Death
Hands-on and humble: Former President Carter dies
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As president, he often cut a hapless figure. It is the period after his presidency that shaped his legacy – and earned him respect worldwide.
He was down-to-earth, close to his homeland and modest. Jimmy Carter grew up on a farm in the southern US state of Georgia – without electricity or running water. This experience shaped him throughout his life. He learned to grab hold of it. Even in his old age, he helped wherever it was needed. He once became dehydrated in the summer heat while building houses for poor families in Canada and was hospitalized. The very next day he was back on the construction site. Carter was tireless.
“Exciting, adventurous and satisfying life”
The former US President dealt with his cancer diagnosis in 2015 in a very similar way. “I’ve had an exciting, adventurous and satisfying life,” he said – and seemed completely at peace with himself. The former peanut farmer from the town of Plains never made a big fuss about himself. And so it was especially the period after his presidency that earned him respect and recognition – unlike the sometimes unhappy years in the White House. Carter died on Sunday at the age of 100, surrounded by his family.
Carter outlived his wife Rosalynn by a year. She died in mid-November 2023 at the age of 96 – her health had previously deteriorated rapidly and she suffered from dementia, among other things. The Carters were married for 77 years. After the former first lady’s death, Jimmy Carter said through his foundation: “As long as Rosalynn was in the world, I always knew that someone loved and supported me.” She was also considered his political companion. Deeply marked by illness, half lying in a wheelchair, covered with a blanket, the 99-year-old paid his last respects to his wife at the funeral service in Atlanta.
Humiliations and triumphs
Hardly any other US president has had to endure such humiliations and defeats during his presidency as this man – from the Tehran hostage crisis to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Even triumphs like the Camp David peace agreement between Egypt and Israel paled in comparison.
He later made a name for himself as a mediator in crises and with humanitarian aid. He managed a kind of fresh start after his time in the White House. In 1982, he and his wife Rosalynn founded the Carter Center in Atlanta to promote democracy, human rights and economic development – especially in poorer countries. Carter became involved as a mediator in peace efforts. In 2002 he received the Nobel Peace Prize for this.
Mother’s values were formative
Carter came into politics – and ultimately to Washington – as an outsider. The ex-president came from a humble background in the south of the country – a region characterized by the separation of people based on skin color. On his parents’ farm he had a lot to do with black people, but his father saw people with white skin as superior. His mother Lilian, however, a nurse, was a completely different type of person and treated black people with respect. It was these values of his mother that also shaped Carter’s character – even if he initially did not publicly criticize the racist system of separation between blacks and whites. It was only later in his career that he took a stand against discrimination.
In the 1950s, he operated his parents’ peanut farm in Plains. Eventually the Democrat began to get involved in politics, initially at the local level. In 1971 he was elected governor of Georgia – in 1976 he ran for the White House against the Republican incumbent Gerald Ford. “Jimmy who?”, many people asked themselves. Carter was given little chance. But after the Watergate scandal that ultimately drove Richard Nixon from office, people in the country wanted change. Carter relied on this during the election campaign – and was successful.
Coup after secret negotiations in Camp David
The trained peanut farmer and nuclear engineer was seen as a morally clean newcomer who would finally overcome the Nixon era. He had some success during his time in the White House. In September 1978, Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin signed two peace framework agreements – a sensational coup that Carter had engineered in secret negotiations at Camp David. Another step was the SALT II strategic arms limitation treaty, which Carter and Soviet party leader Leonid Brezhnev signed in Vienna in June 1979.
But during his time as US President from 1977 to 1981, Carter was often unlucky. His presidency was characterized above all by high consumer prices and the “disgrace of Tehran,” which ultimately cost him re-election. At that time, Iranian students took dozens of Americans hostage in a raid on the US embassy. The drama dragged on for 444 agonizingly long days, and the hostage takers paraded their prisoners blindfolded in front of the TV cameras. Carter’s popularity ratings plummeted.
In April 1980, Carter finally sent his elite soldiers to end the hostage crisis after more than five months. But the campaign ended in a debacle. Eight soldiers were killed when a US helicopter crashed into a transport plane; the elite unit did not even reach Tehran and had to turn back. This sealed his defeat in the 1980 presidential election – Republican Ronald Reagan replaced Carter in the White House. This was completely duped when the hostages were released on the day of Reagan’s inauguration. It was a calculated humiliation.
A new time began for Carter, which he dedicated entirely to his commitment to the good cause. “Certainly my reputation has improved in the years following the presidency,” Carter said with a smile in a 2006 TV interview. And he always joked that he probably wouldn’t have founded the Carter Center if he had been re-elected. The political magazine “The Nation” wrote shortly before Carter’s death: “Jimmy Carter is our greatest former president.”
He always remained loyal to his hometown of Plains. He was drawn back from the capital Washington to the small town with a few hundred inhabitants. But even apart from his humanitarian work, Carter was not bored: in his free time he painted oil paintings, wrote books, worked in his workshop and appreciated good wine.
Voted for Harris in November
And politically, he didn’t mince his words either. Carter said in 2019 that then-President Donald Trump was only in office because of Russia’s alleged interference in the 2016 election. Trump repeatedly criticized Carter. The Democratic US President Joe Biden, however, was asked by Carter to give the eulogy. Carter already knew that he didn’t have long to live.
In February 2023 he wished to only receive palliative treatment. He wants to spend the time he has left at home, with his family. At the beginning of October this year, Carter turned 100 years old. In the US election in November, Carter cast his vote by mail for Democrat Kamala Harris. “My father was a hero – not just to me, but to everyone who believes in peace, human rights and selfless love,” the foundation quoted Carter’s son Chip as saying in the announcement of his death.
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Source: Stern

I have been working in the news industry for over 6 years, first as a reporter and now as an editor. I have covered politics extensively, and my work has appeared in major newspapers and online news outlets around the world. In addition to my writing, I also contribute regularly to 24 Hours World.