Jimmy Carter receives state funeral in Washington DC before burial in Georgia

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Jimmy Carter receives state funeral in Washington DC before burial in Georgia
Author: Joseph Gedeon in Washington
Published: Jan, 09 2025 11:00

Service marks end of 39th president’s lying in state, with all five living presidents expected to attend procession. Jimmy Carter’s six-day farewell to the nation culminates on Thursday as the 39th president receives a state funeral at Washington National Cathedral before returning to his home town of Plains, Georgia, for burial beside his wife, Rosalynn.

 [People standing around a casket draped in the US flag]
Image Credit: the Guardian [People standing around a casket draped in the US flag]

The service marks the end of Carter’s lying in state at the US Capitol, where yesterday Vice-President Kamala Harris led tributes to a president whose legacy of humanitarian work and diplomatic achievements stretched far beyond his single term in office.

“He lived his faith, he served the people and he left the world better than he found it,” Harris said in a eulogy that highlighted Carter’s establishment of key federal agencies and diplomatic initiatives, including the Camp David accords. The procession for America’s longest-lived president will be attended by all five living presidents, including President-elect Donald Trump.

Following the cathedral service, Carter’s remains will make their final journey back to Plains, the small Georgia town where his century-long life began and ended. An invitation-only funeral at Maranatha Baptist church, where Carter taught Sunday school well into his 90s, will precede his burial alongside Rosalynn, his wife of 77 years.

In life, Carter eschewed the traditional elder statesman role in favour of hands-on humanitarian work, including through Habitat for Humanity and his campaign to eradicate Guinea worm disease. He authored over 30 books on politics, faith and poetry, helped to negotiate a nuclear standoff with North Korea in 1994 through H4H, and was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 2002.

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