[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 79 (Wednesday, May 30, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H3256-H3261]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
JEWISH AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentlewoman from Florida (Ms. Wasserman Schultz)
is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
General Leave
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. I ask unanimous consent that all Members may
have 5 legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks on
the topic of this Special Order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentlewoman from Florida?
There was no objection.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor May as
Jewish American Heritage Month. I'm so pleased to be joined by my
colleagues tonight as we honor our Nation's Jewish community through
Jewish American Heritage Month.
{time} 1950
As the first Jewish woman to represent the State of Florida in the
United States Congress, I am so proud to be a strong voice on many
issues crucial to our community, from tolerance and understanding to
tikkun olam--repairing the world.
In 2005, members of the Jewish community in south Florida approached
me with the idea to designate a month to honor the contributions that
American Jews have made to our Nation. As a result, I was the proud
sponsor of Jewish American Heritage Month, which the House and Senate
unanimously passed in 2006 and has been proclaimed by both President
Bush and President Obama annually since then.
This year, in 2012, is the Seventh Annual Jewish American Heritage
Month. JAHM promotes awareness of the contributions American Jews have
made to the fabric of American life from technology and literature to
entertainment, politics, and medicine.
As we are all well aware, the foundation of our country is built upon
the strengths of our unique cultures and backgrounds. The American
Jewish experience is the story of the immigrant, the labor movement,
the battle for civil rights, and so much more. Jews in America have
blazed trails from the battlefield to the Supreme Court, from the
sports field and symphony hall to the pages of our Nation's history
books and our Nation's Capital.
From the time of the Colonies until today, Jewish communities have
played a significant role in American history and telling the American
story. That's why communities across the country have come together to
celebrate Jewish American Heritage Month during the month of May.
Seven years ago, this idea gained momentum as 250 of my colleagues
joined me as original cosponsors of a resolution urging the President
to issue a proclamation for this important month. Senator Arlen Specter
led the effort in the Senate, and together the House and Senate
unanimously passed resolutions supporting the creation of Jewish
American Heritage Month.
Now, each year, the month of May introduces Jewish culture to the
entire country in order to raise awareness and dispel harmful
prejudices. Unfortunately, Mr. Speaker, we have seen a precipitous rise
in intolerance and anti-Semitism, not just in this country but across
the globe. It is my hope that by providing the framework for the
discussion of Jewish culture and contributions to our Nation we will be
able to reduce the ignorance that ultimately leads to anti-Semitism.
Over the last number of years, I have talked about the impact and the
contributions of the Jewish community to our country over more than 350
years of Jewish life in America. It has always struck me that Jews in
America are less than 2 percent of the American population, and so as
much, many of our colleagues--most Americans--never actually spend much
time around the Jewish community. So our traditions are unfamiliar, our
culture and our religion--of which we are both--are not something that
most folks encounter every day. That is the reason that we honor
communities like the Jewish community with a cultural awareness month
so that we can raise that awareness and make sure that people who don't
usually have an opportunity to get the kinds of information that these
months provide can really reach out to one another and learn more so
that we can be the melting pot and also the salad bowl that is always
debated about the United States of America.
Over the last 7 years, we have seen JAHM grow from an inspired idea
to a national reality. We've had a group of committed organizations and
museums around the country that have worked to get JAHM into the
classroom, on the airwaves, and into the halls of our government, as
today's activities demonstrate.
Just before votes this evening, President Obama hosted the Third
Annual Jewish American Heritage Month reception at the White House,
welcoming leaders from the Jewish community into the Nation's House.
The President told the story--not a really wonderful note in our
Nation's history--of General Ulysses Grant who, at the time of the
Civil War, had actually issued an order, Mr. Speaker, to expel Jews
from their homes in the war zone during the Civil War. President Obama
went on to also talk about how President Lincoln issued an order
rescinding that order. The Library of Congress brought out from its
archives all of the documents related to General Grant's order and
President Lincoln's order to make sure that we could protect the rights
of individuals and make sure that our commitment as a Nation to
religious tolerance and freedom was preserved from then through
history.
Tonight, I'm so pleased to be joined by my colleagues to commemorate
the American Jewish experience. From sports games, to concerts, to
lectures and films, JAHM is truly an interdisciplinary and multimedia
experience, and we want to see these efforts continue to grow. However,
it's vital that this idea takes hold not only for Jewish organizations,
because, after all, we're already familiar with the contributions of
Jewish life in America. We want to make sure that this month is an
opportunity to grow that knowledge and reach out to communities across
the country.
It's our responsibility to continue this education. If we as a Nation
are to prepare our children for the challenges that lie ahead, then
teaching diversity and celebrating it is a fundamental part of that
promise. Together, we can help achieve this goal of understanding with
the celebration of Jewish American Heritage Month.
