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News / Nation & World

S.F. mayor praised for integrity, humility

San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee was remembered for his humility, integrity and infectious smile during a public celebration of his life Sunday at City Hall

The Columbian
Published: December 17, 2017, 10:45pm
10 Photos
Anita Lee, far left, and her daughters, Brianna, middle, and Tania attend a service celebrating the life of Mayor Ed Lee at San Francisco City Hall in San Francisco, Sunday, Dec. 17, 2017. San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee was remembered for his humility, integrity and infectious smile during a public celebration of his life Sunday at City Hall attended by family members, former staff, politicians and residents.
Anita Lee, far left, and her daughters, Brianna, middle, and Tania attend a service celebrating the life of Mayor Ed Lee at San Francisco City Hall in San Francisco, Sunday, Dec. 17, 2017. San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee was remembered for his humility, integrity and infectious smile during a public celebration of his life Sunday at City Hall attended by family members, former staff, politicians and residents. (Scott Strazzante/San Francisco Chronicle via AP, Pool) Photo Gallery

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee was remembered Sunday for his humility, integrity and infectious smile during a public celebration of his life at City Hall, attended by family members, former staff, politicians and residents.

Lee, who died last week at age 65, had a love of life and a devotion to public service, said Gov. Jerry Brown, one of several prominent Democrats who spoke during the ceremony.

“I never saw him down,” Brown said. “Every time you saw him he was happy, he was expressing a very upbeat attitude.”

Lee, also a Democrat, was San Francisco’s first Asian-American mayor and a former civil rights lawyer who led the city out of recession and into an economic recovery driven by the technology industry.

He died early Dec. 12 after collapsing the night before at a grocery store. The medical examiner’s office has not released a cause of death.

Acting Mayor London Breed recalled the rapturous reception Lee received during an official visit to China, where his parents were born.

“He was like a superstar. An icon,” she said. “Everywhere we went and to everyone we met, Lee was like Beyonce with a mustache.”

Lee’s casket was not present, as it was on Friday when his body laid in repose in the rotunda of City Hall.

His daughters, Tania Lee and Brianna Lee, shared the microphone and remembered their father for his energy when it came to serving San Francisco, whether it was by giving speeches, stuffing envelopes or waking up early on weekends to paint over graffiti.

“It was absolute love for the city that kept him going,” Brianna Lee said.

The women announced the formation of the Edmund M. Lee Community Fund that will continue to address issues important to the late mayor including care for the homeless and fighting discrimination.

U.S. Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, both from San Francisco, also eulogized Lee.

Local celebrities, government workers and residents came to say goodbye to Lee on Friday. Many stopped momentarily before his closed casket that was draped in an American flag and behind velvet rope. Some bowed or prayed, saluted or cried before continuing to a side room where they could write condolences.

Outside the building, floral bouquets and handwritten notes filled half of the steps. One message on a piece of tie-dyed cloth referenced the San Francisco Bay Area-based Grateful Dead and its late guitarist Jerry Garcia.

“RIP. ‘What a long strange trip it’s been.’ P.S. Say hi to Jerry,” it read.

San Francisco resident Calvin Yee said he did not know the mayor but identified with Lee, who was also a second-generation Chinese American. Yee wants his two sons, a college student and college graduate, to emulate Lee’s dedication to public service.

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