comparemela.com

4yearold kid and took through a lifetime to keep moving and keep moving in the right direction and keep bringing other people to move. And to do it without hatred in his heart. With a song, to be able to sing and dance. As johns brother freddy said in troy, keep moving to the ballot box even if its a mailbox and keep moving to the beloved comeny. John lewis was many things but he was a man. A friend and sunshine in storm. A friend who would walk the stony roads that he asked you to walk. That would brave the chastening rods he asked you to be whipped by. Always keeping his eyes on the prize. Always believing none of us will be free until all of us are equal. I just love that. I always will. And im so grate that feel he stayed true to form. Hes gone up yonder and left us with marching orders. I suggest since hes close enough to god to keep his eye on the sparrow and us we salute, suit up and march on. [ applause ] good day. Im not sure morning, afternoon, whatever it is, it is an honor to be here with each and every one of you. Reverend, thank you for enabling us all to be here in the Ebeneezer Baptist church, to honor and celebrate the life of john lewis with three president s of the United States. [ applause ] isnt that exciting . President clinton, president bush and soon president obama here with us. On behalf of my colleagues as speaker of the house, im pleased to bring greetings to each and every one of you. Im sad to bring condolences to the family, to john, miles, to the entire lewis family. Thank you for sharing john lewis with us. Im pleased to be here with so many members, 50. We would have had more except coronavirus prevented the church from allowing us to bring more but i hope theyll all stand, members of the house of representatives. [ applause ] senators harris and booker who are with us, as well. Senators harris and booker. Among them, mr. Hoyer, steny hoyer, jim clyburn and i served with john lewis for over 30 years. Over 30 years. [ applause ] and in our group, we have senior members and we have members of our freshman class. John convinced each one of us that we were his best friend in congress. And we come with a flag flown over the capitol. The night that john passed. When this flag flew there, it said goodbye, waved goodbye to john, our friend, our mentor, our colleague. This beautiful man that we all had the privilege of serving with in the congress of the United States. So again, we all bring our condolences to the family and mookal collins and johns staff who meant so very much to him. Thank you for your service to john lewis. [ applause ] there are many things were grateful to the family for and to the staff for and we commend them for but lets acknowledge the stamina they have had to keep up with john even as he passed on from troy to selma to montgomery to washington and now to atlanta to be at rest. When john lewis served with us, he wanted us to see the Civil Rights Movement and the rest through his eyes. He told us so many stories. He taught us so much. And he took us to selma. For two decades, mr. President , he took us to selma. You referenced 25 years, some of us were there many times including 50th anniversary where president bush was as well as president obama. And he wanted us to see how important it was, how important it was to understand the spirit of nonviolence. I hesitate to speak about nonviolence in the presence of the master himself reverend lawson who we will be hearing from shortly. We were together just recently in selma when he and john spoke at church and he taught the world really about nonviolence but i just want to say this. The word sacrahaha is that word that means two things in san script. It means nonviolence and it means insistence on the truth. And that is what john lewis was all about. Nonviolently insisting on the truth. He insisted on the truth in nashville and selma and washington, d. C. , lincoln memorial, the truth wherever he went. And he insisted on the truth in the congress of the United States. Every time he stood up to speak, we knew that he was going to take us to a higher place of our understanding and what our responsibilities were and what our opportunities were and he insisted no matter how shall we say offended someone might be that he would insist on the truth. What he said, he said in my life, i have done all i can to demonstrate that the way of peace, the way of peace and not violence is the more excellent way. Now it is your turn, he says in this article that president referenced, to let freedom ring. He always talked about truth marching on. He always worked for a more perfect union. Over the fourth of july weekend, i had the privilege of visiting with john and i brought him this flag pin that i wear, one just like it. Why i did so on that fourth of july weekend was because it is engraved with something that says one country one destiny. Now, wasnt that what john lewis was all about . One country, one destiny. I mention it because this was sown into, embroidered into the lining of Abraham Lincolns coat that he had on the night he left us. I think he had the coat on all the time but also that night. And john lewis and Abraham Lincoln had so much in common. John began we got to know him in front of the len cincoln meml when he made that beautiful, beautiful speech. John lay in state in the rotunda under the dome of the capitol on a catafault, a platform that was made in 1865 to hold the casket of Abraham Lincoln. [ applause ] Abraham Lincoln, john lewis. John lewis. So they had lots of connections. By the way, just incidentally, they were both wonderful and spiritual and saintly but they were both very good politicians. Think of john lewis that way. You will know him know that. He always was about