这位不简单的女议员
Jeanette Rankin
Jeanette Rankin (1880-1973) was born near Missoula, Montana, attended the public schools there, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula. At age 37, Ms. Rankin won election to the US House of Representatives from Montana. She was the first woman elected to the US Congress in 1917 -- three years before women were guaranteed the Constitutional right to vote.
1917.4.威尔孙年代:一次大战的勇气:投反对票就是为妇女运动(WomenSuffrage)蒙上阴影
President Wilson called for a war resolution on the evening Congress convened in April 1917. A strong advocate of women's rights, she was lobbied by rival women's political groups tried to persuade Rankin that her vote would speak for all women. Carrie Chapman Catt of the National American Woman Suffrage Association feared a vote against war would brand suffragists as unpatriotic while Alice Paul of the Woman's Party thought women in politics should speak for peace. Rankin, who had not previously identified herself as a pacifist, announced that she could not vote for war and in joining the fifty-six other Members who voted against the war resolution embarked on the cause that would be at the center of her life until her death more than a half century later. Her vote cost her reelection.
For twenty years following her retirement from Congress in 1919 Rankin was actively involved in a variety of pacifist organizations such as the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. She served also as field representative for the National Council for the Prevention of War.
1941.12.罗斯福年代:二次大战的又一次勇气,这次是唯一的一个投反对票的
She was elected to the House of Representatives again in 1940 on a peace platform and was the only member of Congress to vote "no" to the U.S. entering the second World War. To vote "no" to war after the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor took great strength of conviction. After placing her vote, Rankin had to seek safety in a nearby phone booth from angry crowds until police could escort her home.
六十年代:反对入侵越南
In the years following the war, Rankin made various trips to India to study the pacifism of Gandhi and others. She briefly reentered public life in the late 1960s when a coalition of women organized themselves as the Jeannette Rankin Brigade and marched on Washington in protest of the war in Vietnam.