[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 18 (Friday, February 3, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H464]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
(Mr. COHEN asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, Wednesday, the 1st of February, begins Black
History Month; and on that day I introduced a proposal to have a
Congressional Gold Medal issued to civil rights workers--not to each
one individually, but collectively.
Black History Month celebrates the history of African Americans in
our Nation, and a Gold Medal for civil rights workers is so appropriate
because the people who fought for civil rights had to fight their own
government to get the rights that were embedded in the Constitution for
others, which specifically said that they were three-fifths people and
that slavery should exist in this country, and the Jim Crow laws that
were passed and approved by this Congress and by the State legislatures
continued that for another hundred years.
So the people like John Lewis and Robert Filner, who serve in this
House, the people who engaged in the sit-ins and the marches, that
challenged our system and showed it to be wrong and forced it to change
itself, not just Dr. King but the Julian Bonds and the farmers and the
Ennises and the Belafontes, they deserve recognition. They should be
recognized by this Congress for what they did because they took a wrong
in America and they righted it, and they continued to serve and make
this country greater for all people based on the principles of the
United States Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, which
don't really fulfill their destinies without the efforts of the civil
rights workers who've made the work of Jefferson and our Founding
Fathers true.
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