[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 77 (Wednesday, May 21, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H4691]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
A TRIBUTE TO REVEREND FRANK McRAE
(Mr. COHEN asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, this past week, the city of Memphis lost one
of its greatest sons and leaders, Reverend Frank McRae.
Reverend McRae was a Memphian who took urban ministry to a new
position in the city of Memphis. Before Dr. King was assassinated April
4, 1968, he marched with the sanitation workers and Dr. King. After Dr.
King was assassinated, he led a group of ministers to city hall to urge
the mayor to settle the strife.
He knew that the church needed to do good deeds and help people in a
changing South and a changing America, and he helped found Friends for
Life that dealt with people with HIV and AIDS. He helped found the
Memphis Interfaith Association that provided food and clothing to
people in need. And he turned his church into a place where they had
soup kitchens and pantries, rather than a church of the most blessed
and most privileged. He was a great man who made Memphis the ``city of
good abode,'' as it is well known.
He will be greatly missed. He leaves his wife, two children, and
three stepchildren. I am fortunate to have known Frank McRae, and
Memphis is fortunate he came our way.
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