John Lewis funeral: Obama gives powerful eulogy after Clinton, Pelosi, Bush and more give moving tributes
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Your support makes all the difference.John Lewis will go down in history as the founding father of a better America, former president Barack Obama said during powerful eulogy to the civil rights hero.
Mr Obama was the fourth former president to deliver remarks at the funeral after Bill Clinton and George W Bush spoke, and a letter from Jimmy Carter was read out, to mourners gathered at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.
"The life of John Lewis was in so many ways, exceptional. It vindicated the faith in our founding, redeemed that faith, that most American of ideas," Mr Obama said.
The celebration of Mr Lewis' life turned to the hope for his legacy as Mr Obama used the famous pulpit of MLK to rally support for voting reform ahead of the 2020 election between his former VP Joe Biden and Donald Trump.
Mr Trump was the only recent living president not to make an appearance of some kind at the service, though his actions cast a long shadow over the messages of speakers.
"There are those in power that 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, even undermine the postal service, in the run up to an election that's going to be dependent on mail in ballots so people don't get sick," Mr Obama said.
"I know this is a celebration of John's life, there are some who might say we shouldn't dwell on such things. But that's why I'm talking about it. John Lewis devoted his time on this earth fighting the very attacks on democracy, and what's best in America, that we're seeing circulate right now."
Mr Bush and Mr Clinton earlier focused on the life of Mr Lewis and the better future he created for the country.
Mr Bush had mourners in hysterics as he remembered Mr Lewis's early childhood while Mr Clinton spoke about the lessons he has learned from the late congressman.
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Lewis stands beside Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr - Former Atlanta mayor William Craig Campbell
"John Lewis will stand beside Gandhi, and King, and Mandela as one of the great transformative freedom fighters of humankind," said former Atlanta mayor William Craig Campbell.
He continued that Mr Lewis wasn't a civil rights hero, he was a "women's rights hero, a gay rights hero, a senior rights hero, a worker's hero and immigrant rights hero".
"John wasn't on the right side of history, history was on the right side of John Lewis," Mr Campbell said.
Outpouring of emotion during John Lewis funeral
While the funeral of John Lewis is being held in Atlanta, the grief is being shared around the world as people tune in online.
'Just as you may imagine, but better" - Jamila Thompson, deputy chief of staff to John Lewis
"As a staff we are heartbroken, we are lost. But we know that the work continues. The fight remains. We cannot, we must not get lost in this sea of despair," Jamila Thompson said.
Barack Obama eulogy soon
Former president Barack Obama will be the fourth past leader of the United States to deliver a message at the funeral of John Lewis.
He will begin shortly after speeches earlier from Bill Clinton, George W Bush, and a letter from Jimmy Carter.
John Lewis was the finest disciple of Martin Luther King -- Barack Obama
"An American whose faith was tested again and again to produce a man of pure joy and unbreakable perseverance," Mr Obama said.
'Taste of victory' gave John Lewis righteous purpose -- Obama
Speaking about John Lewis's early non-violent civil disobedience sitting at segregated counters and busses set him on a course to take the battle for civil rights deeper.
"John got a taste of jail, for the first, second, third, several times. But he also got a taste of victory and it consumed him with righteous purpose and he took the battle deeper into the south.," he said.
"Imagine the courage, of two people Malia's age, younger, than my oldest daughter, on their own, to challenge an entire infrastructure of oppression. John was only 20 years old. But he pushed all 20 of those years to the centre of the table betting everything, all of it, that his example could challenge centuries of convention and generations of brutal violence and countless daily indignities suffered by African Americans."
'God put perseverance in him' -- Obama
"John looks so young and he's small in stature, looking every bit that shy serious child that his mother had raised, and yet he's full of purpose. God put perseverance in him," Obama said.
"Their bones were cracked with Billy clubs, their eyes and lungs choked with tear gas, they knelt to pray which made their heads easier targets, and John was struck in the skull. He thought he was going to die, surrounded by the sight of young Americans gagging and bleeding and trampled. Victims in their own country of state sponsored violence."
Life of John Lewis vindicated the founding of America - Obama
"The life of John Lewis was in so many ways, exceptional. It vindicated the faith in our founding, redeemed that faith, that most American of ideas," Obama said.
"The idea that any of us ordinary people without rank or wealth or title or fame can come how point out the imperfections of this nation and come together and challenge the status quo and decided that it is in our power to remake this country that we love until it more closely aligns with our highest ideals."
John Lewis is a founding father of a better America - Barack Obama
"America was built by John Lewises. He as much as anyone in our history brought this country a little bit closer to our highest ideals," Obama said.
"And some day when we do finish that long journey towards freedom, when we do form a more perfect union, whether it's years 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."
'As an old man he didn't sit out any fight' - Obama
"He knew from his own life that progress is fragile, that we have to be vigilant against the darker currents of this country's history. Of our own history. Where there are whirlpools of violence and hatred and despair that can always rise again," Obama said.
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