This is a beautiful tribute to a great teacher, a great labor leader, and a woman of valor by the people who knew her best: the union she led.
STATEMENT: For Immediate Release| ctulocal1.orgCONTACT: Ronnie Reese 312-329-6235, RonnieReese@ctulocal1.org‘ Karen did not just lead our movement. Karen was our movement. CHICAGO, Feb. 8, 2021 — The Chicago Teachers Union released the following statement today regarding the passing of President Emerita Karen GJ Lewis: Our union is in deep mourning today at the passing of our sister, our leader and our friend, President Emerita Karen GJ Lewis. We are sending heartfelt condolences to her husband, John Lewis, and her surviving family and friends. She will be dearly missed. Karen taught us how to fight, and she taught us how to love. She was a direct descendant of the legendary Jackie Vaughn, the first Black, female president of our local. Both were fierce advocates for educators and children, but where Jackie was stately elegance, Karen was a brawler with sharp wit and an Ivy League education. She spoke three languages, loved her opera and her show tunes, and dazzled you with her smile, yet could stare down the most powerful enemies of public education and defend our institution with a force rarely seen in organized labor. She bowed to no one, and gave strength to tens of thousands of Chicago Teachers Union educators who followed her lead, and who live by her principles to this day. Karen had three questions that guided her leadership: ‘Does it unite us, does it build our power and does it make us stronger?’ Before her, there was no sea of red — a sea that now stretches across our nation. She was the voice of the teacher, the paraprofessional, the clinician, the counselor, the librarian and every rank-and-file educator who worked tirelessly to provide care and nurture for students; the single parent who fought tremendous odds to raise a family; and the laborer whose rights commanded honor and respect. She was a rose that grew out of South Side Chicago concrete — filled with love for her Kenwood Broncos alumni — to not only reach great heights, but to elevate everyone she led to those same heights. But Karen did not just lead our movement. Karen was our movement. In 2013, she said that in order to change public education in Chicago, we had to change Chicago, and change the political landscape of our city. Chicago has changed because of her. We have more fighters for justice and equity because of Karen, and because she was a champion — the people’s champion. Our hearts are heavy today, but it brings us joy to know that Karen has joined Jackie Vaughn, Marion Stamps, Addie Wyatt and Willie Barrow as the vanguard of Black women who have forged a heroic path of labor, justice and civil rights in our city. Karen now sits among them, still guiding our every move, and still guiding our vision for the schools our students and their families deserve. ###The Chicago Teachers Union represents more than 25,000 teachers and educational support personnel working in schools funded by City of Chicago School District 299, and by extension, over 350,000 students and families they serve. The CTU is an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers and the Illinois Federation of Teachers and is the third-largest teachers local in the United States. For more information, please visit the CTU website at www.ctulocal1.org. |
STATEMENT: 
Not for a very long time since deaths in my own family have I felt this sad and bereft.
Karen Lewis was a fearless, fierce, pure, real, and genuine justice warrior not only for CTU, but for public education in general. I have never felt so connected to someone I was not very close to, but Karen struck so many of us in a way that was visceral, spiritual, intellectual, and even hopeful.
She provided the resilience and determination in what it means to be human, vulnerable, and powerful, all at the same time. Her legacy of empowering us in our duty to protect and strengthen public education will be noted in the annals of time.
I ask that you think about ways of celebrating her legacy and honoring her work and accomplishments. Ultimately who she is and why she is inside all of us, we educators, is something all too rare and precious, and it will not wane. She is the indelible writing on the hand crafted pages of humanism and morality. Her legacy is as brightly lit and as infinite as the universe itself . . .
With sadness,
Robert
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Thank you for that lovely tribute to a great and inspiring person.
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Beautifully said, Robert!
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so nicely said: thank you
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As everyone here, I mourn the gone-too-soon, great Karen Lewis. In the earlier post, GregB rightly called her a mensch. Indeed she was, to the nth degree.
Having read the earlier post about the Biden Education picks, we must honor Karen’s legacy by doing as she did: fight like hell. We are NOT going to sit back & allow American public schools: students, parents, educators, communities to any longer take a back seat to the Gates, the Waltons, the Broadies, TFAs, the privatizers, the testers & all the other morons who want to destroy our children. (& ALEC–which is going to be FIFTY years old this year–& THIS should be their LAST.). We will begin by DEMANDING an END (not just this spring, not just this year), but an END to “standardized” testing.
Make the NPE in the mold of Karen’s (o.b.m.) beloved CTU, which started a national education revolution–a sea of red–clogging the streets of Chicago, then the capital of Wisconsin, then in the streets & the schools (Jessie Hagopian), & in so many others.
WE WILL be in the streets this year in peaceful protest: no extension of the Obama/Arnetization of public education. Just as we could not survive 4 more years of it45, our public school children cannot survive 4 more years of what has been going on far too long. THIS would be a fitting tribute to Karen, bringing honor to the legacy of such an esteemed person.
For us to do any less is, to me, a shanda (great shame, Hebrew).
Rest in power, Karen.
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BRAVO, RBMTK! So perfectly put! Should be one of many eulogies for her.
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Beautifully said, Retired!
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Fighting against privatization is the best way to honor Lewis’ legacy. What a lovely tribute!
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She was such an inspiring leader: able to see reality and never willing to compromise around it
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