a more perfect union. And he was always about young people. Thats why, mr. President , that article you referenced in the New York Times today, his message that would be delivered at this time as he left us was about young people. He said to them, together you can redeem the world. Together. Always. Perfect union. Together. One nation, one destiny. And he says in the article, answer the highest calling of your heart and stand up for what you truly believe in. Wasnt that just like john . We were very proud to have his voice in the rotunda speaking about all that he cared about and believed in in such a beautiful way, starting in troy. I started my remarks by talking about the flag that waved over the capitol to say goodbye to john as he began his passage. But what i want you to know in addition to how revered he is in the congress, so revered that you know he was a bit mischievous. You know . When he would say, lets make some good trouble, he always had sort of a twinkle in his eye and kind of a spark about it all and my colleagues can tell you that when he cooked up having the sitin to get the Republican Leadership to put the gun violence prevention bill on the floor, when he did that and all the members followed him, the floor covered with people, thought for a moment that perhaps the police might because it was disruptive, good trouble, it was clear to them that if they were to arrest john lewis for doing that they were going to have to arrest the entire House Democratic caucus. [ applause ] so then he spoke. People listened. When he led, people followed. We loved him very much. As his official family, we mourn him greatly. He shared so much his love for his district, his family. The sadness when lillian was sick, the joy he had in john miles. But as i said, we waved goodbye to this person, our leader, our friend, this shall we say humorous he loved to dance. He loved to make us laugh. Sometimes while he was dancing. He said, my granddaughter bella said to him, did you ever sing in the Civil Rights Movement . He said they asked me to sing solo one time. So low so that nobody could hear me. But anyway, getting back to that flag waving goodbye to this person we just loved officially, personally, in every way, politically, too. The last night he was at the capitol it wasnt raining. Thousands of people are showing up to pay their respects. Little bit after 8 00 there was a double rainbow. But it hadnt rained. It was a double rainbow over the casket. For us, it was we waved goodbye when he started to leave us. He was telling us, he was telling us, im home in heaven. Im home in heaven with lillian. We always knew he worked on the side of the angels. And now he is with them. May he rest in peace. Thank you. [ applause ] [ applause ] pastor, sisters and brothers, members of this lewis family that so wonderfully nurtured john and love and hope and courage and faith and the rest of it. And sisters and brothers. Seslof malosa, a polish catholic poet sets the tone at least in part for me as john lewis has journeyed from the eternity of this extraordinary mysterious human race boo the eternity that none of of us know very much about. When he wrote this poem called meaning. When i die, i will see the lining of the world. The other side, beyond Bird Mountain sunset. The true meaning ready to be decoded. What never added up will now add up. What was incomprehensible will become comp prehended. And if there is no lining to the world, if a thrush on a branch is not a sign but just a thrush on a branch, if night and day make no sense following each other and on this earth there is nothing but the earth, even if that is so, there will remain a word. Wakened by the lips that perish, a tireless messenger who runs and runs through interstellar places, through revolving galaxies and calls out and protests then screams. And i submit that john in that other eternity will be heard by us again and again, running through the galaxies, still proclaiming that we the people of the usa can one day live up to the full meaning of we hold these truths, live up to the full meaning we the people of the usa in order to perfect a more perfect union. John lewis practiced not the politics that we call bipartisan. John lewis practiced the politics that we the people of the u. S. Need more desperately than ever before. The politics of the declaration of independence. The politics of the preamble to the constitution of the United States. I have read many of the socalled civil rights books over the last 50 or 60 years about the period between 1953 and 1973. Most of the books are wrong about john lewis. Most of the books are wrong about how john got engaged in the National Campaign of 1959, 60. This is the 60th year of the sitin campaign which swept into every state of the union, largely manned by students because we recruited students. But put upon the map that the nonviolent struggle begun in montgomery, alabama, was not an accident. But as martin king jr. Called it, christian love has power that we have never tapped and if we use it we can transform not only our own lives but we will transform the earth in which we live. I count it providential that as i moved to nashville, tennessee, dropping out of graduate school in nashville came people like kelly smith and andrew white and jeanette hays and Helen Roberts and delo res wilkerson and john lewis. And diane nash. Ct vivian. Marian berry. Bernard lafayette. Paulina knight. And and gentlemen angela butler. How we all gathered in the same city at the same time i count as being providential. We did not plan it. We were all led there. And when kelly smith and the Nashville Christian Leadership Council met in the fall of 1958, and we determined that if theres to be a second Major Campaign that will demonstrate the efficacy of satagria grata, love force, love truth that we would have to do it in nashville. And so, i planned as the strategist and organizer, a fourpoint Strategic Program to create the campaign. We decided with great fear in anticipation we would desegregate downtown nashville. No group of other people in the United States in the 20th century against the segregated system ever thought about desegregated downtown. Tearing down the signs. Ren vatding the waiting rooms. Taking the immoral signs off of drinking fountains. But it was black women who made that decision for us in nashville. I was scared to death when we made that decision. I knew nothing about how we were going to do this. I had never done it before. But we planned the strategy. John lewis did not stumble in on that campaign. Kelly smith, his teacher at abc, invited john to join the workshops in the fall of 1959 as we prepared ourselves to face violence and to do direct action and to put on the map the issue that the racism and the segregation of the nation had to end. And so, in the 60th anniversary of that sitin campaign, which became the second Major Campaign of the Nonviolent Movement of america, those are not my words. John lewis called what we did between 1953 and 1973 the Nonviolent Movement of america not the crm. I think we need to get the story straight because words are powerful. History must be written in such a fashion that it lifts up truly the spirit of the john lewises of the world. [ applause ] and thats why ive chosen just to say a few words about it. Kelly smith invited john lewis. I met a fifth student who told me about a student from chicago who wanted to do something about those vicious signs. I said, invite diane nash to the workshop in september because were going to do something about those signs. I pushed this hard. Now, john lewis had no choice in the matter. You should understand that. Because all of the stories we have heard this morning of john becoming a preacher, preaching to the chickens and other sorts of things, becoming ordained as a baptist minister, Something Else was happening to john. In those early years. John saw the malignancy of racism in troy, alabama. There formed in him a sensibility that he had to do something about it. He did not know what that was. But he was convinced that he was called, indeed, to do whatever he could do, get in good trouble but stop the horror that so many folk lived through and in in this country in that part of the 20th century. John was not alone. Martin king had the same experience as a boy. I had the same experience from age 4. In the streets of masalin, ohio. Matthew mccollum, a pastor whose name you dont know in South Carolina had the same experience. Ct vivian had the same experience. I maintain that many of us had no choice to do but we tried to do primarily because at an early age we recognized the wrong under which we were forced to live and we swore to god that by gods grace we would do whatever god called us to do in order to put on the table of the nations agenda this must end. Black lives matter. [ applause ] and so between 1953 and 1973, we had Major Campaigns, year after year. Thousands of demonstrations across the nation that supported it. We had folk in the congress, folk in the white house, folks scattered across the quite beginning to form late what the solutions are for change. The media makes a mistake when john is seen only in relationship to the Voting Rights bill of 65. However important that is, you must not remember that in the 60s Lyndon Johnson and the congress of the United States passed the most advanced legislation on behalf of we the people of the United States that was ever passed. Head start. Billions of dollars for housing. We would not be in the struggle we are today in housing if president reagan hadnt cut that billions of dollars for housing. Where local churches and local nonprofits could build Affordable Housing in their own communities. Being sustained and financed by loans from the federal government. We passed medicare. We passed antipoverty programs. Civil rights bills 64, 65, Voting Rights bills. A whole array, john lewis must be represent must be understood as one of the leaders of the greatest advance of congress in the United States on behalf of we the people of the usa. [ applause ] we do not need bipartisan if we celebrate the life of john lewis. We need the constitution to come alive. We hold these truths to be self evident. We need the congress and the president s to work unfalteringly on behalf of every boy and every girl so that every baby born on these shores will have access to the tree of life. Thats the only way to honor john robert lewis. No other way. Let all of us in this service today, let all the people of the usa, determine that we will not be quiet as long as any child dies in the first year of life in the United States. We will not be quiet as long as the largest Poverty Group in our nation are women and children. [ applause ] we will not be quiet as long as our nation continues to be the most violent culture in the history of human kind. [ applause ] we will not be quiet as long as our economy is shaped, not by freedom, but by plantation capitalism that continues to cause domination and control rather than access and liberty and equality for all. [ applause ] the forces of spiritual wickedness are strong in our land because of our history. We have not created them. John lewis did not create them. We inherited them. But its our task to see those spiritual forces. I have named them. Racism, sexism, violence, plantation capitalism. Those poisons still dominate far too many of us in many different ways. Johns life was a singular journey from birth through the campaigns