US remembers Kennedy 50 years after assassination

Semiu Salami
Semiu Salami
The Kennedys

The US has been marking 50 years since President John F Kennedy was killed by an assassin’s bullet in Dallas, Texas.

The city, which long struggled with the legacy of the assassination, is hosting a series of official events.

Kennedy, who served less than three years, is often ranked among the nation’s most revered presidents.

Just 46 when he died, he is praised for his youthful vigour, his leadership through the Cuban missile crisis and his vision to put a man on the Moon.

But he is also remembered for ordering one of the most disastrous episodes of the Cold War, the failed Bay of Pigs invasion of communist Cuba by a CIA-trained paramilitary force of Cuban exiles.

Kennedy’s family members laid a wreath on his grave at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington DC on Friday. His wife Jackie and two of their children are also buried there.

President Barack Obama issued a proclamation for flags to be flown at half mast at the White House, US Capitol and other government buildings.

“Today, we honour his memory and celebrate his enduring imprint on American history,” he said.

Among official events in Dallas on Friday, the city’s symphony orchestra performed and bells tolled at the minute of Kennedy’s death. Crowds thronged the ceremony at Dealey Plaza, where the president was shot.

“The man we remember today gave us a gift that will not be squandered: the chance to learn how to face the future when it’s the darkest and most uncertain,” Dallas Mayor Michael Rawlings said to a large crowd before a moment of silence was observed.

Historian and author David McCullough read several of Kennedy’s most famous quotes, including: “We need men who can dream of things that never were, and ask, ‘Why not?'”

Elsewhere, wreaths were laid in the German capital Berlin where Kennedy gave his Cold War-era “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech in June 1963.

Those events and others conclude a week of tributes to the slain American leader.

Kennedy, a Democrat, belonged to one of the 20th Century’s most prominent American political dynasties.

On 22 November 1963, he and his wife travelled to Dallas for early campaigning ahead of the following year’s election.

Crowds of supporters lined the streets to catch a glimpse of the couple. As the presidential motorcade entered Dealey Plaza at around 12:30 local time (18:30 GMT), Kennedy’s convertible passed the Texas School Book Depository.

Gunshots rang out. Bullets struck the president in the head and neck. Half an hour later, Kennedy was pronounced dead at a local hospital.

He was the fourth US president assassinated while in office, but the first to have his death captured on film.

Soon after, Vice-President Lyndon Johnson was sworn in as president aboard Air Force One.

Lee Harvey Oswald, a former Marine Corps veteran and Soviet defector employed at the depository at the time, was arrested in connection with the shooting.

On 24 November 1963, he was scheduled to be transferred from police headquarters to a county jail when he was shot and killed by Jack Ruby, a local nightclub owner.

Official inquiries have determined Oswald alone was responsible for the assassination, but Kennedy’s murder has provided endless fodder for conspiracy theorists.

Members of one such group said they planned to wear T-shirts emblazoned with the slogan “50 years in denial is enough” near Dealey Plaza on Friday.

The events of that November plunged the nation into mourning, and many Americans still recall where they were when they heard the news.

Texan Daniel Kendrick, who as a teenager witnessed the shooting, told the BBC he had been preparing to approach the motorcade in the hope of shaking the president’s hand when he witnessed Kennedy’s shooting.

“I saw the look on Jackie Kennedy’s face,” he recalled. “She turned and looked straight at me with a look of horror on her face. That really freaked me out. I had to run.”

Historian Robert Dallek said Kennedy’s popularity endured in part because Americans have been so disappointed in his successors.

“People want a better life in this country,” he said. “They want to think their children are going to do better. And they associate this with Kennedy’s youth, his promise, possibility.”

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