[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 185 (Friday, December 18, 2015)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E1840-E1841]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
A DAY IN HONOR OF JANET LANGHART COHEN
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HON. CHARLES B. RANGEL
of new york
in the house of representatives
Friday, December 18, 2015
Mr. RANGEL. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in honor of Emmy nominated
journalist, author and playwright Janet Langhart Cohen's one-act play,
``Anne & Emmett.'' On October 23, 2015, at the MIST Harlem Cultural
Center, I joined with the New Heritage Theatre Group, the Greater
Harlem Chamber of Commerce and MIST Harlem to welcome playwright Janet
Langhart Cohen to the Village of Harlem, where she presented the one-
act play ``Anne & Emmett,'' directed by Thomas W. Jones II. The play,
``Anne and Emmett,'' focuses on an imaginary conversation between Anne
Frank and Emmett Till, who were victims of religious intolerance and
racial hatred. That evening, ``Anne and Emmett'' was filmed by The New
Heritage Group under the supervision of celebrated director/producer
and former Chair of Columbia University's Graduate Film Program,
Professor Jamal Joseph.
The presentation of ``Anne and Emmett'' was made possible by RARIA
(Race and Reconciliation in America), a not for profit organization co-
founded by Janet Langhart Cohen, New York City Police Commissioner
William J. Bratton and the New York City Police Academy. First
premiered in 2009 at the United States Holocaust Museum, ``Anne &
Emmett,'' was conceived by Janet Langhart Cohen. The plays two main
characters were Emmett Till, a 14-year-old boy whose brutal murder in
Mississippi sixty years ago which sparked the modern civil rights
movement; and the young Holocaust victim Anne Frank, a Jewish girl who
had to go into hiding during World War Two to avoid the Nazis and after
almost two years in hiding she was discovered and deported to Bergen-
Belsen Concentration Camp where she died. The play has received rave
reviews during performances in Washington, DC, Indianapolis and
Chicago.
Mrs. Cohen is passionate about ensuring Emmett Till's story is never
forgotten; which she does daringly throughout the play. It has been
presented to dignitaries, students, Supreme Court justices, and now,
the NYPD and its recent classes of recruits. Her commitment and
understanding of how vital Emmett Till's story is to our nation was
heralded by the Till family last spring when they honored Mrs. Cohen
with the ``Women of Courage'' award established to honor the memory of
Emmett's mother, Mamie Till Mobley. Additionally, in 2014 Mrs. Cohen
led the way to have a tree planted in memory of Emmett Till, at the
United States Capitol.
To understand why she produced the play, one needs to learn where she
came from. Janet Langhart Cohen grew up in segregated housing in
Indianapolis, where the Indiana Ku Klux Klan rose to prominence in the
early 1920s. Janet went on to attend Crispus Attucks High School and
later moved to New York City, where she began her career in television.
Her television career included stints at NBC, America Alive with Bruce
Jenner, AM New York on ABC, WPIX-TV Channel 11, 9 Broadcast Plaza on
WOR-TV and Entertainment Tonight. Mrs. Cohen has had the privilege of
interviewing such luminaries as President Jimmy Carter, Margaret
Thatcher, Rosa Parks, Mel Gibson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Denzel
Washington, Dan Rather, Oprah Winfrey, Whoopi Goldberg, Barbara Walters
and Larry King, as well as David Duke former head of the Ku Klux Klan.
Janet married William S. Cohen, who at the time served as Secretary
of Defense, under President William Jefferson Clinton, and became known
as ``First Lady of the Pentagon'' due to her active and visible public
role at the Defense Department. Mrs. Cohen spurred several initiatives
aimed at morale and well-being of military and civilian employees at
the Pentagon; which included the Military Family Forum, the Pentagon
Pops concert series, the Secretary of Defense Annual Holiday Tour, and
her own series of interviews on Pentagon TV, Special Assignment. She
was given a volunteer position as ``First Lady of the USO'' and helped
recruit celebrities and civilians to work with the United Service
Organizations. Her many awards and honors include Hadassah Woman of the
Year and The Zachary and Elizabeth Award for Distinguished Civilian
Humanitarian Service for her work on behalf of members of the U.S.
Armed Forces and their families. In President Bill Clinton's last State
of the Union Address, he praised Mrs. Cohen for her enormous
contribution to the welfare and morale of our men and women in uniform
and their families.
Mr. Speaker, I joined with the New Heritage Theatre Group, the
Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, MIST Harlem and the Village of
Harlem to dedicate Friday, October 23, 2015 in honor of Janet Langhart
Cohen for her life-long commitment to ending racial and religious
intolerance and hatred in our Nation. I ask you and my colleagues to
join me in recognition of this great unheralded American, Janet
Langhart Cohen.
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