The lessons of Judaism inspire us to do great things, from our
commitment to service, to our political advocacy, to our cultural
contributions to this Nation. Together, we can and should celebrate our
community's history and values so that not only the Jewish people, but
all Americans may go from strength to strength.
Now I'm delighted to recognize one of my colleagues who has been an
incredible leader for the United States of America, for the people of
her district in New York, and someone that I am proud to say has been a
mentor throughout my time here in the U.S. House of Representatives,
Congresswoman Nita Lowey from the great State of New York. By the way,
let me add, Mr. Speaker, that Congresswoman Lowey is the ranking member
on the Foreign Operations Subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee.
Mrs. LOWEY. Let me thank my outstanding colleague from the State of
Florida, Congresswoman Wasserman Schultz. I personally want to express
my appreciation for the work you have done to make this day a reality
so that we can all acknowledge Jewish American Heritage Month. It's
because of you that this day is noted, and it's because of you that we
have gathered at the White House for a really inspirational speech from
President Obama. So as a Jewish American, I want to express my
appreciation to you.
I know that it may not be coincidental that this was a special time
in
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your life this past week. I think it's appropriate that we talk about
your family and your personal commitment to your Jewish heritage.
During this month--last week, I believe--your daughter celebrated her
bat mitzvah or bene mitzvah. This is such an amazing, amazing time in
your life when your daughter or your son reaches that point where they
have studied, they have learned what it is to be a Jewish American here
in the United States of America. I am sure that your family was just
overflowing with joy. And I just want to say mazel tov to you. That
means good luck and congratulations.
So today I not only rise, Mr. Speaker, to express my appreciation to
Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz for making this Jewish American
Heritage Month an annual tradition, but to express my appreciation to
you for organizing this event tonight.
I rise to mark the contributions of Jewish Americans to the rich
culture and history of our Nation during this Jewish American Heritage
Month.
Jewish tradition embraces the concept of Tikkun Olam, repairing the
world. Indeed, our actions in Congress are aimed at that concept--
helping to improve our society and create equity for all Americans
through quality health care, education, and economic opportunity,
regardless of their ethnic, cultural, or socioeconomic background. What
I am very proud of is that our commitment to justice reaches beyond our
borders.
{time} 2000
The history of the Jewish people reminds us of our unique
responsibility in the international community to stand up for what is
right, speak out against hatred and injustice, and ensure that the
lessons of the Holocaust are not lost to history. We have a
responsibility, and we must defend those unjustly persecuted, no matter
where they are, and we must stand by our ally, Israel, in the face of
continued threats.
I hope you will join me in celebrating the rich history of Jewish
Americans and in looking forward to an even more vibrant and just
future for all people.
Thank you.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Thank you so much, Congresswoman Lowey. Thank
you for your leadership and your commitment as a Jewish American woman,
and for blazing a trail. And thank you for acknowledging my daughter
and son's bar and bat mitzvah.
Mrs. LOWEY. Oh, it's the twins?
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. It was the twins, yes, both of them, and it
was a pretty incredible weekend. It was really amazing to,
coincidentally, have the B'nai Mitzvah service and ceremony during
Jewish American Heritage Month. Their birthday is May 15, and we had a
wonderful celebration last weekend.
Thank you so much. And thank you for being an incredible example. As
a Jewish mother who is raising Jewish daughters, thank you for being an
incredible example for them.
Mrs. LOWEY. Well, as a Jewish mother and a Jewish grandmother, I am
very proud of my three children and my 8 grandchildren. And I just want
to say, again, that you are really a role model for all women, not just
Jewish women, a strong woman with integrity, who is committed to her
Judaism, her family, and yet you understand so well that we have an
obligation beyond ourselves, as we lift people up and hope that all
people, in the United States of America and around the world, have the
opportunity to raise children and have a good life, and can have a
future.
So I want to thank you because you are a role model that just does it
all. In fact, it's amazing to me that you've done it all. So
congratulations. Thank you again for marking this important month for
all of us.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Thank you for joining us. Thank you so much.
It is now my privilege--boy, it's hard to say enough good things
about an incredible woman, a fighter, someone who has been a champion
for the values that I know I was raised to believe in around my family
dinner table growing up, the epitome of Tikkun olam.
Mr. Speaker, let me--we're going to use some Yiddish phrases here and
Hebrew expressions tonight that some may not understand. But the
foundation of the Jewish community, and our commitments to service and
our commitment to fighting injustice, is based in the notion of Tikkun
olam, which means repairing the world. And so often, we have mountains
in front of us that seem so tough to climb, and repairing the world can
seem like an insurmountable obstacle. But working together to address a
little bit of injustice, just a small bite at a time, but banding
together to do it, is something that the Jewish community has stood for
for many years.
