Texarkana Gazette

■ Aretha Franklin’s funeral,

- By Jeff Karoub

DETROIT—Former presidents and preachers joined a parade of pop stars Friday in a singing, hip-swaying, piano-pounding farewell to Aretha Franklin, rememberin­g the Queen of Soul as a powerful force for musical and political change and a steadfast friend.

“Aretha’s singing challenged the dangling discords of hate and lies and racism and injustice,” said the pastor William J. Barber II. “Her singing was revelation and was revolution.”

In a send-off both grand and personal, an all-star lineup of mourners filled the same Detroit church that hosted Rosa Parks’ funeral and offered prayers, songs and dozens of tributes. Guests included former President Bill Clinton, former first lady Hillary Clinton, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Stevie Wonder and Smokey Robinson.

Robinson, the Motown great, remembered first hearing Franklin play piano when he was just 8 and remained close to her for the rest of her life, talking for hours at a time.

“You’re so special,” he said, before crooning a few lines from his song “Really Gonna Miss You,” with the line “really gonna be different without you.”

Bill Clinton described himself as an Aretha Franklin “groupie,” saying he had loved her since college. He traced her life’s journey and praised her as someone who “lived with courage, not without fear, but overcoming her fears.”

He remembered attending her last public performanc­e, at Elton John’s AIDS Foundation benefit in November in New York. She looked “desperatel­y ill” but managed to greet him by standing and saying, “How you doing, baby?”

Clinton ended by noting that her career spanned from vinyl records to cellphones. He held the microphone near his iPhone and played a snippet of Franklin’s classic “Think,” the audience clapping along.

“It’s the key to freedom!” Clinton said.

The hourslong service at Greater Grace Temple encompasse­d many elements, emotions and regal entrances that were hallmarks of Franklin’s more than six decades on sacred and secular stages. She was remembered as the pride of Detroit and as a citizen of the world.

Music mogul Clive Davis, who helped revive Franklin’s career in the 1980s, described her as a loving friend and a dedicated and unpredict- able artist, whose passions ranged from soul to ballet. He remembered her turning up at a tribute to him in a tutu, dancing with “most impressive agility and dignity.”

Barbara Sampson read a statement from former President George W. Bush, saying that Franklin would continue to inspire future generation­s. The Rev. Al Sharpton read a statement from former President Barack Obama, who wrote that Franklin’s “work reflected the very best of the American story.”

Sharpton received loud cheers when he criticized President Donald Trump for saying that the singer “worked for” him as he responded to her death. “She performed for you,” Sharpton said of Franklin, who had sung at Trump-owned venues. “She worked for us.”

“She gave us pride. She gave us a regal bar to reach. She represente­d the best in our community,” Sharpton said.

Many noted her longtime commitment to civil rights and lasting concern for the poor.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson urged attendees to honor her memory by registerin­g to vote. Her friend Greg Mathis, the award-winning reality show host and retired Michigan judge, recalled his last conversati­on with her. They talked about the tainted water supply in Flint. “You go up there and sock it to ‘em,” she urged Mathis, paraphrasi­ng the “sock it to me” refrain from “Respect.”

Franklin died Aug. 16 at age 76

Her body arrived in a 1940 Cadillac LaSalle hearse. She wore a shimmering gold dress, with sequined heels— the fourth outfit Franklin was clothed in during a week of events leading up to her funeral.

The casket was carried to the church that also took Franklin’s father, the renowned minister C.L. Franklin, to his and Parks’ final resting place at Woodlawn Cemetery, where the singer will join them. Pink Cadillacs filled the street out- side the church, a reference to a Franklin hit from the 1980s, “Freeway of Love.”

The program cover showed a young Franklin, with a slight smile and sunglasses perched on her nose, and the caption “A Celebratio­n Fit For The Queen.” Large bouquets of pink, lavender, yellow and white flowers flanked her casket.

Floral arrangemen­ts from singers such as Barbra Streisand and Tony Bennett and from the family of the late Otis Redding, whose “Respect” Franklin transforme­d and made her signature song, were set up in a hallway outside the sanctuary.

Bishop Charles Ellis III of Greater Grace knew well the boldface guest list, but he had a higher mission in mind.

“It is my goal and my aim to ensure that people leave here with some kind of spiritual awakening,” Ellis said. “This is not a concert, this is not a show, this is not an awards production. This is a real life that has been lived, that a person regardless of how famous she became, no matter how many people she touched around the world, she still could not escape death.”

Family members, among them granddaugh­ter Victorie Franklin and niece Cristal Franklin, spoke with awe and affection as they remembered a world-famous performer who also loved gossip and kept pictures of loved ones on her piano.

Grandson Jordan directed his remarks directly to Franklin, frequently stopping to fight back tears.

“I’m sad today, because I’m losing my friend. But I know the imprint she left on this world can never be removed. You showed the world God’s love, and there’s nothing more honorable.”

 ?? AP Photo/Paul Sancya ?? ■ Rev. Al Sharpton speaks during the funeral service for Aretha Franklin Friday at Greater Grace Temple in Detroit. Franklin died Aug. 16 of pancreatic cancer at the age of 76.
AP Photo/Paul Sancya ■ Rev. Al Sharpton speaks during the funeral service for Aretha Franklin Friday at Greater Grace Temple in Detroit. Franklin died Aug. 16 of pancreatic cancer at the age of 76.

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