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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Senate of the State of Illinois | ||||||
3 | learned with regret of the death of one of our nation's | ||||||
4 | foremost civil rights leaders, Coretta Scott King, on Tuesday, | ||||||
5 | January 31, 2006; and
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6 | WHEREAS, She was born on April 27, 1927, on her | ||||||
7 | grandfather's farm in Heiberger, Alabama, to Obadiah and | ||||||
8 | Bernice Scott; she attended Lincoln High School in Marion, | ||||||
9 | Alabama, and Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, where she | ||||||
10 | was the first African American to major in elementary | ||||||
11 | education; and
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12 | WHEREAS, While attending Antioch College, Mrs. King was | ||||||
13 | active in the NAACP and shifted the focus of her studies to | ||||||
14 | music; in 1951, she won a scholarship to the New England | ||||||
15 | Conservatory of Music in Boston; it was there that she was | ||||||
16 | first introduced to her future husband, the Reverend Martin | ||||||
17 | Luther King Jr.; and
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18 | WHEREAS, In 1952, a friend wanted to introduce her to Dr. | ||||||
19 | King, who at the time was studying for his doctoral degree at | ||||||
20 | Boston University; when Mrs. King found out that he was a | ||||||
21 | minister, she lost interest, fearing he was too pious and | ||||||
22 | narrow-minded; still, Dr. King called her and convinced her to | ||||||
23 | have lunch with him; that very day, he told her that he thought | ||||||
24 | they should get married someday, that she was everything that | ||||||
25 | he had wanted in a woman; they were eventually married in the | ||||||
26 | garden of her parents' home in Alabama on June 19, 1953; and
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27 | WHEREAS, After earning her degree in voice and violin and | ||||||
28 | after Dr. King passed his exams, he took on the pastorship of | ||||||
29 | Dexter Avenue Church in Montgomery, Alabama; on December 1, | ||||||
30 | 1955, a seamstress named Rosa Parks boarded a crowded | ||||||
31 | Montgomery bus and refused to give up her seat to a white |
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1 | passenger; she was arrested for violating the state's bus | ||||||
2 | segregation law, igniting a fury among Montgomery's blacks that | ||||||
3 | would ripple across the South; local black leaders formed the | ||||||
4 | ad hoc Montgomery Improvement Assn. and called for a boycott of | ||||||
5 | the municipal bus system; the man chosen to lead the protest | ||||||
6 | was the young minister from Dexter Avenue Church; and
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7 | WHEREAS, Dr. King became the most famous black man in | ||||||
8 | America when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on November 13, 1956, | ||||||
9 | that Montgomery's bus segregation laws were unconstitutional; | ||||||
10 | he became known for his oration, and his most famous speech, | ||||||
11 | the "I Have a Dream" address delivered at the 1963 March on | ||||||
12 | Washington, was a clarion call for justice that galvanized the | ||||||
13 | nation; the following year he was the recipient of the 1964 | ||||||
14 | Nobel Peace Prize; and
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15 | WHEREAS, During the 1950s and 1960s, the Kings had to worry | ||||||
16 | about their own safety, when their house was bombed while Mrs. | ||||||
17 | King was there with the baby, Yolanda, when Dr. King was | ||||||
18 | stabbed in the heart by a deranged woman, and when he was | ||||||
19 | incarcerated multiple times for taking a stand for freedom and | ||||||
20 | equality; and
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21 | WHEREAS, While much of her time was spent at home with | ||||||
22 | Yolanda and their other three children, Martin III, Dexter, and | ||||||
23 | Bernice, Mrs. King was active in several organizations; she had | ||||||
24 | been a member since her college days of the anti-war group, | ||||||
25 | Women's Strike for Peace; at Dr. King's urging, she joined a | ||||||
26 | delegation of the group that went to Geneva, Switzerland, in | ||||||
27 | 1962 for atomic test-ban talks; she also was a member of the | ||||||
28 | Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and in | ||||||
29 | 1969, she led a quarter of a million people on the first | ||||||
30 | "moratorium" on the Vietnam War in Washington, D.C.; and
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31 | WHEREAS, She also raised money for the civil rights | ||||||
32 | movement by organizing a series of "Freedom Concerts", the |
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1 | first of which took place in New York City in 1964; they were | ||||||
2 | modeled on a program held on December 5, 1956, the first | ||||||
3 | anniversary of the Montgomery boycott, in which she, Duke | ||||||
4 | Ellington, Harry Belafonte, and other performers told the story | ||||||
5 | of the Montgomery struggle through music, poetry, and prose; | ||||||
6 | she eventually gave more than 30 concerts and raised in excess | ||||||
7 | of $50,000 for the cause; and
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8 | WHEREAS, As history has recorded, the Reverend Dr. Martin | ||||||
9 | Luther King Jr. was shot and killed on April 4, 1968, in | ||||||
10 | Memphis, Tennessee; he and Mrs. King had been married 14 years; | ||||||
11 | President Lyndon B. Johnson declared a national day of | ||||||
12 | mourning; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Before his burial, Mrs. King flew to Memphis to | ||||||
14 | take his place at the head of the protest march by garbage | ||||||
15 | workers whose plight had brought him to the city; a month | ||||||
16 | later, she helped to open the Poor Peoples' Campaign that he | ||||||
17 | had been planning before his death; she then became the | ||||||
18 | custodian of her late husband's legacy; in 1969, she began to | ||||||
19 | mobilize support for the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for | ||||||
20 | Nonviolent Change; she eventually raised $15 million to build | ||||||
21 | the complex, which opened in 1982;
she served as the center's | ||||||
22 | president for two decades; and
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23 | WHEREAS, She also channeled her energy into a long and | ||||||
24 | difficult drive to establish a King holiday; the legislation | ||||||
25 | finally cleared Congress on November 19, 1983, and was signed | ||||||
26 | by President Ronald Reagan two weeks later; Dr. King's birthday | ||||||
27 | became the tenth national holiday and only the second named for | ||||||
28 | an American; and
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29 | WHEREAS, She established herself as an advocate of women's | ||||||
30 | rights and full employment in the 1970s, campaigned against | ||||||
31 | apartheid in the 1980s, and was a keynote speaker in 1984 at | ||||||
32 | the U.N. International Day of Solidarity with the Women of |
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1 | South Africa and Namibia; the next year she was arrested with | ||||||
2 | her daughter, Bernice, at a rally outside the South African | ||||||
3 | Embassy in Washington; in 1994, she shared the podium with | ||||||
4 | Nelson Mandela after he won the first nonracial government | ||||||
5 | election in South Africa; and
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6 | WHEREAS, The passing of Coretta Scott King has been deeply | ||||||
7 | felt by many, especially her children, Dexter, Martin Luther | ||||||
8 | III, Yolanda Denise, and Bernice Albertine; therefore, be it
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9 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL | ||||||
10 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of | ||||||
11 | Coretta Scott King, who leaves a legacy of activism and | ||||||
12 | devotion to the ideal, and we extend our sincere condolences to | ||||||
13 | her family, friends, and all who knew and loved her; and be it | ||||||
14 | further
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15 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
16 | presented to her family as an expression of our deepest | ||||||
17 | sympathy.
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