The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lewsi opens window into cancer fight

Congressma­n tells AJC how he’s feeling, how he’ll tackle treatment.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com

U.S. Rep. John Lewis famously tells the story of reaching the apex of the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma on March 7, 1965 — Bloody Sunday.

He and Hosea Williams were leading a group of civil rights marchers from Selma to Montgomery when they were violently beaten back by police officers wielding clubs, whips and tear gas.

Today, the 79-year-old civil rights icon and longtime Georgia congressma­n is facing another battle: pancreatic cancer.

“It is a challenge and a fight. But I have had challenges before and been fighting all my life,” Lewis told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on in an exclusive interview on New Year’s Eve. “I am ready for the fight. I will go through the treatment and face the day each day like it is a new day. I will continue to be hopeful and optimistic.”

Lewis shocked the nation Sunday when he quietly announced that he had stage 4 pancreatic cancer, which was confirmed during a routine medical visit in December.

“I am doing good,” said Lewis, who has maintained relatively good health. “I am feeling well.”

Lewis said he will return to

Washington, D.C., later this week in preparatio­n for the legislativ­e session that begins Monday and to prepare for his treatment.

He would not go into details about his treatment but said he is looking forward to it.

“As you well know, I will be

going through something that I have never been through before,” Lewis said. “I have had friends and colleagues who have gone through similar situations. I will be talking and learning from them and obeying my physicians.”

Pancreatic cancer is the nation’s third leading cause of cancer deaths. Roughly three-fourths of those who develop the cancer die within a year of diagnosis, though new advances in treatment are showing signs of success.

Medical experts contend that at this stage, treatment will likely focus on preventing the disease from spreading further and inhibiting symptoms from growing worse.

Lewis added that those new treatment options are “no longer debilitati­ng as they once were,” which has given him hope.

He said he has no plans to retire from the seat he has held for 32 years, and he plans to seek reelection. He was first elected to the U.S. House in 1986, defeating Julian Bond to become the second African American to represent Georgia in Congress since Reconstruc­tion.

He has been reelected 16 times and ran unopposed in 2018 for his latest two-year term. No serious candidate has emerged to challenge him in 2020 in the heavily Democratic 5th Congressio­nal District.

Awarded the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2010 by then-President Barack Obama, Lewis has not enjoyed the same kind of relationsh­ip with the current administra­tion and has been one of President Donald Trump’s fiercest critics, earning Lewis the unofficial title as the “conscience of the House.”

Lewis voted to impeach Trump.

Before he was a member of the U.S. House of Representa­tives, Lewis was and remains a key figure in America’s civil rights movement. A key ally of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Lewis was the youngest speaker at the 1963 March on Washington, representi­ng the Student Non-Violent Coordinati­ng Committee, of which he was the chairman.

In 1961, as one of the original Freedom Riders, he was beaten and bloodied as they rode through the South, addressing laws prohibitin­g black and white riders from sitting next to each other on public transporta­tion.

The 1965 attack in Selma, where Lewis has said, “I thought I saw death. I thought I was going to die,” sparked nationwide support, sympathy and horror, and spurred Congress to move on what became the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

All of that goodwill has translated. Since his announceme­nt last weekend, social media has been flooded with well-wishes for the congressma­n, from school children in rural Georgia to Obama, who said: “If there’s one thing I love about John Lewis, it’s his incomparab­le will to fight. I know he’s got a lot more of that left in him. Praying for you, my friend.”

Lewis said: “It means so much that people all over America and different parts of the world are worried about me. After the announceme­nt, in a matter of a few hours, I had more than 154 calls coming to my personal phone. A lot of it from young people, and some people my age, who have been deeply moved and inspired by the civil rights movement. That is what the movement was all about, trying to help people.”

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