Former US President Ford laid to rest in Michigan [ 2007-01-04 10:01 ]      
 
 
 The late U.S. President Gerald Ford has been laid to 
 rest at his presidential museum in his hometown of Grand Rapids, Michigan, 
 following a private service at a local church. VOA's Michael Bowman 
 reports, tens of thousands of well-wishers joined a long list of 
 dignitaries for a final farewell to America's 38th 
 president.
  It is perhaps fitting that a president often 
 praised for his humility and unpretentiousness was remembered by his 
 family, longtime friends and colleagues at a simple brick church several 
 miles from Gerald Ford's boyhood home. 
 Two of the late president's sons read bible passages, and three 
 grandchildren offered prayers as his wife, Betty Ford, looked on from the 
 first row of pews. 
  Former Defense Secretary Ronald Rumsfeld, who also served in the Ford 
 administration, reminded the congregation of the turmoil that had engulfed 
 America when Gerald Ford assumed the presidency from his disgraced 
 predecessor, Richard Nixon, in 1974. 
  "Many here remember what our country was like on the day that Gerald 
 Ford took the presidency," he said. "The pressures were enormous. The 
 stakes were high. The world was watching. And the American people were 
 holding their breath, wondering what would happen next. The words 
 President Ford used to reassure our country and the American people were 
 plain, and they were straightforward. His sincerity gave them eloquence. 
 Even in a country coarsened by skepticism, few doubted that the gentleman 
 from Michigan would keep his word." 
  Gerald Ford was America's only president never to have been elected to 
 either the presidency or the vice presidency. Running to retain the office 
 in 1976, the Republican Ford was narrowly defeated by Democrat Jimmy 
 Carter. 
  Mr. Carter journeyed to Grand Rapids and paid tribute to his former 
 political opponent and the friendship they forged over the last 30 years. 
  "You learn a lot about a man when you run against him for president and 
 when you stand in his shoes and assume the responsibilities that he has 
 borne so well," he said. "Jerry and I frequently agreed that one of the 
 greatest blessings that we had after we left the White House was the 
 intense personal friendship that bound us together. And Jerry never came 
 to the Washington area without being invited to have lunch with me at the 
 White House. As president, I relished his sound advice. And he often, 
 although I must say, reluctantly, departed from the prevailing opinion of 
 his political party to give me support on some of my most difficult 
 challenges."
  Gerald Ford, who lived to be 93, was buried at his 
 presidential museum, where, before the funeral service, his casket lay in 
 public repose for 18 hours. More than 57,000 people braved near-freezing 
 temperatures to wait as long as six hours to pass by his casket. Ever 
 since the late president's body arrived in Grand Rapids, tens of thousands 
 of people have lined the streets in quiet reverence to view the hearse 
 carrying his remains. 
  As one resident said with pride and great emotion, "America needs to 
 acknowledge a hero."  |  
 
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