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PEOPLE IN AMERICA - Barbara Jordan - 2004-07-24


Broadcast: July 25, 2004

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VOICE ONE:

I’m Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I’m Sarah Long with People in America in VOA Special English. Today, we tell about a woman who worked to make a difference in people’s lives, Barbara Jordan.

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VOICE ONE:

Barbara Jordan was a lawyer, educator and member of Congress. She was well-known for her powerful, thoughtful speeches. During her long political career, Barbara Jordan worked for social change. She sought to use her political influence to make a difference for all Americans.

Barbara Jordan became the first African-American woman to be elected to the United States Congress to represent Texas. In Nineteen-Seventy-Four, she gained national recognition as a member of the congressional committee investigating President Richard Nixon.

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VOICE TWO:

Barbara Charline Jordan was born in the southern city of Houston, Texas in Nineteen-Thirty-Six. She was the youngest of three daughters. Her father was a Baptist minister. He taught her a love of family, faith, music and language. As a child, Barbara’s parents pushed her to succeed.

Barbara Jordan said her parents would criticize her for not speaking correct English. They urged her to become a music teacher, because they said that was the only good job for a black woman at that time. Her sisters did become music teachers. Barbara Jordan, however, explained later that she wanted to be something unusual. At first she thought about being a pharmacist, a scientist who is an expert in medicines. But, she noted, she never heard of an important pharmacist.

VOICE ONE:

In high school, Barbara heard a black woman lawyer speak. Mizz Jordan decided to become a lawyer. She attended the all-black college, Texas Southern University in Houston. She led a championship debating team and became known for her speaking skills. She finished at the top of her class. Then she went onto Boston University law school in Boston, Massachusetts.

After she finished law school, Mizz Jordan returned to Texas. She began to work as a lawyer. She also discovered she was interested in politics. Her interest began when she helped in a presidential campaign. She worked to help get Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kennedy elected in Nineteen-Sixty.

VOICE TWO:

Soon, Mizz Jordan decided to become a politician herself. She first campaigned for public office in Nineteen-Sixty-Two. She wanted to become a member of the Texas House of Representatives. She lost that election, and another election two years later.

In Nineteen-Sixty-Six, she decided to seek a seat in the Texas Senate. She won. Barbara Jordan became the first black person to serve in the Texas Senate since Eighteen-Eighty-Three.

During her years as a Texas lawmaker, Mizz Jordan proposed and helped pass legislation dealing with social change. She helped reform public assistance programs and protect workers' wages. She also opposed legislation that would have made it harder for blacks and Latin Americans to vote.

VOICE ONE:

After eight years in the Texas Senate, Mizz Jordan campaigned for a seat in the United States House of Representatives. She won easily. She was the first woman and first black to be elected to Congress to represent Texas.

In Congress, Mizz Jordan spoke for the poor, for women, for African-Americans and Latin Americans. She believed strongly, however, in being loyal to her state and her political party. She considered the interests of the people of Texas before those of any other group.

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VOICE TWO:

In Nineteen-Seventy-Four, Congresswoman Jordan was a member of the House Judiciary committee. The committee was investigating evidence of wrongdoing by then President Richard Nixon. The Congressional hearings into the situation known as Watergate were broadcast on national television.

During the Watergate hearings, Mizz Jordan declared her strong belief in the United States Constitution. She denounced President Nixon for violating it. She is remembered still for her commanding presentation at the hearing and deep knowledge of constitutional issues. The Watergate hearings that led to President Nixon’s resignation made Barbara Jordan known around the nation.

VOICE ONE:

Following the Watergate hearings, Barbara Jordan went on to other firsts. In Nineteen-Seventy-Six, she was asked to speak at the Democratic National Convention which nominated Jimmy Carter. Mizz Jordan was the first black woman to give an opening speech at the Democratic Convention. She said members of the Democratic party believe that the people are the basis of all governmental power. Democrats believe, she continued, that the power of the people is to be extended, not restricted. In her speech, Mizz Jordan also urged Americans to work for the common good:

(JORDAN)

"Many fear the future. Many are distrustful of their leaders and believe that their voices are never heard. Many seek only to satisfy their private wants, to satisfy their private interests. But this is the great danger America faces -- that we will cease to be one nation and become instead a collection of interest groups, each seeking to satisfy private wants. If that happens, who then will speak for America? Who then will speak for the common good?"

VOICE TWO:

The fact she was black and a woman did not seem to slow Barbara Jordan's rise. Her future seemed limitless. Then, in Nineteen-Seventy-Seven, Mizz Jordan suddenly announced she was retiring from Congress and returning to Texas. She later said she felt she was not making enough difference.

(JORDAN)

"If I felt that I could have been increasingly effective in that job, I suppose I would have continued to do it. But politics is (takes) a long, long time to make any significant, long-lasting difference."

VOICE ONE:

After returning to Texas, Barbara Jordan began teaching about political values at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas in Austin. Her two classes were so popular, students had to be chosen from a long list.

At the time that Mizz Jordan left Congress, there were widespread reports that failing health was the cause for her decision. Later, it was announced that she had the disease called multiple sclerosis that affects the muscles. She had to move about in a wheelchair. But, she said, the disease did not lessen her thinking or the quality of her mind. Nor did it affect her ability to speak.

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VOICE TWO:

In the years after she retired from Congress, Mizz Jordan made two more appearances at Democratic National Conventions. She announced her support for the vice-presidential nomination of Lloyd Bentsen at the Nineteen-Eighty-Eight convention in Atlanta. She spoke from a wheelchair. Her powerful voice was heard once again at the Nineteen-Ninety-Two Democratic convention, which nominated Bill Clinton for president. In her speech, she called for national unity:

(JORDAN)

"We are one, we Americans, we're one, and we reject any intruder who seeks to divide us on the basis of race and color. We honor cultural identity--we always have, we always will. But, separatism is not allowed (applause)--separatism is not the American way. We must not allow ideas like political correctness to divide us and cause us to reverse hard-won achievements in human rights and civil rights." VOICE ONE:

Barbara Jordan considered herself a teacher first, above all else. By her example, she taught all Americans about the importance of one's beliefs and the power of truth. She developed pneumonia caused by the blood cancer, leukemia, and died January Eighteenth, Nineteen-Ninety-Six. She was fifty-nine.

VOICE TWO:

Barbara Jordan was buried wearing the Presidential Medal of Freedom. It is the highest non-military honor given to Americans. President Clinton presented it to her in Nineteen-Ninety-Four. At the funeral ceremony, former Texas Governor Ann Richards said: "There was simply something about her that made you proud to be part of the country that produced her."

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VOICE ONE:

This Special English program was written by Cynthia Kirk and produced by Lawan Davis. I'm Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Sarah Long. Join us again next week for another People in America program in VOA Special English.

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