor you, and we thank you for your
many, many contributions to American life.
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