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Mourners flock to John Lewis mural in Atlanta to honor ‘true hero’

Sixty-five feet high, the mural of John Lewis towers over Atlanta’s Sweet Auburn district. Never has the outsized tribute seemed more appropriate.

On Saturday, mourners gathered in the shadow of the civil rights icon’s famous image, paying their respects to the man and his legacy.

“I moved to Atlanta because of John Lewis,” said Vernon Johnson, 59. When he retired from the military, Johnson said he wanted to raise his children in a city where they could connect with their African American heritage.

Johnson, who was shaped by the Marine Corps, said he felt a connection to Lewis because the congressman “was on the front lines, fighting for change.”

His leadership won’t be easily replaced, said Edie Howard, who drove from Marietta with her husband to visit the mural. She said Lewis stepped up and helped fill the void created when the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. died.

“He was like the father of the civil rights movement, a mentor to so many,” Howard said. “It’s such a great loss, not only for Black America but for the country as a whole.”

Denise Harris woke up Saturday to the news of Lewis’ death. She said it hit her harder than she would’ve expected.

“I just broke down in tears,” said Harris, 62. Determined to give tribute to one of her heroes, Harris arrived at the mural, at the intersection of Auburn Avenue and Jesse Hill Junior Drive, with a bouquet of flowers and a silent prayer.

“To know he’s no longer with us is devastating,” she said. “It’s disheartening. We need his voice now more than ever. We can only hope new leaders will rise in his place.”

>>Read MORE on AJC.com.

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