Former President Jimmy Carter joined Vice President Joe Biden and nearly 1,400 other mourners Saturday at the funeral for Joan Mondale, whose life and spirit were best captured, Carter said, in the phrase, "Live your life as if it was a work of art.''
Mondale, who died Monday at age 83, was remembered as a tenacious, driven woman who was a wife, mother, artist and activist over the course of her marriage to former Vice President Walter "Fritz'' Mondale.
Carter said he and his wife, Rosalynn, shared an "intimate and constantly gratifying life as friends" with the Mondales that began the day they met in 1976 at his home in Plains, Ga., when he was considering vice presidential candidates.
"We fell in love with Joan and decided that both of them would have to come together," Carter said to great laughter from those gathered at Westminster Presbyterian Church on Nicollet Mall in Minneapolis.
Carter, Biden, Joan Mondale's sister, friends and aides all spoke warmly of Mondale's talents while interspersing saucy anecdotes about her "core of irreverence." Many of the jokes poked fun at her husband of 58 years, who along with her sons and family members was at her side when she died at Mount Olivet Careview Home in Minneapolis, where she received hospice care in her final days.
Biden spoke lovingly of the Mondales embracing and guiding him in 1972 when he was a newly elected senator from Delaware who had lost his wife and daughter in a car crash.
More recently, Biden said, he met with a high-level official from Japan, where Walter Mondale served as ambassador during the 1990s. " 'We miss Joan Mondale,' " Biden said the official told him. "They didn't miss you, Fritz," Biden added, getting a roar from the crowd and Mondale himself.
Biden also spoke of Joan Mondale's passions, including her belief in seeing women win equal rights. "She pushed as hard for equal pay for women even when no one else but you was talking about it, Fritz," Biden said.