Baltimore Sun

Cummings ‘devoted his entire life’ to country

- BY COLIN CAMPBELL AND PAMELA WOOD

As a day of tributes to U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings drew to a close Wednesday, Maya Rockeymoor­e Cummings ascended a stage to pay tribute to her late husband.

One day before the congressma­n died, Rockeymoor­e Cummings said the staff at Johns Hopkins Hospital wanted to give him some “sunshine therapy.” Cummings was too weak to get out of bed, so he was wheeled to the 14th-floor roof of the hospital, where helicopter­s land.

“He looked upon the Inner Harbor, and he looked upon South Baltimore where he grew up. He looked toward downtown and he looked to the west side, and it was so glorious,” Rockeymoor­e Cummings said. “He said: ‘Boy, I’ve come a long way.’ ”

Cummings was honored Wednesday by a day of celebratio­ns in his hometown of Baltimore — before Thursday’s honors at the U.S. Capitol and before former President Barack

Obama speaks at his funeral on Friday.

The congressma­n, who had cancer and died last week at age 68, had wanted the people of Baltimore to have a chance to bid him farewell.

He got his wish Wednesday, lying in repose at Morgan State University, where he proudly served on the Board of Regents for 19 years until his death. More than two dozen politician­s, ministers and community leaders closed the day with tributes to the Baltimore Democrat.

A color guard and members of the Morgan State ROTC escorted the casket Wednesday morning into the university’s Murphy Fine Arts Center, where a long line of constituen­ts and admirers had formed outside the doors of the Gilliam Concert Hall more than an hour before the all-day viewing began.

The congressma­n was a champion for science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s education, especially in underprivi­leged schools, said Jonathan Wilson, director of the Science Engineerin­g Mathematic­s and Aerospace Academy at Morgan State. Cummings helped allocate and maintain grants to strengthen students’ educations to make them more competitiv­e for scholarshi­ps, internship­s and jobs, Wilson said.

“All of that is the fruit of the efforts by Congressma­n Cummings and Senator [Barbara] Mikulski in making sure funding is there for K-12 STEM education nationally,” he said.

Inside the hall during the day, Cummings lay in a navy blue suit in an open casket, accompanie­d by a folded American flag, two large bouquets and a uniformed ceremonial honor guard. Well-wishers moved past the congressma­n and shook hands or hugged his widow while a video played highlights from a handful of his most rousing speeches, blasting child detention centers at the Mexican border and the Flint, Michigan, water crisis.

Democratic Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young stood in line with the many Baltimorea­ns filing into the concert hall.

“Elijah was more than just an elected leader,” Young said. “He was a public servant. He was my friend.”

To Baltimore, Cummings was “a father figure, the protector, the defender,” said Diane Thornton, a retired social worker who lives in Morgan Park in Northeast Baltimore.

Thornton, who is in her 60s, said she wasn’t going to let an arthritic knee stop her from waiting in line to bid farewell to the congressma­n. “He wanted to provide for our city, the people, and enrich our lives,” she said. “I’ll stand here as long as it takes to pay my respects.”

For the evening ceremony, hundreds of people filed into the building, where a lineup of two dozen political and community leaders took turns at a podium in front of the now-closed casket. They praised the late congressma­n as a public servant and champion for social justice.

Mikulski, a Baltimore Democrat, recalled Cummings walking the streets of the city in 2015, amid rioting and unrest after the death of Freddie Gray, who was fatally injured in police custody.

“He brought about a calm,” the former U.S. senator said. “It was the social glue that held Baltimore together. In bringing about calm, he did not ask people to give up their passion. He did not ask people to give up their anger.”

Instead, Mikulski said, Cummings encouraged them to channel their passion into change.

Cummings was comfortabl­e with heads of state, but also with Baltimore residents, “inspiring, teaching and leading his community like only he could,” said Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, a Democrat who counted the congressma­n as a political mentor.

U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin, who was speaker of the House of Delegates when Cummings was first elected as a state delegate, said the future congressma­n’s talent was spotted quickly. Cummings lived up to his promise, Cardin said.

“He devoted his entire life to making America better,” said Cardin, also a Democrat. “He advanced measures to improve education, to expand affordable housing, to curb addiction, to enhance public infrastruc­ture, to promote gun safety, to reform police practices, and the list goes on and on.”

Several speakers mentioned Cummings’ key role in investigat­ing President Donald Trump and the ongoing impeachmen­t inquiry. U.S. Rep. John Sarbanes said he was anxious about the loss of Cummings’ leadership on “the journey to reclaim our democracy.”

“I was wondering whether we could get there without him, whether we could finish that fight without him,” Sarbanes said. “Then I realized that Elijah would not have left us unless he thought we had the power to finish the fight without him. And we will finish that fight for Elijah Cummings.”

On Thursday, the congressma­n will be taken to Washington, where he will lie in state in the National Statuary Hall of the U.S. Capitol.

An 11 a.m. arrival ceremony will be limited to members of Congress and Cummings’ relatives. But the public will be allowed, via the Capitol Visitor Center, to pay respects from 1 p.m. until 7 p.m.

A final viewing will be held before his funeral Friday at New Psalmist Baptist Church, his longtime church in Lochearn. That viewing is scheduled for 8 a.m., followed by the funeral at 10 a.m.

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? A casket carrying U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings arrives Wednesday at Morgan State University in Baltimore for the start of three days of public viewings and commemorat­ions leading up to his funeral. The casket was escorted by Morgan State ROTC students.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN A casket carrying U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings arrives Wednesday at Morgan State University in Baltimore for the start of three days of public viewings and commemorat­ions leading up to his funeral. The casket was escorted by Morgan State ROTC students.

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