Kuwait Times

America mourns Barbara Bush; Amir sends condolence­s

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WASHINGTON: Former president George W Bush thanked his mother Barbara for her “beautiful life” as tributes poured in yesterday for the much-loved political matriarch and one-time first lady following her death at the age of 92. Long seen as the pillar of one of America’s most prominent families, as wife to the 41st US president and mother to the 43rd, Barbara Bush died at her home in Texas on Tuesday surrounded by her family. “As a result of her soul being comforted on her deathbed, my soul is comforted,” George W Bush told Fox Business. “It’s the end of a beautiful life.” His father, the 93-year-old George H W Bush, was said by staff to be heartbroke­n to lose “his beloved Barbara,” his wife of more than seven decades.

HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber AlSabah yesterday sent a cable of condolence­s to former US President George H W Bush over the passing away of Barbara Bush. In the cable, the Amir expressed deepest sympathies and heavy-hearted sentiments on the demise of Mrs Bush; who enjoyed a great deal of love and appreciati­on from the Kuwaiti people. HH the Amir sent a similar cable to former US President and son of the deceased George W Bush. HH the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah and HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak AlHamad Al-Sabah sent similar cables to both former presidents.

Known for her trademark faux pearls and tarttongue­d comments about life in and out of Washington - but also her deep loyalty to family and self-deprecatin­g humor - Barbara Bush was in many ways a figure more popular among ordinary Americans than her high-flying husband and sons. Having undergone heart surgery in 2009, she was treated for years for Graves’ disease, a thyroid condition, and as her health failed

in recent days, was moved into comfort care at her home in Houston.

She will be laid to rest in Texas after a memorial ceremony on Saturday in Houston to be attended by the first lady, Melania Trump. President Donald Trump ordered flags to be flown at half-staff at all public buildings and military posts in Bush’s honor, as he paid tribute to her work to promote literacy - a cause she embraced during her time as first lady, from 1989 to 1993, and beyond.

George W Bush and his wife Laura expressed their gratitude for the prayers and sympathies pouring in for his mother, who is survived by five children, 17 grandchild­ren and seven great-grandchild­ren. She lost a sixth child - a daughter - to leukemia as a toddler. A hugely popular figure during and after her time in the White House, Bush made history as one of just two women to be wife and mother to two US presidents. Abigail Adams, who died in 1818, was the other.

Another son, Jeb Bush, served two terms as governor of Florida and ran for president himself in 2016. “I’m exceptiona­lly privileged to be the son of George Bush and the exceptiona­lly gracious, gregarious, fun, funny, loving, tough, smart, graceful woman who was the force of nature known as Barbara Bush,” Jeb Bush wrote in tribute to his mother.

Barbara first met her husband-to-be at age 16 when she was a schoolgirl and he was a student at an elite Massachuse­tts preparator­y school. They married in 1945 while he was on leave from wartime service. She was her husband’s consummate companion and advisor as they traveled the world, moving multiple times as he rose from Texas oil man to congressma­n, US ambassador to the United Nations and envoy to China, director of the CIA and eventually to the vice presidency and the White House.

Tributes poured in from across the political spectrum to honor her life. “We’ll always be grateful to Mrs Bush for the generosity she showed to us throughout our time in the White House,” said Trump’s Democratic predecesso­r Barack Obama and his wife Michelle. “But we’re even more grateful for the way she lived her life as a testament to the fact that public service is an important and noble calling; as an example of the humility and decency that reflects the very best of the American spirit.” Bill Clinton, who succeeded Bush’s husband in office, described her as “a remarkable woman” who brought together “grit and grace, brains and beauty”. “She was fierce and feisty in support of her family and friends, her country and her causes. She showed us what an honest, vibrant, full life looks like.”

Barbara Bush made a point of avoiding direct involvemen­t in politics, and the constant posturing that comes with it - gaining a reputation for toughness, wry humor and straight-speaking. “What you see with me is what you get,” she said at the 1988 Republican National Convention. “I’m not running for president; George Bush is.” “She was smart, generous, kind, & a force to be reckoned with,” said House Republican Steve Pearce.

Asked in 2010 about former Alaska governor Sarah Palin - who sought the vice presidency in 2008 - she told an interviewe­r: “I sat next to her once, thought she was beautiful, and I think she’s very happy in Alaska, and I hope she’ll stay there.” Senator John McCain, who is battling cancer and was at the top of the ticket with Palin a decade ago, recalled that “Barbara understood that the greatest joy in life comes from putting the needs of others before yourself.”

Another notable example came in 1984 when George H W Bush was seeking re-election as vice president under Ronald Reagan, a post he held from 1981 until becoming president in 1989. She told reporters that Geraldine Ferraro, her husband’s Democratic rival for the vice presidency, was a “4 million dollar ... I can’t say it but it rhymes with ‘rich.’” She apologized to Ferraro, the first woman running for US vice president on a major-party ticket. Texas Governor Ann Richards mocked her husband at the 1988 Democratic convention - saying: “Poor George ... was born with a silver foot in his mouth” - and Barbara henceforth referred to Richards as “that woman”. —

 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: In this file photo taken on Feb 06, 1992, former US First Lady Barbara Bush prepares to throw a rugby ball. — AFP
WASHINGTON: In this file photo taken on Feb 06, 1992, former US First Lady Barbara Bush prepares to throw a rugby ball. — AFP

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