
Abbott was joined by six former Australian leaders, Papua New Guinea
Prime Minister Peter O’Neill, Hollywood star Cate Blanchett
and almost
2,000 other dignitaries and members of the public for the service at
Sydney’s Town Hall.

Many more watched the proceedings on a large screen in front of the
building, with the crowd cheering for past and present Labor leaders
while heckling others from the ruling Liberal Party, most notably
Abbott.
Four air force jets marked the occasion in a brief flyover above
Sydney’s central business district in the “missing man” formation.
- “The Whitlam touch is on us all. He touches us in our day-to-day lives, in the way we think about Australia, in the way we see the world,” said Graham Freudenberg, a close friend and former speech-writer for the Labor prime minister, who died last month aged 98.
- “He touches, still, the millions who share his vision for a more equal Australia, a more independent, inclusive, generous and tolerant Australia, a nation confident of its future in our region and the world.”
- Although Whitlam was in power for only three years — from 1972 to 1975 — before being controversially sacked, he launched sweeping reforms of the nation’s economic and cultural affairs.

“I was but three when he passed by but I shall be grateful ‘till the day I die,” Blanchett said.
“The effect on the geo-cultural, political map of Australia made by
Gough Whitlam is so vast that wherever you stick a pin in you get a
wealth of Gough’s legacy.”

Whitlam’s oldest son, Tony, a former politician and judge, said his
family was greatly touched by the outpouring of affection and respect
from the public.
On Monday, a message of condolence to Whitlam’s family from Pope
Francis was reportedly read out at a memorial mass in Rome, The Sydney
Morning Herald said. Whitlam established diplomatic relations with the
Vatican in 1973.
Source: AFP
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