Welcome, Guest! - or
Easy to remember!  »  VinNews.com

New York - Legendary NYC's Mayor Koch Funeral Set For Monday

Published on: February 2, 2013 08:51 PM
By: AP
Change text size Text Size  
Bookmark and Share
SEPTEMBER 20:  Daily News front page dated Sept. 20, 1977, Headline: IT'S KOCH BY LANDSLIDE, Cuomo Beaten by 75,000; Bellamy Swamps O'Dwyer, Bess Myerson at hs side, Ed Koch makes victory statement. At extreme right is Herman Bedillo.  (Photo by NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)SEPTEMBER 20:  Daily News front page dated Sept. 20, 1977, Headline: IT'S KOCH BY LANDSLIDE, Cuomo Beaten by 75,000; Bellamy Swamps O'Dwyer, Bess Myerson at hs side, Ed Koch makes victory statement. At extreme right is Herman Bedillo.  (Photo by NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)

New York - In 1977, New York City was deep into its worst fiscal crisis ever. Riots erupted that summer during a blackout. And a fire in one of the most blighted, bombed-out parts of town that fall led Howard Cosell to announce during a World Series game at Yankee Stadium: “Ladies and gentlemen, the Bronx is burning.”

Into that mess stepped Ed Koch as the city’s newly elected mayor. Within a few years, New York was back on firmer financial footing and the fears that the city was sliding into anarchy had given way to a new sense of energy and optimism.

Koch didn’t do it all by himself, but is credited with hectoring, cajoling and noodging the city to make the hard decisions on its road back.

“The whole city was crumbling, and then we elected Ed Koch,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Friday during a ceremony marking the centennial of Grand Central Terminal, a once-crumbling edifice Koch helped save from the wrecking ball.

“When we were down, Ed Koch picked us up. When we were worried, he gave us confidence,” Bloomberg said. “When someone needed a good kick in the rear, he gave it to them — and, if you remember, he enjoyed it.”

Below video by the Wall Street Journal timeline of Ed Koch A Giant of New York City Politics

The brash, opinionated Koch, who led the city in the late 1970s and ‘80s with a combination of determination, chutzpah and humor, died Friday of congestive heart failure at age 88.

A funeral was set for Monday in Manhattan as tributes poured in from presidents, political allies and adversaries, some of whom were no doubt thinking more of his earlier years in City Hall, before many black leaders and liberals became fed up with what they felt were racially insensitive and needlessly combative remarks.

The Rev. Al Sharpton said that although they disagreed on many things, Koch “was never a phony or a hypocrite. ... He said what he meant. He meant what he said. He fought for what he believed.”

President Barack Obama said in a statement that Koch’s energy, force of personality and sense of commitment “always informed and enlivened the public discourse.” Former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton praised him as a leader who “stood up for the underprivileged and underrepresented in every corner of every borough.”

During Koch’s three terms from 1978 to 1989, he helped New York climb out of its financial crisis through tough fiscal policies and razor-sharp budget cuts.

To much of the rest of America, the bald, paunchy figure became the embodiment of New York City’s brash, irrepressible character — the mayor who raced around town asking average New Yorkers, “How’m I doing,” and usually being in too much of a hurry to wait for an answer.

Quick with a quip or a putdown, Koch dismissed his critics as “wackos,” feuded with Donald Trump (“piggy”) and fellow former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (“nasty man”). He lambasted the Rev. Jesse Jackson and once reduced the head of the City Council to tears.

“You punch me, I punch back,” Koch once observed. “I do not believe it’s good for one’s self-respect to be a punching bag.” Or as he put it in his best-selling autobiography “Mayor”: “I’m not the type to get ulcers. I give them.”

Koch’s favorite moment as mayor, fittingly, was a loud one. During a 1980 transit strike, he strode down to the Brooklyn Bridge to boost the spirits of commuters who had to walk to work.

“I began to yell, ‘Walk over the bridge! Walk over the bridge! We’re not going to let these bastards bring us to our knees!’ And people began to applaud,” he recalled last year.

But New Yorkers eventually tired of Koch. Homelessness and AIDS soared in the 1980s, and critics charged that City Hall’s response was too little, too late. Koch’s latter years in office were also marked by scandals involving those around him and rising racial tension.

In 1989, he lost a bid for a fourth term to David Dinkins, who became the city’s first black mayor.

A lifelong bachelor who lived in Greenwich Village, Koch championed gay rights, taking on the Roman Catholic Church and scores of political leaders. His own sexual orientation was the subject of speculation and rumors. During his 1977 mayoral campaign against Mario Cuomo, posters that read “Vote for Cuomo, Not the Homo” mysteriously appeared in some neighborhoods.

Koch offered a typically blunt response to inquiries about his sexuality: “My answer to questions on this subject is simply, ‘F—- off.’ There have to be some private matters left.”

