[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 31 (Tuesday, February 25, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1045-S1046]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING ELIZABETH AND ROY PERATROVICH
Ms. MURKOWSKI. Madam President, I wish to honor Elizabeth
Peratrovich, her husband Roy Peratrovich, and their relentless pursuit
of equal civil rights in the territory of Alaska. Elizabeth and Roy
lived and worked long before Alaska became a State and still longer
before the United States passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. February
16, 2014 marked the 25th year Alaskans celebrated Elizabeth and the
passage of the Alaska Anti-Discrimination Act of 1945. I would like to
take a moment today, to once again, share the Peratroviches' story and
reflect on the legacy of their work.
Elizabeth, a member of the Lukaaxadi clan, in the Raven moiety of the
Tlingit tribe, was born on Independence Day in Petersburg, AK in 1911.
One year later, Alaska gained a territorial legislature in Juneau made
up of 8 senators and 16 representatives, none of whom were Alaska
Native. In the same year a group of Alaska Natives from Southeast
formed the Alaska Native Brotherhood to advocate for a right to U.S.
citizenship for Alaska Natives. In 1915, Alaska Native women came
together and established the Alaska Native Sisterhood to work alongside
the brotherhood. Although Elizabeth was very young for the creation of
these bodies, each came to play a great role in her fight for equal
rights.
Many Americans are familiar with the history of discrimination and
presence of Jim Crow laws at this time in the South. Probably fewer
Americans are familiar with the existence of similar discrimination
towards Alaska Natives. In Juneau, Alaskan Natives were restricted to
purchasing homes in only certain parts of town and their children
restricted to segregated Indian schools. Local business displayed signs
in their store fronts reading, ``No Natives Allowed,'' ``We cater to
white trade only,'' or ``No Dogs, No Natives'' and restaurant signs
read, ``Meals at all hours--All white help.'' The U.S. Congress granted
citizenship to Native Americans in 1924, yet signs like these and the
discrimination they perpetrated endured.
Elizabeth grew up and attended school in Petersburg, Sitka and
Ketchikan. After graduating she continued her education at the Western
College of Education in Bellingham, WA. In 1931, Elizabeth married Roy
Peratrovich, a fellow Western College student and Tlingit from Klawock,
AK. In 1940, Roy was elected to be the Alaska Native Brotherhood's camp
president and the following year Elizabeth was elected grand president
of the Alaska Native Sisterhood.
Together, with their young family, the Peratroviches moved to Juneau,
only to experience discrimination against Alaska Natives first-hand.
Elizabeth and Roy picked out a home together and tried to purchase it,
but once the owners realized that the Peratroviches were Alaska Native,
they would not sell. Their children felt unwelcome at school. Their
close family friend, Henrietta Newton, who was not Alaska Native
herself but married an Alaska Native man, was told by a local beauty
parlor, ``I'm sorry we don't cater to Indian trade.'' When an Alaska
Native child had an altercation with the law, their local newspaper
published it as front page news. Discrimination towards Alaska Natives
remained prevalent. On December 30, 1941, in their capacities as
president and grand president of the Alaska Native Brother and
Sisterhoods, Roy and Elizabeth wrote a letter to Ernest Gruening, then
Governor of the Territory of Alaska. The letter drew attention to the
discrepancy between Alaska Natives paying taxes for a public school
system from which their children were excluded and also between Alaska
Native men fighting in World War II, who upon return were denied rights
that other locals enjoyed. Thus began their public pursuit of equal
rights for all people in Alaska.
Elizabeth began to call upon her friends and family to involve
themselves in the anti-discrimination movement. She recruited women to
meet with a Senator from Nome in order to express to him what it felt
like to be discriminated against, left out of the United Service
Organization, and forced to read signs in local businesses barring them
from entry. Elizabeth and Roy met with Governor Gruening to strategize
their movement, and then traveled around Native communities bringing
with them sample anti-discrimination legislation from the lower 48. In
1943, State Senator Norman Walker introduced an act that would provide
full and equal accommodations to all people within the Territory of
Alaska. The vote was defeated, but the Peratroviches were not.
In 1945, the antidiscrimination bill was reintroduced. It passed the
house and moved to the senate. The gallery was full, the doors were
open and spectators filled the halls outside. Once on the senate floor,
the debate began. As senators stood to speak, Elizabeth, along with
many other community members listened. They listened as one Senator
rose to say:
Far from being brought closer together, which will result
from this bill, the races should be kept further apart. Who
are these people, barely out of savagery, who want to
associate with us whites with 5,000 years of recorded
civilization behind us?
Elizabeth looked on as another senator claimed, ``Mixed breeds are
the source of trouble, it is they only who wish to associate with the
whites,'' and as a church leader declared that it would take at least
30 years before Alaska Natives were equal to white men, Roy rose to
speak on behalf of the bill noting that Governor Gruening recognized
discrimination in Alaska. He addressed the legislature with these
words, ``Either you are for discrimination or you are against it
accordingly as you vote on this bill.''
Once debate on the bill concluded, the public was given a chance to
express their views in front of the legislature and a crowd gathered
that day. Given this chance, Elizabeth took it. Once on the senate
floor, Elizabeth sat next to the president of the senate, where she
addressed the predominantly white and all-male body of legislators. ``I
would not have expected that I, who am barely out of savagery, would
have to remind gentlemen with five thousand years of recorded
civilization behind them of our Bill of Rights.''
When asked if she thought the bill would eliminate discrimination,
Elizabeth replied:
Do your laws against larceny and even murder prevent those
crimes? No law will eliminate crimes but at least you as
legislators can assert to the world that you recognize the
evil of the present situation and speak your intent to help
us overcome discrimination.
[[Page S1046]]
As Elizabeth finished speaking, the gallery broke out in applause.
The senate voted and passed the anti-discrimination bill by a vote of
11 to 5. On February 16, 1945, Elizabeth earned her spot as our fighter
with velvet gloves, and as she's respectfully remembered in our State,
Alaska's Martin Luther King.
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