[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 82 (Tuesday, May 24, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H2969]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1030
THANKFUL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, today is my birthday, and I chose to take
this opportunity to address Congress and the American people on things
I am blessed with and thoughtful about.
First, of course, are my parents, who are no longer alive, but they
gave me a great education and gave me a lot of love. My mother got the
opportunity to see me get elected to Congress, and when I did, she
said: What does that make me? I told her it made her the queen that she
has always been. She passed about 5 years ago, so she hasn't been able
to see these other years.
I am thankful to my mother, my father, and my grandfather, but
especially to my great-grandfather, Simon, who left Lithuania with
nothing in about 1884 and came to this country. If he wouldn't have
taken that bold step to leave his homeland without anything at all, I
probably would have been born into some union that would have led to my
being killed in the Holocaust.
Simon was a great man, and this was a great country that accepted
him. We have bills dealing with immigration, and I think about Simon
leaving Lithuania and giving me the opportunity to be here.
I am most thankful for my constituents for giving me this opportunity
to serve in Congress. I love my job. I have been in politics all my
life. I got elected for the first time when I was just 27 years old,
and I am a lot older than that today.
My constituents have blessed me. My district is the most African
American district in the United States of America, and the issue of
race and my religion--I am Jewish, which makes me a minority in my
district--do not come up any longer. I have not lost a precinct in the
Democratic primary because I have the best constituents in America who
don't see religion and don't see race, but they simply see somebody who
works hard at their job and votes their interests and tries to make
Memphis more prosperous, more healthy, and more just. And I will always
do that.
I thank my constituents for giving me the opportunity to serve here,
which was always something I longed for. I served in the State senate
for a long time. I ran for Congress once before and lost. And I used to
look at this building and think, ``I didn't get there; I didn't make
it.'' I got a second chance, and the District Nine residents gave me
that chance. I will be finishing my 10th year this year.
To serve with the men and women I serve with in this Congress, we get
a lot of abuse, and some people don't think we do a good job. Sometimes
I don't think we do a good job. I will tell you that the people in
Congress, the men and women, are all good men and women. They are
likeable people. That is why they get elected. They are all winners.
They may have a different perspective on what is right for this
country, but they come here dedicated, and they work hard and they try
to represent their district and make things better for the people in
their district. I am thankful for each of you, Democrats and
Republicans, for the opportunity to serve with you in this great Hall
and to serve America.
I thank District Nine, and I thank all my friends and my parents for
giving me this opportunity and giving me life.
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