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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Obama eulogizes vice president’s son

Memorial for Beau Biden draws 1,000

Vice President Joe Biden composes himself as the casket of his son, Beau Biden, is placed in a hearse at the conclusion of his funeral in Wilmington, Del., on Saturday. (Associated Press)
Richard A. Serrano Tribune News Service

President Obama on Saturday eulogized the son of his vice president, telling a somber memorial service in a Delaware Catholic church that Beau Biden was an “original. A good man. A man of character. A man who loved deeply, and was loved in return.”

Joseph Robinette “Beau” Biden III, former Delaware state attorney general, Army veteran of Iraq and the son of Vice President Joe Biden, was 46 and died from brain cancer May 30. The ceremony was officiated by top church prelates, and marked the first time since the Kennedy administration that a president or a vice president has had to bury a child while in office.

The capacity of 1,000 mourners at St. Anthony of Padua church in Wilmington was reached two hours before the service began; faces were filled with tears, and the eulogies were extremely emotional and personal. Beau Biden’s brother, Hunter Biden, described spending his last moments with his brother in the hospital. “I held his hand as he took his last breath,” he said. “His hand will never leave mine.”

Obama struggled at times to get through his words, with his vice president and the Biden family in the front row, and the casket at the head of the center aisle.

To the Biden family, the president said, “We are here to grieve with you, but more importantly, we are here because we love you.”

After Beau Biden’s mother and sister died in an accident, Obama said, “that little boy made a very grown-up decision: He would live a life of meaning. He would live for others. He would ask God for broader shoulders.

“From his dad he learned how to get back up after life knocked him down.

“He learned how to make everybody else feel like we matter – because his dad taught him that everybody matters.”

Beau Biden was “an upgrade” of the vice president, Obama said. “Joe 2.0.” When he was caught with a friend speeding and the police officer wanted to give him a warning because he admired his father’s work, Obama said, “Beau made him write that ticket. Beau didn’t trade on his name.”

The president also praised Beau Biden in his struggle with cancer. “The cruelty he endured in his life didn’t make him hard, it made him compassionate. It made him empathetic.”

“That,” the president said, “is who built this country. That’s who built it, families like Beau’s. He did in 46 years what most of us couldn’t do in 146. He left nothing in the tank.”

Gen. Raymond Odierno, Beau Biden’s top commander in Iraq, spoke of his soldier’s “natural charisma” that put many at ease.

“Beau possessed the traits I have witnessed in only the greatest leaders,” the general said. “Beau was a soldier and a dear friend and also someone I greatly admired.”

The vice president did not speak. But he greeted nearly all at the church, and hugged the president.