Saturday, September 5, 2009

IMAGENE STEWART



Bishop Imagene Stewart
@ The History Makers


Compassionate Warrior



Imagene Stewart has many battles to fight. She comes armed with a life long cache of compassion. Her morale is high. Surrounded by the mighty fortress of God, she fights on against the mortal enemies of time and apathy. Where she feels pain, she heals it. Where she senses loneliness, she comforts it. Where she sees an American flag, she salutes it.



Born Imagene Bigham in Dublin, Georgia on September 23, 1942, she learned the foundation of her life from her parents, Rev. J.C. Bigham and Mattie Watkins Bigham, who married in Laurens County, Georgia on November 28, 1941. Imagene married Lucius Johnson on August 11, 1958. After her marriage to Lucius "L.C." Johnson ended, she lived in public housing in H.T. Jones Village with her mother, and her two sons, Michael Tyrone Johnson and Jeffrey Lorenzo Johnson. She worked a domestic servant just like her mother. Imagene learned all too well of the injustices of life in the country in the fifties and early sixties. She participated in many civil rights marches in Dublin with the Bates sisters.



It was in 1963 when she began to prepare for the battles to come. She traveled to Washington, D.C. with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as a member of the Georgia delegation on the March on Washington. She stayed in Washington and was an active member of the the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Recently, she told a reporter for The Pentagram, " I came here to fight racial injustice. I thought that white people were against me, but I realized that there were blacks against me too."



As more and more veterans of the Vietnam War came home, she realized that many of them had no home to come home to. In 1972, she opened a shelter for homeless veterans. " It seemed like some people forgot the Vietnam veterans," said Rev. Stewart, an ordained Baptist minister. She continued, " Those people gave us the freedoms we enjoy everyday. They are the life-line of this country."



Stewart, a harsh critic of the Veterans Administration for its seemingly uncaring treatment of homeless and helpless veterans and their families, refused to accept donations from the federal government. "Veterans are discarded by the military. The country does nothing for its homeless veterans," she said. She accused many other similar shelter operators of bilking the government of funds without really caring for the veterans. Following the success of her six-family center on P Street in Washington, D.C., she opened a ten-family shelter in the Suitland section of the city.
Today in her twenty room House of Imagene, she provides bunk beds for twenty five people.





There are occasions when veterans come in with the grandchildren, who have been left in their custody by neglective parents. Rev. Stewart welcomes them all with open arms. For more than three decades, she served meals on Thanksgiving Day to the homeless. Thanksgiving Day 2003, when her shelter served three thousand meals, was the last time her shelter serve the homeless on Thanksgiving. Her health and her age are beginning to fail her. Stewart said, " I’ve gotten too old and my health is deteriorating. I can’t do what I used to do. I just feel I’ve been shoe-stringed for all the years and got no support. I’m at the point where I need help. I’ve enjoyed it, and I don’t think God would be pleased with me to walk away, even after 32 years."



Imagene married Albert Stewart, a veteran of the Korean War. Both of her sons served in the military. Imagene told the reporter from the Pentagram, " I always wanted to be a soldier, but in those days the military rarely accepted teenage mothers." She keeps close to the military as much as she can. She visits the wounded and maimed soldiers who are being sent from Iraq to Walter Reed Hospital. "They are babies, 18- and 19-year-olds without arms and legs. What are they going to do when they try to pick up their lives?" she wonders. She has served as Chaplain of the Tuskegee Airman Civil Air Patrol at Andrews Air Force Base.



Stewart served as the National Vice President of the Eastern Division of the American Legion Auxiliary from 2000 to 2001. She served as president of her local legion auxiliary as well as on the executive board of D.C. Veterans & Auxiliaries Council Veterans Against Drugs. She has been a member of the U.S. Air Force Mother’s Club, American War Mothers and Amvets Auxiliary. In addressing the convention of the American Legion in 2001, she commented on the suggestion that blacks pledge allegiance to Africa and not the American flag, she brought forth a thunderous standing ovation when she told the gathering of veterans, "Well, honey, I ain’t never been to Africa. . . I was born in the United States of America, very proudly." She has been named by the National President of the Legion Auxiliary as "An Angel in Action" for her decades of showing mercy to homeless veterans.



Stewart was consecrated presiding Bishop of the African American Women's Clergy Association during a Women's History Month celebration March 2, 1996 at the Chapel of Hope, Shilo Baptist Church. She is a pastor of the Greater Pearly Gate Full Gospel Baptist Church, Bishop Stewart was the first African-American minister elected National Chaplain to the American Legion Auxiliary.



