2006年VOA标准英语-Mourners Pay Last Respects to Civil Rights(在线收听) |
By Mike Cooper
----------------------------------------------------- Hundreds of people lined the streets as an 18th-century carriage pulled by two horses brought the casket of Coretta Scott King to the Georgia state Capitol. Mrs. King is the first black person and the first woman to lie in state under the Gold Dome of Georgia's Capitol building. During a brief ceremony, Governor Sonny Perdue called Mrs. King one of Georgia's most beloved citizens, as he offered condolences to the King family.
The honors accorded Mrs. King by Georgia's governor were in sharp contrast to the way the death of her husband, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., was treated after his 1968 assassination. Then-Georgia Governor Lester Maddox did not attend the Reverend King's funeral, and refused to let his body lie in honor at the state Capitol. Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, a black woman, noted progress in race relations that has occurred in the Southern United States and Mrs. King's role in facilitating change. "For I would not be in this place as mayor of Atlanta had Coretta not lived and fought for our right as African Americans to be here," said Shirley Franklin. After the viewing at the Capitol, Mrs. King's casket will lie at the Ebenezer Baptist Church, where her husband preached in the years before his death. A funeral service will be held Tuesday at a suburban Atlanta church where the Kings' youngest daughter, Bernice, is a minister. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/2/30627.html |