Rosa Parks being fingerprinted on February 22, 1956, by Lieutenant D.H. Lackey as one of the people indicted as leaders of the Montgomery bus boycott. She was one of 73 people rounded up by deputies that day after a grand jury charged 113 African Americans for organizing the boycott. This was a few months after her arrest on December 1, 1955, for refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger on a segregated municipal bus in Montgomery, Alabama. (Wikimedia Commons)
Rosa Parks being fingerprinted on February 22, 1956, by Lieutenant D.H. Lackey as one of the people indicted as leaders of the Montgomery bus boycott. She was one of 73 people rounded up by deputies that day after a grand jury charged 113 African Americans for organizing the boycott. This was a few months after her arrest on December 1, 1955, for refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger on a segregated municipal bus in Montgomery, Alabama. (Wikimedia Commons)

Reps. Terri Sewell, D-Ala., Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, and Shomari Figures, D-Ala., have introduced legislation to make Rosa Parks Day a federal holiday.

The Rosa Parks Day Act would designate Dec. 1 as a federal holiday marking Parks’ 1955 arrest in Montgomery, Alabama, for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white passenger. Her arrest sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott, a pivotal event in the civil rights movement.

“At a time when Black history is under attack, it is especially important that we recognize the bravery and heroism of changemakers like Rosa Parks who dared this nation to live up to its highest ideals,” Sewell said. “Honoring Rosa Parks with a new federal holiday will ensure that her contributions to the civil rights movement and to American history are never forgotten.”

“Nearly 70 years ago, Rosa Parks changed the course of history when she refused to give up her seat on a segregated bus in Montgomery,” Beatty said. “On that day, she sparked a civil rights revolution, challenging our country to deliver on the principles we’re bound to โ€” that all of us are created equal.”

Beatty, who championed Ohio becoming the first state to recognize Dec. 1 as Rosa Parks Day during her time as a state legislator, called for national recognition of “this esteemed American hero through a new federal holiday.”

While several states have adopted their own holidays honoring Parks, no federal holiday currently recognizes her contribution to the civil rights movement. If established, Rosa Parks Day would become the first federal holiday to honor a woman.

Figures, a freshman representative whose district includes Montgomery and Parks’ birthplace of Tuskegee, supported the measure. “I am proud to join this legislation designating a national holiday in her honor to ensure her contributions that helped ignite the civil rights movement are never forgotten,” he said.

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