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Present. Forward, march. March time. Halt. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Ready, step. Halt. Forward, march. [indistinct speaking] ladies and gentlemen, please, rise. Forward, march. [indiscernible] forward, march. Ladies and gentlemen, [indiscernible] Speaker Pelosi good afternoon. It is an official, personal, and very sad honor to welcome our colleague, john lewis, back to the capitol, to welcome his family and his many friends to acknowledge his sacred life. Please stay standing for the invocation by reverend, dr. Granger browning jr. , ebenezer a. M. E. Church. Rev. Browning let us bow our heads in a word of prayer. Eternal god, our father, i come before you today in the name of jesus. Thanking you for the many different faiths and beliefs and religions that make up your beloved community that come to celebrate the life and the legacy of john lewis. We come today thanking you for the faith foundations that his mother and father established in troy, alabama. We thank you for his leadership of sncc and the march on washington. We thank you for how he was bloodied for us, bruised for us, he marched for us, sat in for us and was willing to give up his life that we might have life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And on today, as his colleagues friends and especially family members come as he lays in state in this hallowed rotunda, we come on this day recommitting ourselves to march as he marched, to ballot boxes and this year for mailboxes, and for Voting Rights and for civil rights and for human rights. And well keep doing that until that day justice rolls down like mighty waters and righteousness like a mighty stream. And finally, on july 17, we want to say thank you that he crossed another bridge. Not the Edmund Pettus bridge that we pray one day will be named the john lewis memorial bridge, but the bridge in earth from earth to glory, and when he got there, Elijah Cummings and the congressional cloud of witnesses welcomed him home. As they marched down that street, paved of gold, we want to say thank you from emmett till, to george floyd, say thank you for allowing our deaths not to be in vain. And when he got to the lily white throne, we want to hear you say, well done, thy good and faithful servant. You have done the good fight and you have kept your eyes on the prize and now enter into the joy of the lord. And after you said that, gabriel told the angels to lift every voice and sing. And we heard dr. King in the background saying, free at last, free at last, the consciousness of congress is free at last. In jesus name we pray. Amen. Ladies and gentlemen, the honorable mitch mcconnell, majority leader of the United States senate. Sen. Mcconnell please, be seated. In his memoirs, john lewis described a childhood home that was quite different from the place he lies today. That farm house in pike county, alabama had no Running Water or electricity. It stood on the first land his fathers family had ever owned. In a part of the country where segregation had led to almost total isolation along racial lines. It would have been hard to conceive back then that the young child tending his familys beckens would, by age 23, leading the movement to redeem american society. That hed be addressing hundreds of thousands of civil rights marchers from the steps of the lincoln memorial. I was lucky enough to be there that day. I marveled at the massive crowds. The sight gave me hope for our country. That was johns doing. Even on that day, as his voice echoed across the mall, i wonder how many dared imagine that young man would come to walk the halls of the congress. Americas original sin of slavery was allowed to fester for far too long. It left a long wake of pain, violence, and brokenness that has taken great efforts from great heroes to address. Johns friend, dr. Martin luther king jr. , famously said, the arc of the moral universe is long. But it bends toward justice. But that is never automatic. History only bent toward what is right, because people like john paid the price to help bend it. He paid that price at every nashville lunch counter, where his leadership made segregation impossible to ignore. He paid it in every jail cell, where he waited out hatred and oppression. He paid that price in harassment and beatings from a bus station in south carolina, to the Edmund Pettus bridge. John lewis lived and worked with urgency, because the task was urgent. But even though the world around him gave him every cause for bitterness, he stubbornly treated everyone with respect. And love. All so that, as his friend dr. King once put it, we could build a community at peace with itself. Today, we pray and trust that this peacemaker himself now rests in peace. All of johns colleagues stand with his son, john miles, their family, and the entire country in thanking god that he gave our nation this hero it needed so badly. May all of us that he will leave behind under this dome pray for a fraction of johns strength to keep bending that arc on toward justice. Ladies and gentlemen, the honorable nancy pelosi, speaker of the United States house of representatives. Speaker pelosi to the family of john lewis, welcome to the rotunda. Under the dome of the u. S. Capitol wee have bid farewell to some of the greatest americans in our history. It is fitting that john lewis joins this pantheon of patriots , resting upon the same catapult of president abraham lincoln. John revered president lincoln, his identification with lincoln was clear. 57 years ago, at the shadow of the lincoln memorial, where john declared, our minds, souls, and hearts cannot rest until freedom and justice exist for all people. Words that ring true today. Mr. Leader, i, too, was there that day. Between then and now, john lewis became a titan of the civil rights movement, and then the conscience of the congress. Here in congress, john was revered and beloved on both sides of the aisle, on both sides of the capitol. We knew that he always worked on the side of the angels, and now we know that he is with them. And we are comforted to know that he is with his beloved lillian. And may it be a comfort to johns son, john miles, and the entire lewis family, michael collins, the entire staff, that so many mourn their loss and are praying for them at this sad time. God truly blessed america with the life and leadership of john lewis. We thank you for sharing him with us. May he rest in peace. John lewis often spoke of a beloved community, a vision he shared with reverend dr. Martin luther king jr. Of the Community Connected and uplifted by faith, hope, and charity. And, indeed, john had deep faith. Believing that every person has a spark of divinity, making them worthy of respect. And he had faith in the charity of others, which is what gave him so much hope. And as he wrote in his book, release the need to hate, to Harbor Division and the enticement of revenge. Release all bitterness, hold only love, only peace in your heart. Knowing the battle for good to overcome evil is already won. John, the optimist. Through it all, john was a person of greatness. He also was a person of great humility. Always giving credit to others in the movement. John committed his life to advancing justice and understood that to build a better future, we had to acknowledge the past. Exactly one year ago, it was a privilege to be with john and members of the congressional black caucus, madam chair, karen bass, on a pilgrimage to ghana to observe 400 years since the arrival of the first slaves from africa. Some of the descendants of those slaves would build this capitol where john lies in state on the caterfal. Reful i wish you could have seen the response that john received when he was introduced to the ghana parliament. My colleagues are shaking their heads. It was overwhelming. Overwhelming. I wish you could have seen him at the door of no return, which enslaved people were sent through, on to the death ships to cross the atlantic. I wish you could have seen what it meant to him. He knew that the door of no return was a central part of american history. Just as is the Edmund Pettus bridge, the march on washington, the selma march to montgomery. When john made his speech 57 years ago, he was the youngest speaker at the march on washington program. How fitting it is that in the final days of his life, he summoned the strength to acknowledge the young people peacefully protesting in the same spirit of that march, taking up the unfinished work of racial justice. Helping complete the journey begun more than 55 years ago. We have all seen the photographs of john being brutally beaten in selma, which painted an iconic picture of injustice. What a beautiful contrast to see john and the mayor of washington, who is with us today, at the black lives matter plaza, standing in solidarity with the protesters, an iconic picture of justice that will endure and will inspire our nation for years to come. John firmly focused on the future. On how to inspire the next generation to join the fight for justice. And his quote, to find a way to get in the way. As one of the youngest leaders of the freedom rides, march on washington, as i said, and march to montgomery, he understood the power of young people to change the future. When asked what someone can do who is 19 or 20 years old, the age that he was was when he set out to desegregate nashville, lewis replied, a young person should be speaking out for what is fair, what is just, what is right. Speak out for those who have been left out and left behind. That is how the Movement Goes forward, john said. Imagine the great joy he had traveling the country to share that message of action with young people. No need to imagine, it is my personal privilege right now for me to yield to our beloved colleague, the distinguished gentleman from georgia, congressman john lewis. [recording] rep. Lewis i grew up in alabama outside of a little place called troy. My father was a sharecropper and tenant farmer. But back in 1944, when i was fatherur years old, my had saved 300, and with the 300 he bought 110 acres of land. My family still owns that land today. How many of you remember when you were four . What happened to the rest of us . It was many, many years ago when we were visiting the little town of troy, visit montgomery, visit tuskegee, visit birmingham, i saw those signs that said, white men, colored men, white women, colored women, white waiting, colored waiting. I would come home and ask my mother, my father, my grandparents, my great grandparents, why . They would say, thats the way it is. Dont get in the way. Dont get in trouble. But one day, in 1955, 15 years old, in the 10th grade, i heard about rosa parks. I heard the words from Martin Luther king jr. On the radio. 