Recorded live from Mediacorp ChannelNewsAsia (
CNA)
Channel from 1200hrs
SGT to 1400hrs SGT on 29 Mar
2015. 2015
Mediacorp TV Singapore Pte
Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
You can watch "2015 -
LKY's
Final Journey Part 2:
Funeral Service Proceedings @
NUS UCC - 29/3/15" @ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s8G94TQczk&feature;=youtu.be
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(
SINGAPORE, 29 Mar 2015) - More than
100,
000 people lined the streets along the state funeral procession route on Sunday to bid farewell to the late
Mr Lee Kuan Yew, according the
State Funeral Organising Committee.
At the Funeral Service held at UCC, about 2,
200 guests, including members of the late Mr Lee's family, the
President of Singapore,
Cabinet Ministers, the
Judiciary,
Members of Parliament, foreign leaders, and invited
Singaporeans from all walks of life attended the State Funeral Service.
Mr Lee Kuan Yew's family then bid farewell to him in an emotional ceremony at the
Mandai Crematorium.
The casket arrived at 6.
10 pm and was borne aloft to
Hall 1.
Daughter Lee Wei Ling placed the memorial portrait in front of the casket.
The national flag draping the coffin was then lifted and folded by uniformed officers, in a drill common in state funerals. The flag was then handed to his eldest son
Lee Hsien Loong, who is the
Prime Minister.
The coffin cover was lifted, in a symbolic move marking the mourning of Mr Lee the public figure, to Mr Lee, the family man.
As his body lay in the open casket, family members took turns to share memories of their father and grandfather.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, the elder son, said: "
We are gathered here to say our final farewells to
Papa - Mr Lee Kuan Yew. After the formalities of the
Lying in State and the State Funeral Service, in this final hour Papa is with his family, his friends of a lifetime, his immediate staff who served him loyally and well, his security team who kept him safe and sound, and his medical team who took such good care of him.
"So much has been said about Pa's public life in the past few days. His public life is something we share with all of Singapore, with the world. But we were privileged to know him as a father, a grandfather, an elder brother, a friend, a strict but compassionate boss, the head of the family."
PM Lee recalled how Mr Lee taught him to ride a bike. "
Once when I was just getting the hang of balancing on two wheels, he pushed me off. I pedalled off across the field, thinking that he was still supporting and pushing me. Then I looked back and found that actually he had let go, and I was cycling on my own, launched, and he had let go! He was so pleased, and so was I."
Daughter Dr Lee, who wore a black dress, spoke lovingly of the father she is said to resemble most, among her siblings, recalling his stubborn insistence
on not using a lift installed for him so he would not need to climb up and down the steps from the verandah at home to the car porch. She had inherited his "pugnacious" trait, she added good-humouredly.
She thanked his staff, especially the
Security Officers who spent so much time with him. She recalled the time three of them had to interlock arms to perform the
Heimlich manoeuvre when he nearly choked on a piece of meat. That bought him a few more months of quality life, she said.
Dr Lee, who has shunned the public spotlight in her private grief, said the last week had not been easy. Mr Lee died on Monday, aged 91.
When she saw this morning that the maid had moved Mr Lee's chair away from the dining table and placed it against the wall, she nearly broke down, she said. "But I can't break down, I am a
Hakka woman."
Instead, she sat composed, and sometimes bowed her head to hide her emotions as other family members spoke.
Younger son Hsien
Yang said: "Papa, thank you for being my own special father.
Always there to guide, counsel and advise, every step of the way, but also prepared to step back and let me find my own wings and make my own way."
Li Hongyi, the elder son of PM Lee and wife
Ho Ching, told of the one and only present his grandfather - whom he called Ye Ye - had given him: a camera.
Hongyi said he went on to take many photographs and had a book printed. "When Ye Ye gave me that camera years ago, he wrote me a note. It was a simple note without any flowery language or cheap sentiment. He simply told me that he hoped I made good use of it. I hope I have."
You can read the rest of the article @
http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/mr-lee-kuan-yews-funeral-public-mourning-private-family-
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- published: 30 Mar 2015
- views: 23312