Louisiana 2014 2014 Regular Session

Louisiana Senate Bill SR179 Enrolled / Bill

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Regular Session, 2014	ENROLLED
SENATE RESOLUTION NO. 179
BY SENATORS BROOME, ADLEY, ALARIO, ALLAIN, AMEDEE, APPEL, BROWN,
BUFFINGTON, CHABERT, CLAI TOR, CORTEZ, CROWE,
DONAHUE, DORSEY-COLOMB, ERDEY, GALLOT, GUILLORY,
HEITMEIER, JOHNS, KOSTELKA, LAFLEUR, LONG, MARTINY,
MILLS, MORRELL, MORRISH , MURRAY, NEVERS, PEACOCK,
PERRY, PETERSON, RISER, GARY SMITH, JOHN SMITH,
TARVER, THOMPSON, WALSWORTH, WARD AND WHI TE 
A RESOLUTION
To express the sincere condolences of the Senate of the Legislature of Louisiana upon the
death of famed poet, author, and activist, Dr. Maya Angelou.
WHEREAS, it is with deep regret and profound sorrow that the Louisiana State
Senate has learned of the death of Dr. Maya Angelou, at the age of eighty-six, at her home
in Winston-Salem, North Carolina; and
WHEREAS, charismatic and passionate, warm and wise, formidable without being
forbidding, Maya Angelou's life was a gift to the world; she selflessly shared her talents as
a professor, singer, dancer, actress, author, poet, and activist, and it is appropriate to
commemorate her life and legacy; and
WHEREAS, Marguerite Johnson was born on April 4, 1928, in St. Louis, Missouri,
to Vivian Baxter Johnson and Bailey Johnson; she grew up between St. Louis and Stamps,
Arkansas and spent her early years studying dance and drama in San Francisco before
dropping out at age fourteen, instead becoming the city's first African-American female
cable car conductor; and
WHEREAS, due to tragic and unfortunate events in her childhood, Maya did not
speak for many years as an adolescent; out of her silence, a star of world-famed magnitude
was born; and
WHEREAS, Maya later returned to high school to finish her diploma and gave birth
a few weeks after graduation; as she waited tables to support her son, she acquired a passion
for music and dance; and
WHEREAS, Maya toured Europe in the mid-1950s in the opera production "Porgy
and Bess"; in 1957, she recorded her first album, "Calypso Lady"; and
WHEREAS, in 1958, Dr. Angelou become a part of the Harlem Writers Guild in
New York and played a queen in "The Blacks", an off-Broadway production by French SR NO. 179	ENROLLED
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dramatist Jean Genet; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou worked as a coordinator for the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, and lived for years in Egypt and Ghana, where she met
Nelson Mandela, who became a lifelong friend, and Malcolm X, whom she remained close
to until his assassination, in 1965; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou was also a close friend of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.; she
helped Dr. King organize the Poor People's March in Memphis, Tennessee, where the civil
rights leader was slain on her fortieth birthday; and
WHEREAS, in 1971, Dr. Angelou published the Pulitzer Prize-nominated poetry
collection "Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water 'Fore I Die"; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou's most revered and acclaimed work was I Know Why the
Caged Bird Sings, which was described as a work of art which eludes description, a tough,
funny, lyrical voice that transforms her story from a litany of isolation and suffering into a
hymn of glorious human endurance; it made literary history as the first nonfiction best-seller
by an African-American woman; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou was most famous for her poems and books, which were
uplifting, inspiring, and motivating literary masterpieces; in 1993, she was asked to recite
her famous classic, "On the Pulse of Morning", at President Bill Clinton's inauguration in
1993, and for President George W. Bush, she read "Amazing Peace" at the 2005 Christmas
tree lighting ceremony at the White House; and
WHEREAS, in 2011, President Barack Obama awarded Dr. Angelou with the
country's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom; she also received
presidential recognition with a National Medal of Arts and an honorary National Book
Award; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou was also one of the first black women film directors; her
work on Broadway was nominated for Tony Awards in addition to countless other honors
she received throughout her lifetime, including thirty honorary degrees, two NAACP Image
Awards, and three Grammy awards; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou was a role model to millions across the globe; her work
inspired dignitaries and heads of state around the world and she will be remembered as a SR NO. 179	ENROLLED
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Renaissance woman, a cultural pioneer, and a beacon of hope and light; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou once said that she wished to be remembered as in the
closing lines of her famous poem "Still I Rise": "Leaving behind nights of terror and fear,
I rise; Into a daybreak that's wondrously clear, I rise; Bringing the gifts that my ancestors
gave, I am the dream and the hope of the slave; I rise; I rise; I rise"; and
WHEREAS, Dr. Angelou's life was a gift to the world and it is wholly appropriate
to express condolences upon her death; she leaves behind a rich, renowned history of literary
works and poems that will forever speak of the profoundness and greatness of
Dr. Maya Angelou.
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Senate of the Legislature of Louisiana
does hereby express condolences upon the death of Dr. Maya Angelou; does hereby
recognize her life as a treasure to the United States and the world; does hereby
commemorate her journey as a black woman born poor who went on to write and recite the
most popular presidential inaugural poem in history; does hereby record for prosperity her
contributions as an activist and author who recorded and celebrated the experience of being
black in the United States; and does hereby express the deep regret of the entire state upon
the loss of this legendary and iconic woman.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this Resolution be transmitted to the
family of Dr. Maya Angelou.
PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE