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  • Elaborate state funeral for Poland's first couple

    Elaborate state funeral for Poland's first couple
    By VANESSA GERA (AP)
    18/04/10

    KRAKOW, Poland - An elaborate state funeral for Poland's President
    Lech Kaczynski and his wife, Maria, began Sunday bereft of many world
    leaders whose travel plans were paralyzed by the plume of volcanic ash
    that has covered Europe.

    The couple's bodies were flown from Warsaw to Krakow early Sunday for
    the tradition-laden ceremony and burial in the nearby Wawel Cathedral,
    the final resting place for Poland's kings, poets and statesmen,
    including Gen. Wladyslaw Sikorski, the exiled World War II leader who
    perished in a mysterious plane crash off Gibraltar in 1943.

    President Barack Obama, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German
    Chancellor Angela Merkel were among the leaders who canceled at the
    last minute because of the expanding volcanic ash cloud, dangerous to
    airplane engines, that has enveloped Europe and closed nearly all of
    the continent's airports since late Thursday.

    "All the French people will be, in their thoughts, with the Polish
    people" on Sunday, Sarkozy said in a letter sent to acting president
    Bronislaw Komorowski expressing his regret for being unable to attend.

    The volcanic ash did not deter everyone. The leaders of Baltic and
    Balkan states, came by car for the stately event.

    Polish police estimated the number of mourners in and around Krakow at
    nearly 150,000.

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev flew by plane from Moscow for the
    funeral. His presence was further sign of the warming ties between the
    two countries, which had been strained for centuries, and recently
    because of communism and the 1940 Katyn massacre.

    Krakow Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz acknowledged those ties in remarks
    to the congregation, noting that the tragedy had given rise "to many
    layers of good between the people and nations."

    "The sympathy and help we have received from Russian brothers has
    breathed new life into a hope for closer relations and reconciliation
    between our two Slavic nations," Dziwisz said. "I direct these words
    to the President of Russia."

    Despite the dearth of global dignitaries, no one said the funeral
    should be postponed.

    "I wouldn't move the funeral," said Bartek Kargol who was among
    thousands of people waiting for the event Krakow. "This event is for
    our president."

    Christian Stoltner, a German student, said Poles need their time to mourn.

    "One cannot do anything about the fact that there are ashes around
    now," he said. "The date was set and momentum was built and slowly
    it's time to find closure."

    The funeral Mass was held at St. Mary's Basilica, a 13th-century
    red-brick Gothic church set on a vast market square in Krakow's Old
    Town.

    Inside, scores of Poland's political elite were seated in the ancient
    pews, shoulder to shoulder with leaders from Estonia, Belarus,
    Armenia, Latvia, Lithuania and Ukraine.

    The Mass was led by Dziwisz. The Kaczynskis' daughter, Marta, and the
    president's twin brother, Jaroslaw, sat in the front row as Mozart's
    Requiem was played.

    After the Mass, the bodies of the first couple were to be carried in a
    funeral procession across the picturesque Renaissance old town and up
    the Wawel hill, the historic seat of kings where a fortress wall
    encircles a castle and 1,000-year-old cathedral overlooking the
    Vistula River.

    The funeral was eight days after the Polish Air Force Tupolev 154
    crashed on approach to Smolensk, Russia, killing the first couple and
    94 others.

    After an all-night vigil at St. John's Cathedral in Warsaw, the bodies
    of the couple were driven slowly through Warsaw past places linked to
    Kaczynski's life, including city hall, where he served as mayor of
    Warsaw, and a museum he championed on the Warsaw Uprising of 1944.

    They were then flown by military transport to Krakow, below the
    volcanic ash plume. As their funeral cortege made its way to St.
    Mary's, thousands of mourners lined the streets and many tossed
    bouqets of flowers on the hearses.

    Ahead of the Mass, scores of people flocked to a memorial at the base
    of Wawel hill to pay tribute to those who died, leaving flowers and
    candles.

    Pictures of Kaczynski and his wife, as well as other victims, could be
    seen amid candles and flowers left by mourners who came to pay their
    respects.

    Last Saturday's crash - which investigators in Russia and Poland have
    said was likely because of human error - plunged the country into a
    deep grief not seen since the death of Pope John Paul II five years
    ago.

    The plane went down in heavy fog after clipping a birch tree on
    approach to Smolensk, Russia. Those aboard had planned to attend a
    memorial for thousands of Polish army officers executed in 1940 by
    Josef Stalin's secret police.

    The first couple will be laid to rest together in a honey-hued
    sarcophagus made from Turkish alabaster in a crypt of the cathedral
    and it will be open to mourners after the ceremonies Sunday.

    The decision to bury Kaczynski at Wawel sparked protests in recent
    days, with people saying that despite the national tragedy he still
    does not belong in the company of some of the nation's most august
    figures.

    Karolina Rajchel, 19, a student who traveled five hours from Wroclaw,
    said she had not supported every step that Kaczynski took, but called
    the protests "out of place" in light of his death.

    "Kaczynski had good and bad qualities but now you shouldn't say
    anything bad about the dead," she said. "I am here to honor the
    president as well as all those who died."

    Among those buried there are Jozef Pilsudski; Romantic-era poet Adam
    Mickiewicz; and Tadeusz Kosciuszko, a hero of the American Revolution
    and of Poland's 1794 uprising against Russia's occupation.

    AP Television News Producer Theodora Tongas and Associated Press
    Writer Marta Kucharska contributed to this report.
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