Describing himself as “a liberal with sanity,” Koch supported President George W. Bush for re-election in 2004 and spoke at the GOP convention. He also endorsed Bloomberg’s re-election at a time when Bloomberg was a Republican.

Proudly Jewish, Koch was an outspoken supporter of Israel.

After leaving office, he worked as a lawyer and continued to offer his opinions as a political pundit, movie reviewer, food critic and judge on “The People’s Court.” He wrote 10 nonfiction books, four mystery novels and three children’s books, played himself in the movies “The Muppets Take Manhattan” and “The First Wives Club” and hosted “Saturday Night Live.”

Edward Irving Koch was born in the Bronx on Dec. 12, 1924, the second of three children of Polish immigrants. During the Depression, the family lived in Newark, N.J.

After serving as a combat infantryman in Europe during World War II, he got a law degree and began his political career in Greenwich Village by winning a district leader race as a liberal Democratic reformer. Koch was elected to the City Council and then to Congress, serving from 1969 to 1977.

With New York in dire financial condition in 1977, Koch defeated Mayor Abe Beame and Cuomo in the Democratic primary to win his first term in City Hall. He breezed to re-election in 1981 and 1985, winning an unprecedented three-quarters of the votes cast.

In 1982, he made a run for governor against Cuomo, then the state’s lieutenant governor. But Koch’s bid blew up after he mouthed off about a possible move to Albany, saying that living in the suburbs was “wasting your life.”

Koch’s third term was beset by corruption scandals, one of which ended in the suicide of a top party boss in 1986.

Meanwhile, racial unease ran high after the deaths of two young black men who were set upon by gangs of whites in 1986 and 1989, and the mayor fell out with many black voters for purging anti-poverty programs and saying, among other things, that busing and racial quotas had done more to divide the races than to achieve integration. He also said Jews would be “crazy” to vote for Jackson during the civil rights leader’s 1988 presidential campaign.

Koch attributed his defeat to longevity, not racial tensions. But he also said his biggest regret as he left office was that “many people in the black community do not perceive that I was their friend.”

On Friday, Jackson said in a statement that Koch’s “leadership and legacy will never be forgotten.”

At 83, Koch paid $20,000 for a burial plot at Trinity Church Cemetery, at the time the only graveyard in Manhattan that still had space. “I don’t want to leave Manhattan, even when I’m gone,” he explained.

The funeral will be Monday at Temple Emanu-El in Manhattan. Dignitaries including Bloomberg and Ido Aharoni, the Israeli consul general in New York, will be among the speakers, said a person familiar with the arrangements, speaking on condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to discuss them.


More of today's headlines

Cairo - Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will visit Cairo next week, becoming the first Iranian president to travel to Egypt since Iran's 1979 revolution ruptured diplomatic ties... Jerusalem - Israeli President Shimon Peres on Saturday formally asked incumbent Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to form a new governing coalition following the...

 

Total20

Read Comments (20)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Feb 02, 2013 at 11:11 PM yochy Says:

BD'E It is important that Misaskim get involved quickly do that he doesn't end up in the above cemetery.

2

 Feb 03, 2013 at 12:04 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #1  
yochy Says:

BD'E It is important that Misaskim get involved quickly do that he doesn't end up in the above cemetery.

There is NOTHING that anyone can do to prevent Koch's burial in a church yard. Nebech!

3

 Feb 03, 2013 at 12:16 AM Anonymous Says:

which chevra kadisha is going to bury him at the church cemetery? proves who he really was!

4

 Feb 03, 2013 at 12:54 AM Not_just_that___ Says:

Reply to #1  
yochy Says:

BD'E It is important that Misaskim get involved quickly do that he doesn't end up in the above cemetery.

You're out of your mind, the deal's done and there's nobody to talk to.

5

 Feb 03, 2013 at 01:11 AM Brooklynhocker Says:

Reply to #1  
yochy Says:

BD'E It is important that Misaskim get involved quickly do that he doesn't end up in the above cemetery.

Misaskim??? The guy paid $20,000 for the plot. Misaskim won't be able to get within 10 feet of the body.

6

 Feb 03, 2013 at 02:51 AM Yawvous Says:

Ed Koch was once present at a sent Patricks day parade taking in the festivities,while being asked by a reporter-"Mr Koch! What are you doing here? Aren't you Jewish?" His reply? "Well, there is rumor that some of the 10 lost tribes ended up in Ireland..."

7

 Feb 03, 2013 at 02:59 AM Smokey Says:

Reply to #2  
Anonymous Says:

There is NOTHING that anyone can do to prevent Koch's burial in a church yard. Nebech!