And there is no finer example of someone--I have to tell you that Jan
Schakowsky, as a representative from Illinois, and as someone who had a
reputation that I became aware of long before I actually had the
privilege of serving in this institution, was someone I wanted to be
like when I grew up because she has been the absolute epitome of what I
know I was taught to believe in around my family table, which was that
we should stand up for people who have no voice, fight for the civil
rights and civil liberties that are instilled as Jewish values. And I'm
so thrilled that you joined us here tonight, Congresswoman Jan
Schakowsky from the great State of Illinois.
Ms. SCHAKOWSKY. Thank you so much, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, for your
leadership role in making Jewish American Heritage Month a reality.
Really, this was your idea, and you mobilized the Members of the House
in a bipartisan way to make this happen, and we're so appreciative.
I think Jews and non-Jews alike realize that it's important that we
honor the culture and the heritage of the Jewish community. Throughout
American history, Jewish Americans have helped shape American culture
and society. For over 350 years, Jewish Americans have made untold
contributions to our country, through science, art, medicine,
education, sports, technology, entertainment, and government. Jewish
Americans have served in the military and in government, have helped
build and grow our economy, and have served their communities as
teachers, nurses, organizers, and in countless other critical roles.
American Jews played a critical role in creating and sustaining a
homeland for all Jews around the world--the State of Israel, our
beloved State of Israel, first, as a refuge for those who survived the
Holocaust, continuing to be a place where all Jews are welcome, and
today, an enduring and essential ally of the United States of America.
As a first-generation Jewish American, I have personally witnessed
the struggles and successes of Jewish immigrants who came to this
Nation in order to create a better life for themselves, their families,
and future generations, the reasons that all immigrants seek out the
United States. Like other important immigrant communities, the Jewish
experience in the United States represents the promise, the
opportunity, and the freedom of America.
I think today about my grandparents, Sam and Mary Cosnow, who settled
in Chicago with three of their four children. The fourth was born in
the United States. My mother was not. They came from Russia. They left
a place that they knew they would never return to, left a place where
there were pogroms, where it was dangerous for the Jews, and came to
Chicago, Illinois.
And every Sunday we would go to my grandparents House in Humboldt
Park, and I would rush out to what is now the garage, but then was the
barn, where Teddy, the horse, was there. And I would say hello first to
Teddy, I think, even before my grandparents.
Teddy would pull the cart that my grandfather, a peddler, would--
every weekday he would get up at the crack of dawn and take Teddy and
the wagon to the vegetable and fruit market several miles away and load
up the cart and carry bags of potatoes up several flights of stairs in
the alleys of Humboldt Park to his customers.
My grandmother stayed home. She made the clothes for her children and
was a homemaker. And they put all of their children through college.
That was the American Dream.
My grandfather, as a peddler--now, college tuition wasn't what it is
today and it was easier to do that, but two teachers, one lawyer, one
business college student, all of those children of Sam Cosnow, the
peddler, could make it in America. That is the American
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Dream. It's the immigrant dream. It's the dream of hardworking people
who believed that if you are willing to get up at the crack of dawn and
carry potatoes up the back porch that you could do it here. That's the
America we dream for everyone and for our children and their children;
that they can have a good life if they are willing to work hard.
An estimated 250,000 Jews live in Chigago today. Chicago's vibrant
Jewish community has been home to countless prominent figures, from
sports to the arts to politics. Saul Alinksy, the father of community
organizing, came from a Russian Jewish immigrant family. Nobel Prize-
winning author Saul Bellow grew up in Chicago, a Jewish--from Humboldt
Park, as my grandparents and my parents lived. And his work strongly
reflects both his Jewish roots and the city of Chicago.
Actors Jeremy Piven and Mandy Patinkin were both raised in Jewish
households in Chicago. And Benny Goodman, the clarinetist known as the
``King of Swing,'' called Chicago home.
{time} 2010
Sidney Yates, my predecessor, served in the House for nearly 50
years, passionately working for environmental protection and government
funding for the arts. Also, two current members of the Chicago Bears
NFL team, Gabe Carimi and Adam Podlesh, are Jewish Americans.
So, Mr. Speaker, Jewish American Heritage Month is an opportunity to
recognize the contributions of Jewish Americans to our community, to
our country, to our culture. For 350 years, Jewish Americans have made
extraordinary contributions to American life and culture; and in
Chicago and throughout the country, American Jews continue to be
leaders in their communities.
All of those Jews in America today owe a thank-you to Congresswoman
Wasserman Schultz for creating the Jewish American Heritage Month of
May, so I thank you.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Thank you, Congresswoman.
