The Mercury News

Civil rights icon Lewis lauded as a hero at Georgia Capitol

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John Lewis was lauded as a warrior and a hero during a ceremony Wednesday at the Georgia Capitol, where the civil rights icon who represente­d much of Atlanta in Congress will lie in repose before a funeral service that at least two former presidents are expected to attend.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said Lewis called on “America to be America again,” referencin­g the poem in which Langston Hughes reproaches the country for not living up to its ideals.

“Until his last days, he was calling on America to be America again in his words and deeds,” she said, citing his visit to the Black Lives Matter street mural in Washington, D.C., as well as a videoconfe­rence he participat­ed in with former President Barack Obama. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp called Lewis a “beloved Georgian, an American hero and a friend to all who sought a better, fairer, more united society.”

“And even today, as our country faces a public health crisis and new challenges rooted in injustice, I know that the example left behind by Congressma­n Lewis ... will inspire all of us to do the hard necessary work to overcome our shared challenges and emerge stronger,” Kemp said.

Kemp presented the Lewis family with a folded Georgia state flag.

Among the other guests at the ceremony was Martin Luther King III, the son of the great civil rights leader who Lewis joined on the podium in the March on Washington.

King brought his 12-year-old daughter, Yolanda, saying her presence was an appropriat­e tribute to Lewis.

“Whenever he saw young people, he always made a bee line for them to encourage them. His entire career was about lifting up the next generation,” King said.

People lined the streets as the hearse carrying Lewis’ body moved through downtown. It stopped briefly in front of a mural of Lewis with the word “Hero” before arriving at the state Capitol, where it was met by Kemp and Bottoms.

Members of the public later filed into the state Capitol rotunda to pay their respects to Lewis, pausing to take photograph­s in front of his flag-draped coffin. It lay underneath a life-size portrait of former Confederat­e Vice President Alexander Stephens.

Jeff Haynes and his wife, Daniele, brought their two young daughters, Ava and Nya.

Haynes, an Atlanta resident, said he felt a connection to Lewis in part because his family is of mixed race.

“Now, with the Black Lives Matter movement and the inequality situation, it’s almost symbolic that he would die at this time,” he said.

The funeral service in Atlanta is scheduled for today, followed by a private burial.

Obama will be attending Lewis’ service and is expected to address mourners, according to a person familiar with the funeral arrangemen­ts who was not authorized to speak publicly. President George W. Bush’s office said the former president and first lady Laura Bush also will attend.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A mourner pauses by the casket of Rep. John Lewis lying in repose at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta on Wednesday.
BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A mourner pauses by the casket of Rep. John Lewis lying in repose at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta on Wednesday.

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