[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 62 (Tuesday, April 28, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H2493-H2494]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THERE IS NO POWER LIKE THE POWER OF A MOTHER
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mrs. Comstock). Under the Speaker's
announced policy of January 6, 2015, the gentleman from Illinois (Mr.
Rush) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority
leader.
Mr. RUSH. Madam Speaker, Mother's Day is soon approaching, and as we,
our Nation, take time to honor our mothers, I would like to make a
special appeal to African American mothers across this country that
they begin to use their awesome powers to take back our streets from
the daily violence that far too many of our youth, far too many of our
families, and far too many of our communities are experiencing each and
every day.
It is now time, time right now, for Black mothers to once again rise
up to stop the unmitigated and endless violence that is occurring
often--far too often--in our Nation's streets.
Madam Speaker, there is no power like the power of a mother. Beside
me today is an image that many across the Nation have seen, and it is
the subject of conversation all across our country. It is the image of
a strong Black mother giving her son what I will call a ``love
whipping''--a ``love whipping,'' Madam Speaker--to snatch him back from
the grips of senseless violence that is currently plaguing the city of
Baltimore, Maryland.
As this picture demonstrates, Madam Speaker, mothers can and mothers
must be the mobilizing force to take back our streets. Mothers feel the
pain of a loss of a child unlike any other. The primal scream of a
mother at the sudden death and departure of her child is unlike any
other outcry known to mankind.
As my own history has demonstrated, I am not one to excuse police
brutality and police murder and police mayhem and police utter
disrespect for the citizens that they are pledged and sworn to serve
and to protect. And as a former member of the Black Panther Party, we
in the party have always said, and I quote, that ``spontaneity is the
art of the foolish.''
[[Page H2494]]
What the Baltimore rioters and other rioters across this Nation fail
to understand, particularly those who are in Baltimore, what they fail
to understand and what they fail to consider is how many people in that
neighborhood were depending on the CVS drug store, or how many older
neighbors of those same young people were looking forward to the day
that they could call that burned-down senior citizens home a home for
themselves, and they were looking forward to it being completed. ``When
is the move-in date?'' They were looking forward to the comfort of that
senior home.
Simply put, Madam Speaker, senseless destruction of your own
neighborhood is not protesting; it is pillaging. It is not political;
it is pillaging--nothing more, nothing less. It is pillaging your own
neighborhood.
That is unintelligent. That makes no sense. That is eating the
wrapper and throwing the candy bar away. It makes no sense to pillage
your own neighborhood and deny your own people.
Beyond Baltimore, Madam Speaker--yes, and there is a beyond
Baltimore. Beyond Baltimore, we must look at the whole picture of
violence in our Nation. The violence that has plagued Baltimore didn't
come out of nowhere. It wasn't just a spark out of nowhere.
Instead, Madam Speaker, it was sparked by the frustration that so
many African Americans feel with the reports of the death of yet
another young African American man at the hands of our Nation's police.
It was sparked by the flame of frustration that far too many of our
Nation's youth are facing each and every day of their lives:
unemployment, disrespect, broken-down homes, broken-down communities,
failed education systems.
All these frustrations, frustrations that deny them a sense that
there is a future for them in this Nation, these frustrations inflame
all the fires in Baltimore or in other places across this Nation.
{time} 1945
That said, Madam Speaker, from my friend Fred Hampton, my friend
Michael Clark in 1969 to Michael Brown and Eric Garner and Tamir Rice
and now Freddie Gray in 2015, we have seen far too many young men of
color fall victim to the very same people who were sworn to serve and
protect.
This mother is demonstrating the power of a mother's love and the
power of a mother's courage. She walked into harm's way
straightforward, directly to, located her son. And she is demonstrating
a power that is beyond imagination and beyond all selflessness.
To honor her and the important role that all mothers, mamas, our
mothers--including my own mother--to honor them and to honor the
important role that they play in taking back our streets and ending the
violence that plagues our communities all across this Nation, I humbly
call on America's mothers, those in the African American community and
outside of the African American community, those in urban areas and
those in rural areas, all American mothers, to wear yellow, to wear
yellow, to wear yellow on Mother's Day in a symbolic show of solidarity
and to create a ``Mothers in Yellow'' movement to end the violence that
plagues this Nation's cities, this Nation's communities, this Nation's
neighborhoods.
Mothers, rise up now. Use this as an occasion to take back the
streets. Your pain, the pain that you feel, your sense of loss of hope
for your child, your sense of finality in terms of a future of your
child, that pain must stop, and you have the power to stop it.
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________