Let me also thank you for your leadership as a ranking member of the
Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade for the Energy and
Commerce Committee; and your leadership in the area of health care has
been incredibly important for America.
I think it's interesting. First of all, you taught me something that
I didn't know tonight. I did not know that there are two Jewish players
on the Chicago Bears. One of your staffers was joking with my staffer
today, saying that there are actually more Jews on the Chicago Bears
than there are in the Illinois delegation, which is really kind of
ironic, actually. Thank you so much for being here.
Now it is my privilege to introduce and acknowledge a friend and
colleague from the neighboring district of mine, someone who is a
relatively new Member, who had some big shoes to fill but who has done
so capably. He serves as a member of the House Committee on the
Judiciary and on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, and he was a
State senator in the State of Florida. I am fortunate that I don't need
his bio as a cheat sheet because I know him so well. He is our
colleague from the great State of Florida, Congressman Ted Deutch.
Mr. DEUTCH. Thank you very much to my dear friend Congresswoman
Wasserman Schultz, and thank you for your committed work in making sure
that not only this Special Order hour takes place tonight but for your
work in ensuring that Jewish American Heritage Month has become a
reality. You are to be commended for that, and I think we are all the
better for it. I appreciate it, and I appreciate the opportunity to be
here tonight.
Mr. Speaker, I rise to celebrate the seventh annual Jewish American
Heritage Month, which is an opportunity for our Nation to recognize the
many contributions of Jewish Americans throughout our history.
America's Jewish community has helped shape our country since its
inception. Jewish Americans have courageously served in our Armed
Forces in every major conflict of our Nation's history. They've also
helped drive America as a powerhouse of economic innovation,
contributing key advances in everything from science and medicine to
the law and the arts.
Today, as we mark this year's Jewish American Heritage Month here in
Congress, I would like to highlight our community's tremendous
contributions to American social policy. Jewish Americans have a long
history of shaping our political priorities as a Nation. I am proud to
be part of a community that has led efforts to protect the most
vulnerable, to ensure fairness in our justice system, to promote
economic opportunity, and to safeguard the religious freedoms and
liberties of all Americans.
We need look no further than Social Security, a program that helps
keep 50 million Americans economically secure each year. Serving on the
committee that helped establish Social Security was Wilbur Cohen, a man
who was eventually appointed by President Kennedy as an Assistant
Secretary for Legislation of Health, Education, and Welfare. As a
member of President Johnson's Cabinet, Wilbur Cohen's influence over
issues that impact America's seniors continue to grow, and many today
regard him as the man who built Medicare.
Jewish Americans also took an active role in our Nation's struggle
for civil rights. In the 1950s and 1960s, Jewish Americans were
passionately engaged in the struggle for civil rights:
Rabbi Stephen Wise, the great American Jewish leader, was one of the
founders of the NAACP. He made the case that civil rights were not only
a Jewish issue but that civil rights were a quintessential Jewish
issue. He understood and believed firmly that the Jewish community and
that the Nation--America--were stronger when prejudice was defeated and
when equal rights were extended to all;
Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel marched with Martin Luther King, Jr., in
Selma. In reflecting upon that march, Rabbi Heschel said, When I
marched in Selma, my legs were praying. It was his understanding, his
commitment, to what he viewed as essentially the holy work of lifting
up all Americans and of ensuring equal rights for all;
Several prominent Jewish activists, including Michael Schwerner and
Andrew Goodman lost their lives, along with African American activist
James Chaney, while fighting for the right to vote alongside organizers
in the South;
And perhaps there is no greater indication of Jewish Americans'
involvement in the struggle for civil rights than the fact that both
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965--two
landmark pieces of civil rights legislation--were both drafted as
legislation at the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.
As a Jewish American, I am honored to be part of a community that
throughout our Nation's history has helped make America a more fair and
a more just Nation--a Nation where opportunity extends to all, where
everyone can be lifted up by being given the chance to succeed. It is a
commitment to ensuring that seniors live lives of dignity and where the
poor receive the support that they need when times are most difficult.
Finally, it is the respect for every American--the dignity of every
American--that is recognized and fought for still to this day by so
many in the Jewish community.
I am so grateful to my friend Congresswoman Wasserman Schultz for
helping to ensure that we have the opportunity to share these thoughts
here on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives this evening. I
am grateful for that opportunity. I thank you for it.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Thank you so much for your commitment and for
your leadership. It is really a privilege to fight side by side with
you on behalf of our constituents in south Florida and on behalf of the
values that matter so deeply to our community.
For many years, actually, before you were elected to public office, I
watched your commitment to the U.S.-Israel relationship and to a strong
and vibrant Jewish State of Israel as an AIPAC activist and then as a
State senator, now as a Member of Congress and as a colleague. I thank
you so much for joining us here this evening.
