Rep. John Lewis remembered in emotional service
ATLANTA — Three American presidents showed up Thursday to laud a man born 80 years ago in a three-room shotgun house to sharecroppers in rural Alabama.
A fourth president’s regards were read to attendees that included Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, members of Congress and civil rights icons who marched with Lewis and to those listening to the national broadcast from Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church.
“What a gift John Lewis was,” said former President Barack Obama. “We were all so lucky to have had him walk with us for a while. And show us the way. I am proud that John Lewis was a friend of mine. He was a good and kind and gentle man and he believed in us. Even when we don’t believe in ourselves.”
Memories, funny stories, heroic tales, songs, scripture and prayers were shared, as at a funeral for any Christian. But many speakers’ words also carried the political tension of the times, references to recent events and the coming elections. Those tensions were reflected in Lewis’ own last words, a letter he left to be read the day of his funeral.
“Ordinary people with extraordinary vision can redeem the soul of America by getting in what I call good trouble, necessary trouble,” the letter reads. “Voting and participating in the democratic process are key. The vote is the most powerful nonviolent change agent you have in a democratic society. You must use it because it is not guaranteed. You can lose it.”
“I just loved him,” said former President Bill Clinton, “I always will, and I am so grateful that he stayed true to form. He has gone up yonder and left us with marching orders.”
In his eulogy, Obama carefully reconstructed Lewis’ life, from his days growing up in his hometown of Troy to the courage he showed during the civil rights movement to his dignity as a 33-year-member of the U.S. House of Representatives.
“The life of John Lewis was in so many ways exceptional,” Obama said. “It vindicated the faith in our founding. It redeemed that faith. That most American of ideas — that any of us, ordinary people without rank or wealth or title or fame, can somehow point out the imperfections of this nation. And come together and challenge the status quo. And decide that it is in our nature to remake this country that we love.”
Obama said that on the battlefield of justice, Americans like Lewis, the Rev. Joseph Lowery and the Rev.
C.T. Vivian, all of whom died this year and to whom he each gave a Presidential Medal of Freedom, helped liberate the country.
“America was built by people like that. He, as much as anyone in history, brought this country a little closer to our highest ideals,” Obama said. “And someday, when we do finish that long journey toward freedom, when we do form a more perfect union ... whether it is a year from now or decades or even if it takes another two centuries, John Lewis will be a founding father of that fuller, fairer, better America.”
Obama veered into the times and a warning, bringing up images of racist Alabama Police Commissioner Bull Conner and former Gov. George Wallace, and he aligned their actions to what is going on today with police brutality and voter intimidation and suppression.
“We may no longer have to guess the number of jellybeans in a jar to cast a ballot. But even as we sit here there are those in power who are doing their darndest to discourage people from voting by closing polling locations and targeting minorities and students with restrictive ID laws and attacking our voting rights with surgical precision,” Obama said. “Even undermining the postal service in the runup to an election that is going to be dependent on mail-in ballots.”
Former Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell, who served on Atlanta’s City Council with Lewis decades ago and remained a close friend told the crowd: “In the last days of his life, when we both knew that death was imminent, I desperately wanted to tell John how much he meant to me and the country. But in a solemn moment, he pulled me closer and he whispered, ‘everyone has to vote in November. It is the most important election ever.’”
Former President George W. Bush spoke of Lewis’ famous compassion and forgiveness and referred to a time when Republicans like himself and Democrats like Lewis could share common ground.
“Listen, John and I had our disagreements of course,” he said.
Their conflict started when Lewis boycotted Bush’s 2001 inauguration after the contentious 2000 election. But they ended up working together on issues like voting rights laws and the building of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Bush also signed legislation extending for 25 years the Voting Rights Act, the historic 1965 law which opened polls to millions of Black Americans by outlawing racist voting practices in the South.
“But in the America John Lewis fought for and the America I believe in, differences of opinion are inevitable elements and evidence of democracy in action,” said Bush, who got a standing ovation when he was introduced by the Rev. Raphael Warnock.