[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 6] [Extensions of Remarks] [Page 8000] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]HONORING BISHOP H.H. BROOKINS ______ HON. JANICE HAHN of california in the house of representatives Wednesday, May 30, 2012 Ms. HAHN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor the memory of Bishop H.H. Brookins, who passed away on Tuesday, May 22, 2012 at the age of 86. Bishop Brookins was a giant in the Los Angeles community and in the African Methodist Episcopal, A.M.E. Church both nationally and internationally. He was a leader among leaders who had a knack for creating historic ``firsts.'' Bishop Brookins is credited for identifying former LAPD Lieutenant Tom Bradley as the preferred candidate to run for Los Angeles City Council in 1963, and for spearheading Bradley's victory as Los Angeles's first African-American Council member, and again 10 years later as the city's first African- American Mayor. Another Brookins ``first'' was the co-founding of the United Civil Rights Council, organizing 75 groups to help the Black community recover from the 1965 Watts Riots. Bishop Brookins served as the first President of UCRC, and later was a founding Board Member of Rev. Jesse Jackson's People United to Serve Humanity, also known as Operation PUSH. Born Hamel Hartford Brookins in Yazoo City, Mississippi on June 8, 1925, the seventh of 10 children of sharecroppers, he first attended Campbell College in Jackson, Mississippi. There he became pastor of his first church with fewer than 20 members. By 1954, H.H. Brookins was a minister in Wichita, Kansas, where he was elected the first black president of the 200-member Interracial Ministerial Council and led religious and civic leaders in uniting communities following the Supreme Court's order to desegregate the Topeka, Kansas public schools. Bishop Brookins also was famous for his leadership in the struggle to end Apartheid in South Africa. The H.H. Brookins legend in Los Angeles centers around his extraordinary accomplishments as Pastor of First A.M.E. Church, whose storied multi-million dollar sanctuary lies in the historic West Adams district, having started with an $8 building fund. First A.M.E.'s congregation now has nearly 20,000 members, a community development corporation, senior housing, and much more. Although he has passed from this life, Bishop H.H. Brookins lives on in the ministries of First A.M.E., and in all of us who loved and admired him. I offer my sincere condolences to Bishop Brookins' wife, the Rev. Rosalynn Kyle Brookins, his two sons, Sir-Wellington Hartford Brookins and Steven Hartford Brookins, and his daughter, the Rev. Francine A. Brookins. ____________________