It is now my privilege to recognize a newer colleague and a newer
friend but someone whom I have seen develop as a leader and someone who
has stepped up to represent her constituents in the
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western part of our country, which I'm sure is a completely different
Jewish experience than the east coast experience. Congresswoman Suzanne
Bonamici is a new Member who was elected in a special election not even
a year ago--actually, just a few short months ago. She has stepped up
and represents the Portland area in Oregon. More importantly, she is a
member of Congregation Beth Israel, and I am pleased to recognize her
here tonight.
Ms. BONAMICI. Thank you so much for yielding me this time,
Congresswoman Wasserman Schultz, and for your leadership in Jewish
American Heritage Month. It is great to join you and our other
colleagues here this evening.
Mr. Speaker, I would like to recognize the contributions that so many
Jewish Americans have made to our communities, to our States, to our
country. There are many Jewish Americans who could be recognized here
this evening and who deserve to be recognized for their contributions
here this evening in honor of Jewish American Heritage Month.
I rise to pay tribute to a great Jewish American, an Oregonian, Mr.
Harold Schnitzer. Born in 1923, Harold Schnitzer was the fifth of seven
children of Russian immigrants.
{time} 2020
He was born to Rose and Sam Schnitzer, who took a junk business and
turned it into a steel empire.
As a boy, Harold earned 25 cents a week for polishing metal at his
father's scrap yard. He told his teachers at Lincoln High School in
Portland that his future was in steel. By the age of 16, he came back
here to the East and he was studying at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, from which he graduated in 1944. He served in World War II.
He dealt scrap metal during his time in the Army, and he was expected
to take over the family business, but something happened. He didn't
want to compete with his brothers. So he left to start his own real
estate company, Harsch Investment Properties.
Throughout his life, Harold, along with his wife Arlene Schnitzer,
generously supported education, health care, and cultural and Jewish
institutions and organizations not only in Portland, but throughout the
State of Oregon. Harold Schnitzer lost his life last year in 2011 at
the age of 87. There is no question that he embodied tikkun olam. He
made the world a better place.
I want to thank you for this opportunity, Congresswoman Wasserman
Schultz, to pay tribute to a great Jewish American, but also to say
thank you again for making Jewish American Heritage Month a reality so
that others can learn about the contributions of Jewish Americans
around this great country.
Thank you again for this opportunity.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Thank you so much, and thank you for your
service on the House committee on the Budget. We serve on that
committee together, and you have represented your constituents well. I
appreciate you honoring the contributions of Jewish Americans across
this country here tonight.
Now it is my privilege to bring to the rostrum--for lack of a better
term--a friend and colleague who represents the southern region of
California in San Diego, who has been an incredible leader on the Armed
Services Committee, and who has definitely in her own right been a
Jewish leader and as a Jewish woman someone who has taken a leadership
role in the area of armed services, not only not traditional for women,
but one that we have a story to tell about Jewish involvement
throughout our American military history. And I'm going to share a
little bit about that later, but thank you so much.
Congresswoman Susan Davis.
Mrs. DAVIS of California. Thank you.
And I want to thank my colleague Debbie Wasserman Schultz for having
us together to talk about Jewish American Heritage Month this evening.
It's important for us to do that.
Whenever we think of perfecting our union--the President spoke about
this a little bit today as he hosted a number of individuals in the
Jewish community and people from around the country. The thing that I
always think about is tikkun olam, because it is part of our tradition
to repair the world.
Many Jewish people came to the United States having left a community
in which they weren't able to make contributions, and I think that's
partly why in bringing some talents and some skills--and, yes, in many
cases they weren't skills that were honed very well when they first
came to this country, but they developed those. And in developing those
skills and making a contribution and becoming treasures for each of
their communities, they clearly made a great deal of effort to repair
the world. They continue to do that in so many ways.
There is another tradition that we have. It's called tzedakah. It's
about caring for others. It's about giving to others. It's about
engaging people in that effort. It's about going down to soup kitchens
from time to time. It's about bringing homeless people into your
synagogue or into your temple during the winter. It's about engaging
all the time because we know that that's important to do. That caring
of tzedakah goes back to so many of the traditions that we all share.
It's about the golden rule. It's about taking care of one another. It's
about treating people the way that we want to be treated. That's very
much a part of our heritage.
I'm going to share a little story today, and it's a story that I
think my colleague is going to be laughing a little bit about because
it's not something that I would ordinarily do. But I had a chance to
read a little bit about a very special Jewish woman. Her name was
Thelma Tiby Eisen, and she was born in 1922 and lives today. I tell
this story because she was very famous as a professional athlete in
America. Probably people who don't know about Jewish women in athletics
or in baseball wouldn't know of her, but those who do would know that
name.
