The Commercial Appeal

Final march

John Lewis ♦ 1940-2020

- Brad Harper

John Lewis’ body will be carried from Selma to Alabama’s Capitol in Montgomery on Sunday.

Civil rights hero John Lewis will make the journey from Selma to Montgomery one last time.

Fifty-five years ago, the Alabama native was beaten by Alabama state troopers as he and others tried to make that trip to demand equal rights. By the time he died July 17, the long-serving congressma­n had become the conscience of Washington, a man whose moral gravity had pulled the nation toward equality for decades.

At 10 a.m. Sunday, his body will be carried on a lone pilgrimage across Edmund Pettus Bridge and on to Alabama’s Capitol, where he will lie in state at the Capitol from 2 to 7 p.m. Sunday.

Mayor Steven Reed and other community leaders encourage people to line the sidewalks of Dexter Avenue, the final leg of that journey.

They’re asking the public to join them starting at 11:30 a.m. while wearing face coverings and maintainin­g social distance.

Reed, the first black mayor in a city Lewis helped fight to integrate, plans to lead a 7 p.m. vigil honoring Lewis’ life and legacy in Bicentenni­al Park in front of the Capitol. Scheduled speakers include Bernice King, Fred Gray, Joe Reed, Black Voters Matter co-founder Latosha Brown, original Freedom Rider Bernard Lafayette, and Selma-to-montgomery March participan­t Sheyann Webbchrist­burg.

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey ordered flags to be flown at half-staff in Lewis’ honor from sunrise Saturday to sunrise Monday. She said the state is indebted to him.

“As we prepare to lay Congressma­n Lewis to rest, we are honored to welcome him home to Alabama to sit overlookin­g Dexter Avenue, as he lies in state in the Alabama state Capitol,” Ivey said in a statement. “Let us remember the life and longstandi­ng public service of Rep. Lewis. As a pioneer of the Civil Rights Movement, he is a proud son of Alabama. He dedicated his life to serving his community and advocating for others, during some of the most difficult times in our nation’s history.”

In all, six days of ceremonies will trace Lewis’ life, starting Saturday in his birthplace of Troy.

He’ll lie in repose at a public event from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday in Trojan Arena on the campus of Troy University. Lewis will move on from there to Selma, where he’ll lie in repose at Brown Chapel AME Church from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. The public is required to wear face coverings at both events.

After the procession Sunday to Montgomery and honoring at the state Capitol, he’ll then continue to Washington, where he will lie in state at the U.S. Capitol rotunda beginning at 1:30 p.m. Monday. He’ll be moved to the Capitol’s east front steps later in the day, and the public will be allowed to pay their respects by filing past the east plaza from 6 to 10 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday. Mourners must wear masks and remaining socially distant.

He’ll lie in state in the rotunda of Georgia’s state Capitol building from 3 p.m. Wednesday to 8 a.m. Thursday before a celebratio­n of his life starting at 11 a.m. Thursday at Ebenezer Baptist Church Horizon Sanctuary.

A military honor guard will accompany him throughout the journey.

The Lewis family is asking people not to travel to across the country to pay their respects because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, they’re encouragin­g people to remember him from their homes by tying a blue or purple ribbon on their front door, and using the online hashtags #Belovedcom­munity or #Humandigni­ty.

Lewis was born in Troy but became a global figure because of his determined march toward nonviolent change, in the face of violence. Along that journey, he was severely beaten in Montgomery while working to integrate the nation’s bus system with the Freedom Riders. That work led to the desegregat­ion of the interstate transporta­tion system in 1961.

National outrage over the beating of protesters during the Selma-to-montgomery March was a major catalyst for the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

Lewis was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer last December.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States