The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Obama: C.T. Vivian’s passing marks ‘well-deserved rest’

Private funeral set for Thursday in Atlanta for civil rights legend who died Friday at 95.

- By Ernie Suggs ernie.suggs@ajc.com

In 2013, when President Barack Obama placed the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom around C.T. Vivian’s neck, he said that the preacher and civil rights icon pushed America “closer to our founding ideals.”

On Friday, upon hearing that Vivian had died while America is in the middle of a period of civil unrest, the former president pushed further, saying Vivian “shrunk the gap between reality and our constituti­onal ideals of equality and freedom.”

“I have to imagine that seeing the largest protest movement in history unfold over his final months gave the reverend a final dose of hope before his long and well-deserved rest,” he said.

Vivian, who marched on the front lines of the civil rights movement, where he suffered violent blows and earned mountains of respect, died quietly at home in Atlanta early Friday morning. He was 95.

Vivian’s funeral will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. at Providence Missionary Baptist. The service will be livestream­ed and private.

Vivian, following the March death of the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery, will be the second major civil rights figure to die and not have a big, traditiona­l funeral because of concerns over the COVID19 pandemic.

“He lived a ripe old age and made good use of his time and years,” said Bernard Lafayette, who met Vivian while he was a student at the American Baptist Theologica­l Seminary and a member of the Nashville Student Movement. “C.T. taught lessons by the options he took, not just the words. His actions delivered the message.”

Along with Obama, the reaction to Vivian’s death was swift and emotional from the civil rights community that helped define him.

Ambassador Andrew Young, a former Atlanta mayor and himself a veteran of the civil rights movement, called Vivian “one of the people who had the most insight, wisdom, integrity and dedication.”

Vivian “was a strategic nonviolent leader, a brilliant mind who believed that soul force could overpower physical force,” said Bernice King, the youngest daughter of Martin Luther King Jr. “I’m thankful for his legacy of service and influence, including in my father’s life.”

In his statement about Vivian’s death, Obama, who also honored John Lewis and Lowery with Presidenti­al Medals of Freedom, noted how Vivian was “always one of the first in the action,” who absorbed “blows in hopes that fewer of us would have to.”

“He waged nonviolent campaigns for integratio­n across the South, and campaigns for economic justice throughout the north, knowing that even after the Voting Rights Act and Civil Rights Act that he helped win, our long journey to equality was nowhere near finished,”

Obama wrote.

Working closely with him in Nashville and the early Freedom Rides, Lafayette had a special relationsh­ip with Vivian, secured as cellmates in dozens of jails throughout the South.

So Vivian’s death, Lafayette

said, leaves another personal void. They always celebrated their birthdays — July 29 for Lafayette and July 30 for Vivian — together over lunch.

“I am going to miss that,” said Lafayette, 79. “I already bought his birthday card.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? In July 2017, C.T. Vivian views a painting of himself with President Barack Obama as he holds his Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom. Vivian’s funeral will be Thursday at 11 a.m. at Providence Missionary Baptist. The service will be livestream­ed and private. Vivian, after the March death of the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery, will be the second major civil rights figure to die and not have a big, traditiona­l funeral because of concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM In July 2017, C.T. Vivian views a painting of himself with President Barack Obama as he holds his Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom. Vivian’s funeral will be Thursday at 11 a.m. at Providence Missionary Baptist. The service will be livestream­ed and private. Vivian, after the March death of the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery, will be the second major civil rights figure to die and not have a big, traditiona­l funeral because of concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.

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