I bring that up because my colleague brought me into the first and
only bipartisan women's softball team here in the Capitol. I have to
share my story because I never played team sports in my life. In fact,
I probably picked up a baseball maybe once to hit somebody, but I
really don't remember doing that at all.
So when I was asked by my colleague to join with her in this team,
which is supporting young survivors of breast cancer, I thought, Well,
that's crazy for me to even do this because I can't make a contribution
to this team. But I've done it because I've cared about the cause
certainly of young survivors who have breast cancer and largely because
there are a number of Jewish women who by virtue of their genes have a
propensity to develop breast cancer.
Right around the time that I actually had agreed to be on this team--
actually, this even goes back to walking in the 3-day march for breast
cancer--I learned that my sister had breast cancer. Fortunately, she
has been able to overcome that. But it was something that I knew and I
had to take account of in my own life, as well. But I wanted to share
this story because I enjoyed reading about Thelma Tiby Eisen. I'm going
to share that.
One of the most versatile and talented professional athletes in
America was Gertrude Tiby Eisen. She was born in Los Angeles in 1922,
and she was a star of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball
League, the only professional women's league in baseball history. The
women's hardball league lasted from 1943 until 1954, and she was one of
at least four Jewish women in that professional league. As its only
Jewish superstar and a pioneer in American women's sports, she was an
outstanding athlete in her native Los Angeles. She started playing
semipro softball at age 14. When the league was formed in 1943, she won
a spot on the Milwaukee team, which was moved the next year to Grand
Rapids, Michigan. Her best season was in 1946, when she led the league
in triples. She stole 128 bases and made the all-star team.
The part of the story that I particularly like was that Eisen's
family was very ambivalent about the career choice that this ``nice
Jewish girl'' had made, although she ultimately won all of their
respect.
``We played a big charity game in Chicago for a Jewish hospital,''
Eisen recalled in an interview with historian David Spaner. ``My name
and picture were in every Jewish newspaper. My uncle, who had said,
`You shouldn't be
[[Page H3260]]
playing baseball--you'll get a bad reputation, a bad name,' was in the
stands bursting with pride that I was there.''
When she retired from professional baseball in 1952, she settled in
the Pacific Palisades area and became a star for the Orange Lionette
Softball Team, leading them to a world championship in 1993. She helped
establish the women's exhibit at the Baseball Hall of Fame in
Cooperstown, New York, and she wanted to have all this recorded to keep
the baseball league in the limelight:
``It gets pushed into the background,'' she said, ``just as women
have been pushed into the background forever. If they knew more about
our league, perhaps in the future some women will say, `Hey, maybe we
can do it again.' ''
Well, that's probably how all of us feel here in our bipartisan
effort in women's softball. We're going to play this game on June 20.
We're going to play against all of our women colleagues in the media:
TV, radio, and print.
{time} 2030
We certainly hope that we're going to bring back a victory here.
If I may, Mr. Speaker, I wanted to just highlight a few people,
really my contemporaries in San Diego, who have made such a
contribution because they're well known in our community and certainly
when we think of Jewish American Heritage Month, we can't help but
think of these individuals who today are continuing to make a
contribution. Two of them have passed on.
One, of course, is Jonas Salk that we all know very well. The Salk
Institute of San Diego continues to educate our scientists for our
country and really for the world, globally. I've had an opportunity to
meet with a number of young scientists there from time to time, and
their enthusiasm and their desire to really cure diseases in our
country are just always inspiring, and I think of them often when I
think of the Salk Institute.
The other person who I wanted to highlight very briefly is a
gentleman named Sol Price. Sol Price was the founder of Price Club, he
and his family. Whenever you think of ingenuity, innovation,
entrepreneurs, he was great, great at this. He also founded an
organization that I had an opportunity to be the executive director of
in its early years, the Aaron Price Fellows Program, educating a very,
very diverse group of young people to repair the world, to find in
civic life as a student and then as they go on as adults, to find a way
to really make a contribution to their community. It's a wonderful
program and the young people come here to Washington every year.
Finally, to just say, in regard to great contributors in our
community and across, across the world today, Dr. Irwin and Joan
Jacobs. Dr. Jacobs is the founder of Qualcomm along with Doctor Vitebi
in San Diego, who have made such extraordinary, extraordinary
contributions and continue to do that every day. It's a real honor to
be in a community where their philanthropy is so well known.
Finally, we have a very active group of Jewish war veterans in San
Diego, and I just wanted to thank Alan Milefsky, who has been the
Veteran of the Year in San Diego and continues to reach out and make a
great contribution and remind everybody of his extraordinary story as a
Jewish war veteran.