in the south and through congress. To get us to see that these forces of wickedness must be resisted. Do not let our own hearts drink any of that poison. Instead, drink the truth of the life force. If we would honor and celebrate john lewiss life, let us then recommit our souls, our minds, our hearts, our bodies, our strength to the continuing journey to dismantle the wrong in our midst. And to allow a space for the new earth and new heaven to emerge. I close with this poem from Langston Hughes which is a kind of a sign and symbol of what john lewis represents and what we, too, can represent in our continuing journey. Langston hughes, i dream a world where no human, no other human will scorn. Where love will bless the earth and peace its past adorn. I dream a dream where all will know sweet freedoms way, where greed no longer saps the soul nor adverse blights our day. A world i dream where black and white and yellow and blue and green and red and brown, whatever your race may be, will share the bounties of the earth. And every woman and man and boy and girl is free. Where wretchedness hangs its head and joy, like a pearl, attends the need of all humankind. Of such a world i dream. Celebrate life. Dream and labor for an atlanta and los angeles and a United States and a world that is to celebrate the spirit and the heart and the mind and soul of john lewis. And to walk with him through the galaxies. Seeking equality, liberty, justice and the beloved community for all. Thank you. [ applause ] three living president s with us today, we have heard from yet another. To the friends and family of congressman john lewis, rosalyn joins me in sending our condolences to all gathered today to mourn the loss of one of our nations great leaders. Throughout his remarkable life, john has been a blessing to countless people and we are proud to be among those whose lives he had touched. While his achievements are enjoyed by all americans, we know him as our neighbor, friend and representative. His enormous contributions will continue to be an inspiration for generations to come. Please know that you are in our hearts and prayers during this difficult time. We hope your warm memories and the love and prayers of your family and friends will be of cold front to you in the days ahead, sincere sly, jimmy carte. [ applause ] if i can help somebody as i pass along if i can cheer somebody with a word or a song if i can show somebody that hes traveling then my living shall not be in vain then my living shall not be in vain yes my living shall not be in vain if i could help somebody as i pass along then my living shall not be in vain oh if i can do my duty as a christian or if i can bring that beauty in a world oh lord if i could share share loves message that the master taught then my living shall not be in vain then my living shall not be in vain yes my living yes it shall not shall not be in vain if i could help somebody if i could help somebody as i pass along then my living it shall not then my living it shall not then his living yes shall not hallelujah his living his living shall not then my living shall not be in vain in living shall not be in vain [ applause ] [ applause ] i want to first call attention to the excellent job that media has done to keep us informed of john. Hasnt the media been tremendous . Ive never seen such coverage. But john deserved it. But i want to talk a moment in my presentation on john before he became famous. I met john. I came to atlanta, we came to atlanta on the same day. She came to work at the university, Atlanta University and i came to work for Martin Luther king jr. In the southern leadership Christian Conference and thats when i met john. Saw him all the time. We were all involved in the same quest for equity and justice in this america. And i got a chance to see him all the time. And i admired his fervor and all of his tenacity and lillian was single so i decided that lillian needed a good man. Not just the bums who were approaching her. She was highly intellectual, well traveled, well educated. And i wanted her to have someone who really would appreciate her skills and her talent. So i looked around and decided that i liked john. But lillian didnt like john particularly. And so she thought she was kind of slow and i said, but, lillian, hes busy. Hes fighting the evils of the world. And she said, yes, but i decided, girl, listen. This boy is going places. So lets see what he can do to get this thing moving. So we decided, well, i did as her friend and thats what you do for friends. You have to help them out. And so, john had to go to the hospital for an examination and i said, oh lillian, this would be a good moment for us to be florence nightingale. We went to the Grocery Store and bunch a little bunch of flowers and took it to the hospital. I said hell be impressed because he was a little slow, too. And i said, well go to the hospital and that would just impress him that he will notice you more because you bring him flowers while hes in the hospital. Well, we got in the hospital and there was a young woman already there and she was fluffing the pillow. Lillian, shoot. I said ive already asked john. John, do you have a young woman who you are especially interested in . And he said, well, not really. And i said, thats not the answer im looking for. I want a more definitive answer because i got some things in mind. Well, you know john was just slow about, well, not really. Well, i decided on new years eve lillian was single as i said and didnt have any plans. So i said, well, ill have a dinner party and invite the two of them and maybe theyll give us a chance. I was known as the one that gave big parties. Lillian thought i was going to have a big party. John thought i was