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Obama mourns death of 'greatest legislator of our time' | President Barack Obama led the mourning of Edward M. Kennedy, "the
greatest legislator of our time," by delivering an emotional and simple eulogy on Saturday. Obama employed humour, his own experiences and timeless anecdotes
to memorialize the senator, who died on Tuesday at 77 after battling brain cancer
for more than a year. According to Obama, the country may have viewed him (Ted)
as "heir to a weighty legacy" but he was playfully known by the youngest Kennedys
less grandly: as the big cheese, "The Grand Fromage." "Ted Kennedy's life's work
was not to champion those with wealth or power or special connections. It was
to give a voice to those who were not heard, to add a rung to the ladder of opportunity,
to make real the dream of our founding," CBS news quoted Obama, as saying. Obama
called Kennedy "the lion of the United States Senate" and said that "though it
is Teddy's historic body of achievements that we will remember, it is his giving
heart that we will miss." He focused as much on Kennedy's impact on the U.S. since
first being elected in 1962 as on his individual outreach to those in need, whether
relative or stranger, and his resilience through terrible personal trials - "more
pain and tragedy than most of us will ever know," the American President noted.
"It's a string of events that would have broken a lesser man ... But that was
not Ted Kennedy. Ted Kennedy was the baby of the family who became its patriarch,
the restless dreamer who became its rock," the president said, embracing Vicki
Kennedy and lightly patting the senator's casket as he returned to his seat. Joining
Obama and nearly 1,500 other invitees were former US Presidents George W. Bush,
Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, as well as 58 current members of the U.S. Senate,
21 former members and Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, once an aide to Kennedy.
Singer Tony Bennett and actor Jack Nicholson also attended.
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