Thank you very much to my colleague for bringing us together today,
and it's been my honor to have an opportunity to speak about Jewish
American Heritage Month.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Thank you so much. Thank you, Congresswoman
Davis. Thank you for your leadership and for sharing the stories of the
important contributions that Jews in the San Diego community in America
have made through the fabric of American history.
It's now my pleasure and my privilege to ask my colleague from the
great State of Connecticut, Chris Murphy, to share some things.
I had--this is a reunion of sorts. A number of years ago, when Mr.
Murphy and I, along with Mr. Ryan of Ohio and our former colleague,
Congressman Meek from Florida, we used to spend a little time down here
on the House floor, around this time of night or later in the 30-
Something Working Group, and you may still actually be eligible to
participate. I no longer would be.
Mr. MURPHY of Connecticut. Barely.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Maybe I would be part of the ``something'' in
30-something.
I did have a chance to meet your fantastic Lieutenant Governor, Nancy
Wyman, today at the Jewish American Heritage Month reception at the
White House. She is obviously an incredible leader, an example of the
political leadership that is part of the contributions that American
Jews have made to American life.
Mr. Murphy.
Mr. MURPHY of Connecticut. Thank you very much, Congresswoman
Wasserman Schultz. I don't think that we were ever allowed down on the
House floor this early. It was normally close to the witching hour when
I, Representative Ryan, you, and Representative Meek were down here,
but it is wonderful to be back here.
I was really touched when you approached me earlier today to ask me
to come and say a few words, because the Murphys are not a very well
known Jewish American family. Yet in Connecticut we are so, so proud of
the legacy that we have helped contribute to with respect to Jewish
American heritage, and this is a great way to be part of this month's
celebration.
You know, the list is long in Connecticut. You know, I think about
somebody like Annie Fisher, who was one of the pioneers of special
education in this country trying to segment out a different way to
teach kids with learning disabilities. She was the first female
principal, first female superintendent in Hartford, Connecticut.
I think about a young guy by the name of Kid Kaplan, who was from my
district, from Meriden, Connecticut, was a featherweight champion of
the world, one of the top 10 featherweights by most people's estimates.
But I think maybe most about some of the political legacy that Jewish
Americans from Connecticut have left this country.
I think a lot about Abraham Ribicoff. Abraham Ribicoff was everything
in Connecticut. He was our Governor, he was our Senator, he was our
Congressman. He faced, not so quietly, the prejudice that so many
Jewish Americans faced as they entered into political life and
commercial life throughout the last 100 years.
He talked openly when he first ran for Governor about walking into
social halls and hearing prejudiced whispers throughout the room as he
walked in. He also talked about taking that prejudice head on. He would
walk up to the podium, and he would talk about the fact that he had
lived the American Dream as the son of Polish immigrants, as a young
guy who grew up working in zipper and buckle factories throughout the
Hartford region, that he was living the American Dream, that if he
could do it so could everybody else and their kids in that room.
He was probably best known for a moment at the podium of the
Democratic National Convention in 1968 when Chicago police were outside
treating protesters fairly roughly. He was the one member of the
political elite to stand up on that podium and call them out for their
tactics, and even with the mayor of that city sitting in the front row
calling him some pretty unfriendly names. He kept his cool and is
credited with essentially marginalizing that kind of violence,
certainly with historical hindsight.
Maybe most important is that Abraham Ribicoff also saw his role as
one of the leading American Jewish political figures in this country to
help pave the way for others. He had a young intern, not long after he
became U.S. Senator, named Joe Lieberman. He hired, in the early 1970s,
his administrative assistant, a young hot-shot lawyer named Richard
Blumenthal.
The two of them, both given their political sea legs by Abraham
Ribicoff, are today proudly serving as Connecticut's two United States
Senators, both part of our proud political tradition in Connecticut of
Jewish American participation in American politics.
I am really thrilled to be down here with you to share my gratitude
for what Jewish Americans in Connecticut have meant to our cultural
life, to our educational life, to our sporting life and, yes, to our
political life. Representative Wasserman Schultz,
[[Page H3261]]
thank you for your leadership and thank you for allowing me and asking
me to come down this evening.
Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Thank you so much, Mr. Murphy, and thank you
for your leadership as a member on the Foreign Affairs Committee, as
well, and your commitment and support to a strong U.S.-Israel
relationship, also an important issue to those of us in the Jewish
community and important to Americans, as Israel is our strongest ally
and friend.
You are right, and the reason that I wanted you to come down tonight
is because growing up as a nice Jewish girl on Long Island, I knew a
few folks over your way in Connecticut, being a resident of the tri-
State area, and knowing the rich tradition of political activism and
involvement of Jewish leaders in Connecticut and your leadership. You
know, we will call you an honorary Jew tonight--Murphyberg, or
something like that. But thank you so much for your leadership on
behalf of your constituents and your State, and thank you for joining
me this evening to honor the contributions of American Jews to the
fabric and the tapestry of American life.