Koch will not be buried in Trinity Churchyard, located at 74 Trinity Place, but he will be buried at Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum located at Broadway and
W. 155th Street Trinity Church is the landlord at the uptown cemetery, but there is no church located there. It is a non-denominational cemetery. The gravestone, completed in 2008, has the shma inscribed in both English and Hebrew, and it contains a quotation from the late Daniel Pearl, who was killed by terrorists in Pakistan in 2002. It reads:: "My father is Jewish, my mother is Jewish, I'm Jewish.".

8

 Feb 03, 2013 at 03:57 AM Norden Says:

Reply to #5  
Brooklynhocker Says:

Misaskim??? The guy paid $20,000 for the plot. Misaskim won't be able to get within 10 feet of the body.

Misaskim => Modern day body snatchers?? Somehow I think not.

9

 Feb 03, 2013 at 04:00 AM ALLAN Says:

Ed Koch never down played his Jewish heritage or identity. To make arrangements to be buried in a Church cemetery spits in the face of his Jewish heritage...he should have known better.

10

 Feb 03, 2013 at 04:43 AM Huh? Says:

If I remember correctly, he purchased the plot and they agreed to have it fenced off with a separate entrance to make a mini jewish cemetary. Not perfect, but not my business.

11

 Feb 03, 2013 at 04:54 AM Anonymous Says:

He reportedly asked the question and there will be a border around his plots and no one will be able to be buried within the area other than him..He did ask a Rav..it is a shame the article didnt address that.

12

 Feb 03, 2013 at 07:52 AM Yossel Says:

1. It's a non denominational cemetary. It's not adjacent to the church.
2. His plot has a separate gate marked as the Jewish Cemetery
3. There is an iron railing around his plot that separates it from the rest of the cemetery.
4. He consulted with Rabbis to create this little Jewish cemetery within the larger cemetery

He did more for our people than any of you probably ever will.

13

 Feb 03, 2013 at 08:21 AM Yossel Says:

Here's a quote from a 2008 article about his burial plans:
"Mr. Koch chose a plot on what he described as a “small mountain” overlooking Amsterdam Avenue, and he researched the propriety of being buried in a non-Jewish cemetery.
“I called a number of rabbis to see if this was doable,” he said. “I was going to do it anyway, but it would be nice if it were doable traditionally.” He said he had been advised to request that the gate nearest his plot be inscribed as “the gate for the Jews,” and the cemetery agreed. He was also instructed to have rails installed around his plot, so he ordered them."

He did more for our people then ANY of you every did! Shame on you!

14

 Feb 03, 2013 at 09:36 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #1  
yochy Says:

BD'E It is important that Misaskim get involved quickly do that he doesn't end up in the above cemetery.

He checked with a rov and got a heter to do this. why don't you people learn before you talk narishkeit?

15

 Feb 03, 2013 at 12:03 PM Anonymous Says:

Fence, shmence, there are dozens of Jewish cemetaries he could have chosen. Es POSTNISHT!

16

 Feb 03, 2013 at 12:09 PM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #14  
Anonymous Says:

He checked with a rov and got a heter to do this. why don't you people learn before you talk narishkeit?

WHICH rov would give his ok to do something like this, you have a name?

17

 Feb 03, 2013 at 10:44 PM Anonymous Says:

The sad thing is that the poor soul has to wait 3 days before being buried.

19

 Feb 04, 2013 at 02:01 AM naisgal Says:

Reply to #11  
Anonymous Says:

He reportedly asked the question and there will be a border around his plots and no one will be able to be buried within the area other than him..He did ask a Rav..it is a shame the article didnt address that.

I am surprised he could not purchase some land and make it into a Jewish cemetary, or that the Rav could not dissuade him. he was very close to Cardinals or Bishops in NY, however, so maybe he feels comfortable buried near them.

20

 Feb 04, 2013 at 02:07 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #9  
ALLAN Says:

Ed Koch never down played his Jewish heritage or identity. To make arrangements to be buried in a Church cemetery spits in the face of his Jewish heritage...he should have known better.

The original articles made it seem it was in a churchyard which it is not, just owned by the church but located elsewhere. Not sure if he was or was not gay or is any halachas apply regarding that and burial in Orthodox cemetary. Sorry to raise that question but civil law and relgious law are different. Maybe he factored in that there could be objections where he would be buried if he chose Orthodox. Asking anyone know?
He did not deny his Jewishness and was proud of it. He was a well liked mayor and highly capable. let's not nitpick on him in death. It is on the Rov who gave consent although he would have done so without it. A fence and etc, is making it a Jewish makom.

21

 Feb 04, 2013 at 02:08 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #15  
Anonymous Says:

Fence, shmence, there are dozens of Jewish cemetaries he could have chosen. Es POSTNISHT!

He had no wife or kids so the frinds he made were his family, and included Catholic clergy.He has some siblings and it is for them not us to decide.

22

Sign-in to post a comment

Scroll Up
Advertisements:

Sell your scrap gold and broken jewelry and earn hard cash sell gold today!