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1949-2003 On June 4, 2003, Rene Maxwell, a servant of the people, died of a stroke. Anybody who knew Rene even a little knew that when he walked into the room, the fighting spirit of humanity came with him. He knew exactly whose side he was on, and he never stayed quiet about it. The struggle against injustice became his life's work, and he gave it every bit of energy he could muster, and then some. Rene was born in Stateway Gardens, one of the public housing developments in Chicago, in 1949 and raised in Stateway and Altgeld Gardens. He also lived in the ABLA Development and spent his last years living in Cabrini Green. In the early 1970s he went to work in the steel mills that encircle the southern tip of Lake Michigan. In 1996, public housing came under attack nationally, with systematic efforts to tear down poor people's homes. Wardell Yotagan of Rockwell Gardens and Carol Steele of Cabrini Green co-founded the Coalition to Protect Public Housing (CPPH) and Wardell asked Rene to be his lead organizer. Rene realized the seriousness of the attacks on public housing and he jumped in with both feet. A lifelong friend described how he and Rene played cards together "every day--sometimes all day" for 40 years. "Then one day Rene came and told me about what was happening to Public Housing and what he had to do. That was it for the card games." Rene knew from experience what it meant to need low-income housing, and he worked tirelessly to bring this understanding to as many people as he could. He spoke at rallies and press conferences, to schools and churches and synagogues, and he appeared on radio and TV shows. He was a constant presence in Chicago's 24 public housing developments, talking to residents about their common struggle. He had a straight-forward, no-nonsense approach. He was well known for going up in the faces of the authorities making decisions about public housing, not allowing them to portray themselves as servants of the people when they were in reality the servants of the oppressor and the architects of the people's suffering. Over the years, Rene also came forward as a leader in other battles for economic human rights. He worked with a wide range of groups and was on the board of the Lawyers' Committee for Better Housing and the Workers' Rights Board of Jobs with Justice. He was frequently asked to represent the struggle for public housing at rallies throughout the midwest and east coast. He traveled around the country to participate in events, conferences, and marches --He was a key leader in the Poor Peoples' Economic Human Rights Campaign. Rene spoke at the UN after joining the March of the Americas from Washington, DC to New York City which was organized to raise awareness about homelessness, hunger and other issues affecting people. After September 11, 2001 Rene saw the danger in the political direction the U.S. was taking. He was deeply concerned for people in the U.S. and around the world and as the anti-war movement gained strength he took up that struggle. He was on the steering committee of the Not In Our Name Project in the Chicago area. From his earliest youth Rene loved music. He and his brother wrote songs together as kids, Rene providing the lyrics and his brother the tunes. In the 1970s he formed a band, The Elements of Time, with his brothers and sister. Rene was a person who was willing to make life-changing choices. He left his job in the steel mills to struggle to bring the music he loved to the people he loved. Until the day before his stroke Rene worked in the music industry. He, his brother and a group of Blues artists were scheduled to go into the studio the next day to re-cut a blues album Rene was producing. He was a manager and producer, bringing into being many gospel albums, and recording songs himself, including one with his daughter. On Juneteenth 2002 the Coalition to Protect Public Housing led activists, public housing residents, and youth in building a tent and cardboard box city on vacant land where housing had been torn down in the Ida B. Wells public housing development. Rene made that day a festival of resistance that no one who was there will forget. As people pitched tents and built homes out of boxes, Rene brought forward a memorable bill of musicians to alternate with speakers from 3 in the afternoon until 11 at night Gospel, solo saxophonist, and beyond, the music drifted through the makeshift city. When Wardell Yotagan died in 1998 Rene created a theme song for the struggle to defend public housing, "Our Fight Must Go On." Barbara Moore said, "Rene would write songs and poems that went to the core of what this fight was about." Earlier this year Rene pulled together a group of musicians and singers to create Recording Artists for Economic and Human Rights. He had a vision for strengthening the struggle by bringing together, through music, those who might not normally consider protesting and people who were the backbone of the social justice struggle. Rene kept every flyer from every rally. He took pictures of people everywhere he went. His office, an apartment in the rowhouses in Cabrini Green, is truly a "Museum of the Fight for Justice," a gallery of flyers, articles, pictures, posters and quotes. Rene made beautiful collages, the smiling faces of the many people he worked with mingled among the articles and headlines about the struggle--for housing, for jobs, against the war. He had love and a deep appreciation for the people struggling alongside of him. Every year for the last few years, Rene organized an appreciation ceremony on the west side of Chicago. The destruction of public housing in Chicago by the system was a source of tremendous anger and sorrow for Rene. He knew how badly it affects the people--this hurt him deeply but also fueled his fighting spirit. Giuseppe, a 20-year-old DePaul University student who worked with Rene in both the housing struggle and the fight to stop the war, said: "He had so much energy, so much passion, and most importantly, so much hope. Nothing could hold him back." In "Our Fight Must Go On," Rene's spoken intro says: "Let no one tell you different/ Until all injustices are erased/ And people's needs are met/ Until broken promises are kept/ And it hasn't happened yet/ Our fight, it must go on..." The spoken interlude of "Our Fight Must Go On" was his credo: "There are too many injustices Rene was our brother in struggle. He will be deeply missed. |
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