[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 3 (Thursday, January 8, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H111]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ISSUES CONFRONTING CONGRESS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, there are a number of issues that are
confronting this Congress as it returns to serve the American people
here in the United States Capital. What a wonderful place of democracy
and freedom. It gives me a sense of ownership on these values on behalf
of my constituents in celebration that we live in a nation that admires
and respects and finds a way to disagree without being disagreeable
but, more importantly, that we understand that violence against one
another is not the solution.
Tragically, I stand to mourn with the people of France as they have
experienced a heinous terrorist act, the first, I believe, in a decade
that follows the tragedies in Canada and Australia. So we have to
define ourselves in somewhat of a different way. The commentary
indicated, How would we know?
As a senior member of the Homeland Security Committee, I challenge
all of us to say we have to know. We must find a way to balance our
civil liberties and the respect for our Constitution with protecting
the American people, and in a two-road process, try to hinder those who
would come to do this violent harm on our soil. But more importantly,
we have to begin in a societal confrontation through diplomacy on
stopping the radicalization of young people using sources such as the
Internet. It is real and we must address it. I look forward as a member
of the Homeland Security Committee to begin looking legislatively and
pointedly at how we address this question to protect the American
people.
I want to step aside for a moment and just speak on two local issues.
Riverside Hospital, Houston
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, Riverside Hospital, Houston, quite
different from my earlier comments, is a local hospital in my community
founded by the family of a deceased World War I veteran. It has a
special place in the hearts of African Americans because it was the
only hospital where Negroes could go in the 20th century. It has fallen
on difficult challenges.
And so my question and my inquiry is to the new, incoming Governor
for the State of Texas, Governor Abbott, to find value in this medical
facility because of its historic relationship. It once housed the only
outside posttraumatic stress disorder center in Houston outside of the
veterans hospital system. It was well attended by veterans who loved
the idea of a center that was away from the massive hospital system. It
serves people who are poor in the neighborhood and seniors. It has
helped those who suffer from substance abuse, and I believe that it
needs and desires and deserves a new start.
I will be working with a variety of agencies to do that, and will not
be ashamed that unfortunately tragic or, let me say, misbehavior of
some caused this unfortunate turn in this hospital. Its history is
worth saving. I thank the Cullinan family, whose son died in World War
II, for providing the initial funds for us to be able to have this
Negro hospital.
Saluting Wheatley High School
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, then I want to salute Wheatley High
School and those who have attended it. It was named after Phillis
Wheatley. It was an African American high school in the great city of
Houston in the fifth ward. Two of its many graduates were the late
Congressman Mickey Leland and late Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, and
obviously many other great Americans who went to that high school.
Unfortunately, the original Wheatley High School--over the valiant
efforts of Wheatley graduates because ``everything new'' seems to be
the direction we want to go--was torn down. But I believe there is a
way to find common ground, and I am going to encourage HISD to meet
with these valiant former alumni to find a common path of preserving
that history in the new school and bringing the community together.
We look forward to meetings forthcoming, for HISD to lend a hand out
to people who want to preserve history, to tell the story of a school
that was built in 1927 out of a material that in fact actually lasted.
And when African Americans could not go to any other school, when those
who went off to World War II and Vietnam couldn't go elsewhere, they
had the Wheatley High School that sits proudly in the fifth ward. There
is a Wheatley High School that was modernized, but the original
building of terra-cotta material--so beautiful if you had seen it--
could have been restored.
I would like to stand here and say don't condemn those who wanted to
hold that piece of history alongside of educating children today and
give them the kind of technology they needed. We can do this together.
I want to salute those who fought hard, and we can find a common path
by working together.
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