[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 69 (Thursday, May 16, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H2661-H2662]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GUN VIOLENCE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Illinois (Ms. Kelly) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KELLY of Illinois. Madam Speaker, by now you've all heard of the
terrible shooting that took place on Sunday during the Mother's Day
parade in New Orleans. Like all Americans, I was saddened to once again
see a joyous public event marred by gun violence.
Yet, as the Mother's Day shooting unfolded in New Orleans, I was
struck by another lesser known story about the toll of gun violence
that was playing out more than 100 miles away in Chicago. It is the
story of love and loss told by the mothers of those killed by gun
violence who were facing Mother's Day without their children, perhaps
for the first time.
A group of these mothers gathered at a memorial outside a Chicago
church to mourn and remember their children. As a mother who was
blessed to spend the day with my children, their pain and anguish is
unimaginable.
For every mass shooting that grabs the headlines, there are dozens
more that take place on America's streets every day that are leaving a
lost generation in their wake. And yet, in the national debate about
gun violence, these everyday killings, this slow-motion massacre is
often overlooked. And so are the mothers who are left behind.
Just as the mothers who wept for their children in Newtown, these
Chicago mothers are also the faces of the aftermath of gun violence.
Because whether your child is shot in the classroom or on a street
corner or in a park, your hopes and dreams for them were the same, and
so is the agony of your loss.
It is for these mothers--Clara Allen, Tanya Butler, Angela Blakely,
and others like them--that I raise my voice and will continue to raise
my voice in memory of their children to implore my colleagues in
Congress to pass reasonable and responsible gun legislation. We must
act now to end the senseless scourge of killings in our streets due to
gun violence.
I know there are those who think that new gun laws are not the
solution. I say they're looking at the wrong equation. Commonsense gun
restrictions are part of a multipronged approach to stemming gun
violence that should also include increased access to mental health
services and better community and social supports. It will take a
village to save these children, our children.
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Passing commonsense gun legislation is a key step in the process by
helping to keep guns out of the wrong hands. We must take a stand for
these children and their mothers and send the message that we hear
them, we care about them, and that their lives matter.
____________________