Mr. Speaker, I am going to wrap up here in a few moments. I want to
share a few other things to help tie a ribbon on the second-to-last day
of Jewish American Heritage Month. We'll wrap up tomorrow.
{time} 2040
I want to share a story of a Floridian, because oftentimes--
certainly, recently--Florida would be well-known for our significant,
sizable, and accomplished Jewish community, particularly in south
Florida, where my district is. I like to say that I'm the person that
represents paradise down our way in south Florida. But the paradise
that we see today in south Florida was mostly swamp land many, many
years ago. And so the pioneers that blazed the trail that allowed for
the vibrant communities that we have in our State really were just
that--they were pioneers.
I want to share a story of one of those pioneers. For example, Moses
Elias Levy, who lived from 1782 to 1854, was one of the earliest and
largest developers in the State of Florida. At his Pilgrimage
Plantation, which was the first Jewish communitarian settlement in our
country, Moses housed several Jewish German families while
reintroducing sugarcane to our State. Thanks to his cultivation of the
first sugarcane plantation in Alachua County, which also has the good
fortune of being the home county to the University of Florida, my alma
mater--go, Gators--Florida boasts a thriving sugar production market
today, and that can be traced directly to Moses Elias Levy.
As a civil rights activist, though--that's the contribution that I
want to highlight--as America's first Jewish abolitionist author, Levy
exemplified not only the American entrepreneurial spirit, but the
Jewish value that we've been talking about here this evening of tikkun
olam--repairing the world.
He was an early and ardent advocate for public education for both
boys and girls--and that also was not common back then. Education was
typically more often left for boys, and girls were kind of lucky if
they had someone in their lives that encouraged them to get an
education and to continue it for any length of time.
So I'm proud to remember Moses Elias Levy's early contributions and
dedication to education and gender equality. Interestingly enough, Levy
County today is named after this gentleman, as well as David Yulee
Levy, who was our first United States Senator in the State of Florida,
and who was also an American Jew.
The other thing I want to mention, Mr. Speaker, is it is also not
often that Americans are aware of Jewish contributions to our military
history. And there is a way that people can get educated about American
Jewish contributions to the military history throughout our history of
involvement militarily by going and visiting the National Museum of
American Jewish Military History, which is in our Nation's Capitol on
Dupont Circle. I had an opportunity to host a Jewish American Heritage
Month event month there a few years ago, and was really thrilled to
learn about the contributions all the way back, Mr. Speaker, to the
Revolutionary War.
Jews were not only a part of fighting the Revolutionary War and
fighting for freedom in the United States, but also financing and
making sure--Haym Solomon was an important figure in ensuring that the
Minutemen had the resources under George Washington's leadership to
ultimately be able to make sure that we have a country and that we are
the beacon of freedom across the world that we are today. That was in
no small measures thanks to the contributions of Jews who were pioneers
here in America.
Lastly, Mr. Speaker, I want to share some of the really unique and
wonderful events that have happened throughout Jewish American Heritage
Month, and that we will continue to foster and thrive in and encourage
both Jews and non-Jews to celebrate these rich traditions.
Earlier this month, right at the beginning, on May 2, there was a
focus and program on ``Religion and Politics: When General Grant
Expelled the Jews.'' It's so important. And Jewish community leaders
and religious leaders talk so often about the importance of not
forgetting about previous persecution so that we can make sure that
history doesn't repeat it. Having an opportunity at the National Museum
of American Jewish History in Philadelphia to hold that lecture so that
we are familiar with that history was important.
There was also a program in Miami Beach, ``Coming to America: The
Jewish Impact and the Jewish Response.'' We had some unique
programming, ``The American Jewish Deli--A History,'' because food is
so important to the Jewish way of life all over the world. That was
held in New York City at the Park East Synagogue.
Two other important events to highlight were the Jewish American
Heritage Month Film Festival, which was held right here in Washington,
D.C., in the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial Library Auditorium. And
lastly, the program held in Margate, New Jersey, by the Board of Jewish
Education highlighting the contributions of Jewish women in America.
As a Jewish woman in America, I am really proud to have been a part
of introducing this resolution ensuring that ultimately we were able to
honor the contributions of American Jews to our history, but also to
make sure that we can help all Americans make it a priority that we
promote tolerance, that we reduce anti-Semitism, reduce bigotry, and
hopefully, Mr. Speaker, reach out to non-Jews across this country and
help them learn a little bit more about a culture that they may be
unfamiliar with, about a tradition and a history that might be a little
bit foreign to them, so that we can all come together as we're so
committed to do in America as one people standing for freedom, standing
for tolerance, and standing for justice.
I yield back the balance of my time.
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