having a big party. They got to my house, there was only room for three of us. The two of them and me. And so, now were discussing the wiles of the world and hoping now that theyre going to get a little closer and closer. Well, because when john didnt have a date on new years eve i knew he didnt have a commitment. Everybody has a date on new years eve with somebody somewhere. So i figure, well, i will have a game now. It is new years eve and i got him. And then things start happening. And still slowly, not fast enough for me but i was patient. And finally, lillian said, i do like him. I said, okay. Im ready now. Ill set a date. Got her a dress ready. We going to have a wedding and so, im not really sure. I asked john not too long ago, did we everyone ask you would you take her . I dont think i ever got much of an opportunity to propose. We just had a wedding. [ applause ] and so, now it looks like things are going to be okay. So we had a big wedding. I did all the planning because lillian was still republicaning andy the planning and had the big wedding, the family came. So now things are going okay and she said, you know, i dont like the idea of that girl looks like she had, you know, some designs on john. I said, honey, dont run away from competition. We can handle competition. Well get rid of that girl so fast she wont know what happened to her. And we did. And they got married. Well, i want you do know they were very happy. But when she found out now, lillian as i said well traveled, well educated but she absolutely didnt like politics. Like other people, she didnt like politics but when john expressed an interest, lillian got in there and became his strongest supporter. She did everything. Everything to make his successes work for him and it did. Well, then john miles came along. And he was a kutdecutest little and then she said they gave me the honor of being his god mother. And i said, oh, thats nice. Ive heard of what does godmother do . What am i supposed to do . She said, well, if something happens to me and john, we want you to take care of him. I said, got to feed him . Because john miles can eat as a kid. I said, feed him every day . They said, yes. And then spike him when he acts up. I agreed to that. But john miles, do you mean . Just stand up, john miles. Stand up. Thats john miles now. [ applause ] now, wait a minute. Take a good look at john miles. Im 411. And almost 90 years old. And there he is. And i supposed to spike him when he doesnt do right. When i walk up to john miles to give him a spanking, i have to get permission because he is pretty big now. But i love john miles then and i love john miles now. And i will take care of you and spank you whether you like it or not. [ applause ] but lillian and john stayed married. I put it together but it lasted 43 years. Thats not a bad record, is it . They were happy and lillian gave him every support a wife could ever give a partner. And they gave love to john miles in the process. John was an unusual individual. Ambassador young is sitting over here. We all loved him all the time. His sincerity was apparent. He worked hard and he said that he wasnt going to stop. I dont need to tell you anything about john. All of you knew him. All of you know his fervor. And his commitment to equity and the love he had for everybody. And i want us to look at the john we thought we knew, the john who convinced us we knew the real man because he was constant. But i ask him one time, john, what in the world is bad trouble . I said, when i was a young girl my sister and i were, we were courting and go out on a date, my mother said, okay, have a good time but dont get in no trouble. Well, we didnt know nothing else except trouble was not good. But john said, the good trouble is when your mother says, dont get in trouble, find a way to right the wrongs of our society. And he did a pretty decent job of that. [ applause ] and during this week, john was on television all day every day. And i love young people. And i had an opportunity and i want people to know i like young people so i was invited to speak to a group of kids and i said to them, as youll watch on television, i want you to know thats not a Public Relations program youre watching. Thats a story of a man who lived the life theyre talking about. John made a decision on the kind of life he was going to live. And i said to those young people that you have the responsibility of making your life have the meaning you want it to be. You can either decide to be the bank robber or the bank owner. Its your choice. The man you see on television decided that his life was going to have a quality to it. Do as much as you can as long as you can as often as you can because thats the way john lewis did. We wont forget john. But i would want to tell you dont sit here and listen to these praises. Dont forget what you read in the newspapers, how wonderful he was. Do something about the man he asked us to be in ourselves. And that is, be kind to everybody, love everybody, speak up and speak out. I dont need to tell you that. You know what he said. But what you can do and i want to advise you and admonish you, to really give meaning to the john we love, vote. Thank you. [ applause ] to johnmiles obama, speaker pelosi, madame mayor, romans 8 18 tells us for i consider the sufferings of the present time to not be worthy of the glory which shall be revealed to us. When i met john lewis over 40 years ago our lives intersected because in 1960 he came to my hometown raleigh, north carolina. To form snic in a small black college. Where my father who was president of the naacp led nightly civil rights demonstrations. Again in 1963, our lives intersected

© 2025 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.