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Presidents, preachers, poets praise King

10,000 celebrate life of civil rights leader in service at times turned political

Jason Reed / Reuters
Following the funeral, the coffin of Coretta Scott King is moved from the New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, Ga., on Tuesday.
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CORETTA KING
  Coretta Scott King
View images chronicling the life of Coretta Scott King.
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  Martin Luther King Jr.
See the civil rights leader in speeches and marches from Alabama to Washington.

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The Big Picture

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updated 8:34 p.m. ET Feb. 7, 2006

LITHONIA, Ga. - Ten thousand mourners — including four U.S. presidents, numerous members of Congress and many gray-haired veterans of the civil rights movement — said goodbye to Coretta Scott King on Tuesday, with President Bush saluting her as “a woman who worked to make our nation whole.”

The immense crowd filled the New Birth Missionary Baptist Church — a modern, arena-style megachurch in a suburban Atlanta county that was once a stronghold of the Ku Klux Klan but today has one of the most affluent black populations in the country.

More than three dozen speakers at the funeral took turns remembering the widow of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who worked to realize her husband’s dream of equality for nearly 40 years after his assassination. She died Jan. 30 at age 78 after battling ovarian cancer and the effects of a stroke.

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The president ordered flags flown at half-staff across the country.

“Coretta Scott King not only secured her husband’s legacy, she built her own,” Bush told the crowd. “Having loved a leader, she became a leader, and when she spoke, Americans listened closely.”

President Clinton urged mourners to follow in her footsteps, honor her husband’s sacrifice and help the couple’s children fulfill their parents’ legacy. President George H.W. Bush said the “world is a kinder and gentler place because of Coretta Scott King.” President Carter praised the Kings for their ability to “wage a fierce struggle for freedom and justice and to do it peacefully.”

Bush agenda criticized
The funeral at times turned political, with some speakers decrying the war in Iraq, the Bush administration’s eavesdropping program, and the sluggish response to Hurricane Katrina in mostly black New Orleans.

The Rev. Joseph Lowery, who co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with Martin Luther King Jr., drew a roaring standing ovation when he said: “For war, billions more, but no more for the poor” — a takeoff on a line from a Stevie Wonder song. The comment drew head shakes from Bush and his father as they sat behind the pulpit.

The lavish service stood in sharp contrast to the 1968 funeral for King’s husband. President Lyndon B. Johnson did not attend those services, which were held in the much smaller and older Ebenezer Church in Atlanta, where King had preached.

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KING
  Coretta Scott King remembered
As Coretta Scott King was laid to rest Feb. 7, Americans from former presidents to everyday people said goodbye to, in President Bush’s words, “one of the most admired Americans of our time.”

Coretta Scott King’s body was to be placed in a crypt near her husband’s tomb at the King Center, which she built to promote his memory. The crypt is inscribed with a passage from First Corinthians: “And now abide Faith, Hope, Love, These Three; but the greatest of these is Love.”

Over the past several days, more than 160,000 mourners waited in long lines to pay their respects and file past King’s open casket during viewings at churches and the Georgia Capitol, where King became the first woman and the first black person to lie in honor.

“She made many great sacrifices,” said Sean Washington, 38, who drove from Tampa, Fla., with his wife and children from a disability center to attend the funeral. “To be in her presence once more is something that I would definitely cherish, no matter what.”

Stevie Wonder and Michael Bolton sang, giving soaring, gospel-infused performances. At least 14 U.S. senators attended, along with members of the House.

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