Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mourners honor Rep. Cummings

Body to lie in repose at historical­ly black college

- By Regina Garcia Cano and Julio Cortez The Associated Press

BALTIMORE — Mourners, constituen­ts and other well-wishers paid respects to U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings on Wednesday as his body lay in repose at a historical­ly black college in Baltimore ahead of the first in a series of services.

A tan hearse with a U.S. House of Representa­tives seal carrying Cummings’ body arrived Wednesday morning at Morgan State University’s Murphy Fine Arts Center. A group of mourners led by Cummings’ widow, Maya Rockeymoor­e, followed pallbearer­s who wheeled the black casket with silver trimmings into the building.

The auditorium opened to the public Wednesday morning and a large group of people waiting in line began to file through.

Later in the day, fraternal organizati­ons honored Cummings, calling him a “friend and companion to many” who was always willing to lend a helping hand to others.

The congressma­n’s widow closed his casket before the fraternal organizati­ons began paying their respects.

Katrina Hutton, who lives in Baltimore, emerged from the viewing area with tears in her eyes.

“He’s always been there for us and supported us,” she said. “No scandal. He’s been forthright with everything he’s done for us.”

Flowers were laid outside the arts center, including an arrangemen­t from the university’s president that included a note with the message, “Congressma­n Cummings was a great man and will be truly missed.”

The Maryland congressma­n and civil rights champion died Thursday at age 68 of complicati­ons from long-standing health issues.

Inside the auditorium, the open casket was placed in front of the auditorium stage, flanked by arrangemen­ts of white flowers. Two members of the Masonic group Knights Templar, one on each side of the casket, stood guard in dark uniforms with gold trim.

A large screen above the stage showed photos of Cummings along with portions of his news interviews and remarks in Congress. On display were photos of him with former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, Democratic presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren, and MSNBC hosts Joe Scarboroug­h and Mika Brzezinski, whose wedding he officiated in 2018.

Baltimore resident Sandra Whitehurst said she stopped by the auditorium because she wants to be able to tell her 15-year-old grandson that she was present to pay her respects to the late congressma­n.

Whitehurst said today’s youth read books about civil rights champions such as Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King Jr. and Cummings, but don’t realize the struggle “was real.”

“I lived through Jim Crow. I lived through segregatio­n,” Whitehurst, 72, said. “… To them, it’s just a story.”

She said she was “particular­ly proud” of how Cummings “stood up to (President Donald) Trump” this summer, when he attacked Cummings’ majority-black district.

Morgan State University is in Cummings’ congressio­nal district, and he served on its Board of Regents for 19 years. Following the public viewing that was to last until 5 p.m., a tribute service was to feature remarks from Rockeymoor­e, U.S. Rep. John Sarbanes and Baltimore Mayor Bernard “Jack” Young.

Cummings’ body will lie in state on Thursday in the National Statuary Hall of the U.S. Capitol. A wake and funeral for Cummings is planned Friday at New Psalmist Baptist Church in Baltimore, where the congressma­n worshipped for nearly four decades.

A sharecropp­er’s son, Cummings went on to become a lawyer and elected official, most recently leading one of the U.S. House committees conducting an impeachmen­t inquiry of Trump.

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