NATION BIDS FAREWELL TO 41st PRESIDENT
Remembered as statesman who was humble, imperfect
WASHINGTON — In a state funeral that leavened pomp with humor, President George H.W. Bush was celebrated Wednesday as a man who melded character with self-deprecation — a statesman who managed the peaceful end of the Cold War and patriarch of one of America’s most successful political dynasties.
“To us, his was the brightest of a thousand points of light,” said his eldest son, former President George W. Bush, in a funeral service at the National Cathedral in Washington — a reference to his father’s oft-quoted call for volunteerism.
President Donald Trump and America’s four other living presidents were among the hundreds of dignitaries and elected leaderswho crowded into the pews to remember the 41st president whose collegial style and grace helped him become increasingly popular as the nation’s political chasm widened.
Eulogies focused on Bush’s compassion and foreign policy prowess, which deftly navigated the U.S. and its European allies through the collapse of the Soviet Union and led an international coalition to reverse Iraq’s 1991 invasion of Kuwait.
“He stood in the breach of the Cold War against totalitarianism. He stood in the breach in Washington against unthinking partisanship,” said Jon Meacham, his biographer, who delivered the first eulogy. “On his watch, a wall fell in Berlin, a dictator’s aggression did not stand.”
Meacham called Bush, a naval aviator shot down during World War II, “America’s last, great soldier-statesman, a 20th-century founding father,” in the tradition of U.S. presidents who believed in causes larger than themselves.
“An imperfect man, he left us a more perfect union,” Meacham said.
The large Bush family, including Jeb Bush, who served two terms as Florida governor and ran unsuccessfully for president, laughed at the memories of first lady Barbara Bush’s straight talk, cried in recounting the death of sister Robin at 3 years old and nodded in recognition at the jokes about Bush’s love of off-color jokes and digs at his own expense.
In a break with modern tradition, President Trump was not offered a chance to speak. He was the first sitting president not to make the speakers’ program at the funeral of a predecessor since President Richard Nixon failed to eulogize Lyndon B. Johnson in 1973.
“To us, his was the brightest of a thousand points of light.” George W. Bush, former president and son of President George H.W. Bush
The elder Bush “was a man of such great humility,” said former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson, 87. “Those who traveled the high road of humility in Washington, D.C., are not bothered by heavy traffic.”
In another implied rebuke of today’s Washington, Simpson added that Bush understood that “hatred corrodes the container it is carried in.”
The signature Bush slogans that sometimes drew mockery from Trump and others during Bush’s own life — “a thousand points of light,” “a kinder, gentler” nation — were celebrated as sincere reflections of his essence.
“My hunch is heaven, as perfect as it must be, just got a bit kinder and gentler,” said the Rev. Russell Levenson Jr., rector of St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Houston.
“Some have said in the last few days, ‘This is an end of an era,’ ” Levenson said at another point. “But it does not have to be. Perhaps it’s an invitation to fill the hole that has been left behind.”
It was not just Bush’s old rhetoric that was given a nostalgic reboot. The policy achievements his eulogists chose to highlight demonstrated how much has changed in both the country and the Republican Party that Bush and his family personified for half a century: the updating of the Clean Air Act, the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act, negotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement, assembling an international coalition to end Saddam Hussein’s occupation of Kuwait.
Simpson even recalled how Bush broke his “read my lips” pledge and agreed to raise taxes, a decision that was “surely one of the main factors ensuring his return to private life.”
“I’ll never forget it,” Simpson said. “He said ‘What I have said on that subject sure puts a hell of a lot of heat on me.’ ”
His own party turned on him after that, Simpson recalled. “But he often said ‘When the really tough choices come, it’s the country, not me — it’s not about Democrats or Republicans, it’s for our country that I fought for,’ ” Simpson recalled Bush saying.
Though Bush later acknowledged that his 1992 defeat made him bitter and angry for a time, former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney said that by 2001 — after Jeb Bush became governor of Florida and George W. Bush won the presidency — the elder Bush and former first lady found serenity. Mulroney read from notes he made during a long private discussion he had with the former president at the time, while visiting him at the family retreat called Walker’s Point in Kennebunkport, Maine.
“They are truly at peace with themselves, joyous in what they and the children have achieved, gratified by the goodness that God has bestowed upon them all, and genuinely content with the thrill and the promise of each passing day,” Mulroney said.
In lighter moments, George W. Bush acknowledged that his father was “not totally perfect . His short game was lousy. He wasn’t exactly Fred Astaire on the dance floor. The man couldn’t stomach vegetables, especially broccoli.”
And many in the room wept when the younger Bush recounted speaking to his father on the phone Friday, shortly before he died.
“I said ‘Dad, I love you and you’ve been a wonderful father,’ ” George W. said. “And the last words he would ever say on earth were ‘I love you too.’ ”