Bishop Stewart has been awarded numerous accolades for her community service. In 1991, she was commended by President Bush for efforts in meeting the needs of homeless veterans. The next year, she was awarded the prestigious " Living the Dream Award" for her service to battered women. Oh yes, the House of Imagene takes in victims of domestic violence in the D.C. Area. Are you surprised? In 2000, she was awarded a Leadership Award by the D.C. Chamber of Commerce. She has been commended by Secretary of State Colin Powell, who has provided his own support of homeless veterans in Washington. On Feb. 8, 2004, she was awarded a community service award by Fort Myer, which Bishop Stewart calls a "thankless job, but somebody has to do it." In her spare time, Bishop Stewart hosts a Sunday morning radio talk show on WOL 1450 AM in Washington, D.C., where she is known to her listeners as "The Georgia Peach."



For decades, Bishop Stewart has been a leading advocate for a constitutional amendment to protect the American flag from desecration. Despite the fact that most states have asked the Congress to adopt such an amendment, the Congress has failed to act. She served on the board of the Citizens Flag Alliance and urged her listeners to speak out in favor of the amendment to protect the flag.



While Imagene has long been an advocate for the rights of her people, she doesn’t consider herself an African-American. "Some people tell me my allegiance should be to Africa," she told the Pentagram reporter. "I’m from the USA. I’m an American," she proudly proclaimed. She is often criticized for her support of President George W. Bush, but that doesn’t mean she isn’t an advocate for social rights. She always has been there to defend and promote the rights of all persons. She has adopted a policy of "love one, love all." She supports President Bush for his strong stance in protecting the freedoms we enjoy following the Attack of America.
Today, Bishop Stewart is fighting the biggest battle of her life. It is a personal one, the battle against ovarian cancer. Tonight when you go to bed, say a prayer for this "Compassionate Warrior." Pray for her health and those she fights for. If you would like to help, write Bishop Stewart at 214 P Street Washington, D.C. 20001.

3 comments:

charles c. sumblin said...

MY hat if truly off to you Ms.Imagene Stewart, your mother were one of my role models in Dublin. The fruti didn"t fall far from the tree. You are a great contributor to the dream that Dr.King often talked about. We love and cherish your great works.

Charles C.Sumbin

sam ford said...

Her named is pronounced EYE-magene.

This picture I stole from an internet sight is a good one of Imagene Stewart who passed away last week. She was 69. I first met her nearly 30 years ago when I moved to Washington and came to her House of Imagene shelter to do a story on helping the needy at Thanksgiving. I'll never forget her words in the interview. She said she moved to DC from Dublin, Georgia and that she herself had been homeless at one point, sleeping on benches in Lincoln Park. And she told "God and two or three other people" that if she ever got on her feet she was going to help others. And she did. She ran a house for battered women. And at Thanksgiving, for decades she fed the mainly down and out homeless men at her place at 214 P Street Northwest.

Going to one of Imagene's Thanksgiving dinners wasn't like going the Salvation Army's. Yes, she had the traditional turkey and dressing, But Imagene had not forgotten the street and she wanted people to be happy...so she also had pig feet and rabbit and she she knew those street guys liked cheap wine, so she had that for them too.(though as her dinners got more and more media attention, she'd slip it to them out in the back yard.)

She made them feel welcome, with her d-j blasting oldies on the sound system..she'd hand dance with the street guys, old and young, and whatever their problems were, they forgot about them for the hour or two they and their buddies spent at Imagene's.

The most paradoxical thing to me was that on the other hand, Imagene was extremely found of right-wing conservative white people.

I'll never forget being assigned to cover the memorial service for Congressman Larry McDonald of Georgia, who was among the victims when the Soviets mistook for a military jet, a Korean Airlines passenger liner that strayed into Russian airspace, and shot it down. McDonald, the most conservative member of Congress, was on that flight to Korea from the US. It was 1983 i think.

I walked into the service at Constitution Hall and up front on the speakers platform were lots of the right-wing big wigs and this one black woman. Then it hit me. That's Imagene. What is she doing up there?

When it was her turn to speak, she told this 100% white audience that she used to visit Congressman McDonald at his Capitol Hill office seeking donations for her women's programs. She said "He always told me, 'Imagene! if you don't stand for something, you'll fall for anything!'"

The crowd erupted with applause.

Imagene, then sang a capella, "Amazing Grace." They exploded with applause. Republican Senator Jesse Helms jumped up from his seat, yelling " Oh Gal" and hugged and kissed Imagene.

But she was also on good terms with the Democrats. In her house hung photographs of her with Ronald and Nancy Reagan, Bill and Hillary Clinton and with George W.

Locally, she had widespread support. She was running low on turkey for Thanksgiving dinner one year and then DC Mayor Tony Williams heard about it and bombed her with so many turkeys, she couldn't cook all of them. She gave the street guys a cooked dinner and then handed them a frozen turkey in a bag and told them to take it home with them.

When I first met her she Just Imagene Stewart, then she was Rev Imagene Stewart and finally Bishop Imagene Stewart.

She was always the same, no matter what the title.

She was an amazing lady.

sam ford, abc7 news, washington

Roger Springer said...

Hi greaat reading your blog