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[Page H4432]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN HONOR OF SARAH M. STEVENSON
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
North Carolina (Ms. Adams) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ADAMS. Mr. Speaker, I rise this morning to speak in honor of the
first Black woman to serve on the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School Board.
One of the cofounders and conveners of the Tuesday Morning Breakfast
Forum, not only a queen of the Queen City, but one of the crown jewels,
Miss Sarah Stevenson.
Sarah Belle Mingo was born in Heath Springs, South Carolina, in 1925,
the first of 14 children.
Her life quickly led her to Charlotte where, like many African-
American women of her time, she worked as a housekeeper and did
domestic work so that she and her family could achieve a brighter
future.
In Charlotte, she successfully integrated the school district's
parent-teacher associations, and as an activist and mother of four,
helped lay the foundation for one of the most integrated school
districts in the Nation.
You could have found her across the street from us on October 12,
1970, when she attended oral arguments at the Supreme Court for the
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education case.
In 1980, she won election to the board of education, which she served
for 8 years.
Equity in education was always at the forefront of what she did,
because even though the courts declared separate but equal was unequal,
too many schools in Charlotte were still both separate and unequal.
What she did made a difference. In 1984, halfway through Miss Sarah's
tenure on the school board, President Ronald Reagan made a campaign
stop in Charlotte at the height of his popularity. President Reagan had
a line in his stump speech that won thunderous applause in cities
across the country, and in Charlotte, he repeated it, saying that
school busing was a failed social experiment that nobody wants.
The crowd went silent. There was, at best, scattered applause. That
is because in Charlotte, activists like Sarah Stevenson worked hard so
that Black and White parents could come together in support of
Charlotte's ``finest achievement''--school integration.
She lost reelection to the school board in 1988 because she continued
to value equity and integration even as the political winds changed.
Her values were more important to her than winning votes. And that is
an example that we can all learn from.
While on the school board, she cofounded the Tuesday Morning
Breakfast Forum, a group she continues to convene to this day. The
Forum can best be described as the pulse of the community in Charlotte.
The Forum has met on most Tuesdays for the past 40 years and is a
required stop for candidates for public office in Charlotte and those
running statewide.
For these and many other achievements, it goes without saying that
Sarah Stevenson has earned numerous awards and commendations over the
course of her life. I was honored to be with her in 2007 as the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Housing Partnership opened the 130-unit Stevenson
Apartments in her honor.
But perhaps the greatest honor she continues to bestow on us, the
entire Charlotte community, is her wisdom. Not only her wisdom, but the
wisdom of the Forum and its 40 years of guest speakers and attendees.
As is said in a Fourfold Franciscan blessing that often starts the
Forum:
May God bless us with discomfort at easy answers, half-
truths, and superficial relationships, so that we may live
deep within our hearts.
May God bless us with anger at injustice, oppression, and
exploitation of people, so that we may work for justice,
freedom, and peace.
May God bless us with tears to shed for those who suffer
from pain, rejection, starvation, and war so that we may
reach our hands to them to comfort them and turn their path
pain into joy.
May God bless us with enough foolishness to believe that we
can make a difference in this world, so that we can do what
others claim cannot be done.
I thank Miss Sarah, for working for justice, freedom, and peace, and
for blessing so many people with enough foolishness to believe that we
can make the impossible possible.
____________________