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The Congressional Black Caucus Mourns the Loss of Rep. John
Lewis
The Congressional Black
Caucus released the following statement on the passing of
House Ways and Means Oversight Subcommittee Chairman and
Congressional Black Caucus Member, Congressman John R. Lewis
(GA-05):
The world has lost a legend;
the civil rights movement has lost an icon, the City of
Atlanta has lost one of its most fearless leaders and the
Congressional Black Caucus has lost our longest serving
member. The Congressional Black Caucus is known as the
Conscience of the Congress. John Lewis was known as the
conscience of our caucus. A fighter for justice until the
end, Mr. Lewis recently visited Black Lives Matter Plaza in
Washington DC. His mere presence encouraged a new generation
of activists to “speak up and speak out” and get into “good
trouble” to continue bending the arc toward justice and
freedom.
The City of Atlanta has lost
one of its most fearless leaders. Congressman John Lewis
spent his life fighting racism and injustice wherever he
confronted it, from boycotts, sit-ins, and other protests in
the streets, to championing bold, progressive policies in
Congress. Mr. Lewis was born and raised in Troy, Alabama, a
segregated town of the Deep South. At an early age, he was
inspired by the non-violent activism of Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. and his leadership of the Montgomery Bus
Boycott. This passion drove Mr. Lewis to dedicate himself
and his life to the Civil Rights Movement.
As a student at Fisk
University, Mr. Lewis was a part of the Nashville Student
Movement and helped organize sit-ins that eventually led to
the desegregation of the lunch counters in downtown
Nashville. In 1961, he became one of the 13 original Freedom
Riders, an integrated group determined to ride from
Washington, DC to New Orleans. In 1963, he became the
chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC),
an organization he helped form.
As chairman of SNCC, John
Lewis was one of the “Big 6” leaders of the historic March
on Washington on August, 28, 1963, and was the youngest
speaker to address the hundreds of thousands marching for
jobs and freedom that day. He also played a key role in the
marches from Selma to Montgomery, a campaign against the
blatant voter suppression of Black citizens. He joined Hosea
Williams and hundreds of civil rights marchers to cross the
Edmund Pettus Bridge on “Bloody Sunday” and suffered a
fractured skull that day for the right of Black people to
register and vote. |



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For 34 years, Mr. Lewis
served Georgia’s 5th district and our country with the same
burning desire to ensure America’s promises were accessible
to all. He never hesitated to tell the truth about this
nation’s history and injustices. In his very first Congress,
John Lewis introduced a bill to create an African American
history museum in Washington, DC, but the bill was blocked
by Senator Jesse Helms for 15 years. But Mr. Lewis
persisted, and the National Museum of African American
History and Culture opened in 2016 and is by far the most
popular museum on the National Mall.
In 2012, John Lewis unveiled
a marker in Emancipation Hall commemorating the
contributions of enslaved Americans to the construction of
the United States Capitol. The marker was the result of
literally a decade of work by a special task force led by
Mr. Lewis after a bill was found in the National Archives
documenting payment for slaves to build the Capitol.
Congressman Lewis commented at the unveiling:
“When I walk through
Statuary Hall, it means a great deal to me to know that the
unusual grey marble columns were likely hewn and polished by
slaves in Maryland. They quarried the stone in Maryland and
sailed ships or barges many miles down the Potomac River
weighed down by heavy marble columns to bring them to DC.
Somehow, they carried them several miles through the streets
perhaps using wagons and mules or horses, and then hoisted
them up so they are standing as we see them today in the
Capitol. The bronze statue sitting on top of the Capitol
dome also involved the contribution of slaves. These men
and woman played a powerful role in our history and that
must not be forgotten.”
Legislatively, Mr. Lewis
championed the Voter Empowerment Act, which would modernize
registration and voting in America and increase access to
the ballot. He was also an ardent advocate for immigrants,
the LGBTQ community, and affordable health care for all. As
Chair of the Oversight Subcommittee on the House Ways and
Means Committee, Mr. Lewis helped ensure the efficient
implementation of laws related to tax, trade, health, Human
Resources, and Social Security. He examined how the tax code
subsidizes hate groups and the public health impact of gun
violence. Most recently, Mr. Lewis pressed the Trump
Administration to quickly deliver the stimulus checks that
Congress provided in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Mr. Lewis continued his
practice of nonviolent protest, community organizing, and
grassroots activism throughout his tenure in Congress. In
2011, President Barack Obama awarded Mr. Lewis the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian award in
the United States of America. Following the Pulse Nightclub
shooting in 2016, John Lewis led Democrats in a 26-hour
sit-in on the House floor to demand that the body debate gun
control measures. Every year, he led a pilgrimage to Selma
to commemorate the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge.
Even his recent health challenges could not keep him from
commemorating the 55th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday” this
year.
Despite more than 40
arrests, brutal attacks and physical injuries, Mr. Lewis
remained devoted to the philosophy of nonviolence in his
fight for justice and equality, even to this day, as America
faces another reckoning with racism and hundreds of
thousands around the world spark a modern-day civil rights
movement against police brutality and racial injustice. He
taught us to keep our eye on the prize, and that lesson is
more crucial than ever. We will keep our eye on the prize of
social justice, voting rights, quality education, affordable
health care, and economic empowerment for every soul.
The entire Congressional
Black Caucus extends our condolences to Mr. Lewis’ family,
friends, staff, and the city of Atlanta.
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Copyright © 2019 by [The Sojourner's Truth]. All rights reserved.
Revised:
07/23/20 10:04:21 -0400. |
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