1957, i met rosa parks at the age of 17. In 1958 at the age of 18, i met Martin Luther king jr. , and these two individuals inspired me to get in the way. To get in trouble. So i come here to say to you this morning, on this beautiful campus, with your great education, you must find a way to get in the way. You must find a way to get in trouble. Good trouble. Necessary trouble. [applause] use your education. You have wonderful teachers. Wonderful professors. Researchers. Use what you have. Use your learning. Use your tools. Help make our country and make our world a better place. Where no one will be left out or left behind. You can do it, and you must do it. It is your time. [applause] in a few short days, we will commemorate what we call the mississippi summer project. More than 1,000 students from all over america, many from abroad, made a trip to mississippi to encourage people to register to vote. And a summer night of june 21, 1964, three young men that i knew, two whites, and one africanamerican, nick burner, andy goodman, and james cheney, went out to investigate the burning of an africanamerican church that was used for Voter Registration workshops. These three young men were detained by the sheriff, taken to jail, taken out of jail, turned over to the klan where they were beat and shot and killed, and i tell students today, these three young men didnt die in vietnam. They didnt die in the middle east or eastern europe. They didnt die in africa or central or south america. They died right here in our own country. Trying to help all of our citizens become participants in a democratic process. As young people, you must understand that there are forces that want to take us back to another period. But you must say that were not going back. We make too much progress, and were going forward. There may be some setbacks. Some delays. Some disappointments. But you must never, ever give up or give in. You must keep the faith and keep your eyes on the prize. That is your calling. That is your mission. That is your moral obligation. That is your mandate. Get out there and do it. Get in the way. [applause] in the final analysis, we all must learn to live together as brothers and sisters. We all live in the same house. And it doesnt matter whether we are black or white. Asian american or native american. It doesnt matter whether youre straight or gay. We are one people. We are one family. We all live in the same house. Be bold. Be courageous. Stand up. Speak up. Speak out. And find a way to create the beloved community. The beloved world. A world of peace. A world that recognizes the dignity of all humankind. Never become bitter. Never become hostile. Never hate. Live in peace. We are one. One people. And one love. Thank you very much. [applause] ladies and gentlemen, dr. Whitley phipps. Oh lord amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me i once was lost but now im found was blind but now i see through many dangers, toils, and snares i have already come twas grace that brought me safe thus far and grace will lead me home when weve been there 10,000 years bright shining as the sun weve no less days to sing gods praise than when weve first begun hallelujah, hallelujah, hallelujah hallelujah, hallelujah, hallelujah hallelujah, hallelujah, amen [applause] ladies and gentlemen, dr. Whitley phipps. When peace like a river attended my way when sorrows like sea billows roll whatever my lot thou hast taught me to say it is well it is well with my soul it is well with my soul it is well it is well with my soul even my faith shall beside the clouds shall beord even though it is well with my soul it is well with my soul it is well it is well with my soul it is well with my soul it is well it is well with my soul [applause] ladies and gentlemen, please rise for the honorable james b. Clyburn. Mr. Clyburn god, grant me the serenity to accept the things i cannot change, courage to change the things i can, and the wisdom to know the difference. Living one day at a time, accepting hardships as a pathway to peace. Taking, as he did, the sinful world as it is, not as i would have it. Trusting that he will make all things right if i surrender to his will. That i may be reasonably happy in this life and supremely happy with him forever in the next. Amen. Ladies and gentlemen, please remain in your seats until you are escorted to pay your respects by the sergeant at arms

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