Biden and others honor Ethel Kennedy's legacy
U.S. President Joe Biden joined former Democratic presidents and others to honor longtime human rights advocate and storied political family matriarch Ethel Kennedy at a memorial service in Washington after her death last week at age 96.
The widow of Robert F. Kennedy - a former U.S. attorney general and U.S. senator, who was assassinated while seeking the Democratic presidential nomination in 1968 - founded a human rights center to carry on her husband's work.
She never remarried and went on to raise her 11 children, enduring a host of other family tragedies along the way, including separate plane crashes that killed her parents, brother and nephew as well as the untimely deaths of several of her children, grandchildren and a great-grandchild.
She and her husband were devastated by the assassination of his brother, President John F. Kennedy, in Dallas in 1963.
Biden, a fellow Irish Catholic who has leaned on his faith amid his own losses, including the death of his son Beau, said the Democratic family matriarch was there for him at his time of tragedy. He said her husband had been one of his heroes.
"Ethel was a hero in her own right," Biden said in remarks at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in Washington, just blocks from the White House.
Former Democratic Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, as well as former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and others, also reflected on her life.
The Kennedys were known for their parties and service was no different, with scores of relatives filling the pews and high-profile attendees remembering the infectious spirit highlighted by her children and grandchildren.
Over the decades, Kennedy took up many causes championed by her late husband, including fighting poverty, working for social justice and protecting the environment. Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2014. She died Oct. 10 from complications following a stroke, her family said.