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1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate wish to honor |
3 | | Black women, their accomplishments, and their contributions to |
4 | | the history of the United States; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, Black women have shaped and molded U.S. history |
6 | | in innumerable and irrefutable ways, from the moment they |
7 | | arrived by means of the Middle Passage as slave labor to their |
8 | | arrival in the White House as the vice president of the United |
9 | | States; and
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10 | | WHEREAS, Even in the face of unimaginable racism rooted in |
11 | | our violent origins in America, and continued for over 400 |
12 | | years, Black women have risen above their circumstances in the |
13 | | face of adversity, not just to survive but also to thrive, |
14 | | imagine, create, achieve, inspire, and excel; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, Black women have been the bedrock of the |
16 | | community, the foundation of the family, the cornerstone of |
17 | | the Black church, the innovator, the explorer, the |
18 | | entrepreneur, and so much more; and
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19 | | WHEREAS, Instead of accepting discrimination as their |
20 | | reality, Black women have instead built, created, developed, |
21 | | implemented, spearheaded, and maintained guilds, sororities, |
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1 | | non-profit organizations, clubs, scholarship foundations, |
2 | | medical associations, and philanthropic affiliations that have |
3 | | uplifted, improved, inspired, and supported multitudes of |
4 | | communities with diverse needs; and |
5 | | WHEREAS, It is time to celebrate "Mama" and the ancestors |
6 | | who taught Black women to be strong, resourceful, and to do |
7 | | good for the greater good; and |
8 | | WHEREAS, Black women nurture, guide, mentor, and inspire |
9 | | as they rise to unimaginable heights, overcoming intentional |
10 | | and systemic barriers; as Black women soar, communities are |
11 | | uplifted, and we all benefit; and
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12 | | WHEREAS, Black women have excelled in all areas of life, |
13 | | including but not limited to journalism, education, medicine, |
14 | | art, law and government, and business; this is exemplified in |
15 | | the lives of Black women who hail from the State of Illinois, |
16 | | such as Dr. Carol Adams, Ida B. Wells Barnett, Rev. Willie |
17 | | Barrow, United States Ambassador and Senator Carol Moseley |
18 | | Braun, Gwendolyn Brooks, Margaret Burroughs, Bessie Coleman, |
19 | | Rev. Johnnie Coleman, Marva Collins, Lorraine Hansbury, Vivian |
20 | | Harsh, Jennifer Hudson, Mahalia Jackson, Mae Jemison, Jackie |
21 | | Joyner-Kersee, Congresswoman Robin Kelly, Chaka Khan, Annie |
22 | | Turnbo Malone, Mamie Till Mobley, Diane Nash, Michelle Obama, |
23 | | Shonda Rhimes, Georgiana Simpson, Illinois Lieutenant Governor |
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1 | | Juliana Stratton, Jacqueline Vaughn and Oprah Winfrey; and
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2 | | WHEREAS, Black women have stood in solidarity with women |
3 | | and men of all backgrounds, sexual orientations, races, |
4 | | religious affiliations, and ethnicities across Illinois, the |
5 | | United States, and the world in an effort to demand parity and |
6 | | equity of all human beings in all areas of life; and
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7 | | WHEREAS, February 28th intentionally connects the |
8 | | nationally recognized months of February with Black History |
9 | | Month and March with Women's History Month, uplifting the |
10 | | unique intersectionality of race and gender of being both |
11 | | Black and a woman; therefore, be it
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12 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL |
13 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we declare February |
14 | | 28, 2023 as Black Women's History Day in the State of Illinois |
15 | | to honor the accomplishments, power, beauty, courage, |
16 | | intelligence, ingenuity, stewardship, and leadership of Black |
17 | | women; and be it further
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18 | | RESOLVED, That we encourage all Illinoisans and their |
19 | | families to acknowledge, in word and in deed, the |
20 | | accomplishments of Black women in places where they live, |
21 | | work, and play, because doing so recognizes Black women's |
22 | | history as American history.
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