Springfield News-Sun

Lieberman remembered as a ‘mensch’ who bridged divides

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STAMFORD, Conn. — Former Vice President Al Gore and other politician dignitarie­s remembered the late Joe Lieberman Friday as a “mensch” who both bridged partisan political divides and wasn’t afraid to go against mainstream political currents, during a packed funeral service for the four-term U.S. senator.

Noting there is no English equivalent for the Yiddish term, Gore — who ran for president on a Democratic ticket with Lieberman in the disputed 2000 election — told mourners at a synagogue in Stamford, Connecticu­t, that they could find its meaning just by looking at his former running mate, who passed away this week at 82.

“Those who seek its definition will not find it in dictionari­es so much as they find it in the way Joe Lieberman lived his life: friendship over anger, reconcilia­tion as a form of grace,” Gore said. “We can learn from Joe Lieberman’s life some critical lessons about how we might heal the rancor in our nation today.”

Top Connecticu­t Democrats, including Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy and Gov.

Ned Lamont — Lieberman’s onetime rival for the Senate seat — shared similar sentiments.

Lamont said his acquaintan­ce with Lieberman started on “an inauspicio­us note” when they ran against each other in 2006. After Lamont defeated the incumbent Lieberman in the Democratic primary for his Senate seat, Lieberman ran as an independen­t and defeated Lamont.

Lamont said Lieberman loved Frank Sinatra songs, especially “My Way.” “He did it his way,” Lamont said. “He never quite fit in that Republican or Democratic box. I think maybe in an odd way I helped liberate him because when he beat me — he beat me pretty good, by the way — he won as an independen­t.”

Lamont said Lieberman “was always a calming presence” and a “bridge over troubled waters as you see the partisan sniping from both directions.”

Blumenthal recalled Lieberman’s “tremendous accomplish­ments,” including helping to form the Department of Homeland Security and championin­g civil rights, voting rights, women’s reproducti­ve freedom and LGBTQ rights. “But the greatest accomplish­ment of his life was his marriage to Hadassah and their children and grandchild­ren,” Blumenthal said.

Services were held at Congregati­on Agudath Sholom in Stamford. For Lieberman, a self-described observant Jew who followed the rules of the Jewish Sabbath from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday, the congregati­on played a key role early on in his life.

He once recalled how the congregati­on’s former synagogue building was “a place that gave me the first sense of religion; a very special uplift,” according to a posting on the congregati­on’s website.

“I feel very lucky — my adherence to the Jewish tradition is really an asset,” he said. “Religious Catholics and Protestant­s find a bond of common value with my beliefs and stand. It is this that makes me so proud of being an American.”

Lieberman’s youngest daughter, Hana Lowenstein, who moved to Israel in 2018 with her family, said tearfully that she had prayed, “Please God, give my father many more years. Let him see all of my kids’ bar mitzvahs, their weddings, his great-grandchild­ren.” But she said God “had other plans.”

 ?? BRYAN WOOLSTON / AP ?? Former Vice President Al Gore offers his condolence­s to Hadassah Lieberman during the funeral for her husband, former Sen. Joe Lieberman, in Stamford, Conn., on Friday.
BRYAN WOOLSTON / AP Former Vice President Al Gore offers his condolence­s to Hadassah Lieberman during the funeral for her husband, former Sen. Joe Lieberman, in Stamford, Conn., on Friday.

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