Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, The Untold Story.
As we approach the 51st anniversary month of the
assassination of John Kennedy, a new biography of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis by Barbara Leaming is released.
The subtitle, The Untold Story, is
appropriate as it reveals intimate details, conversations, and correspondence
which I think the American public has not been privy to earlier. As a devoted fan of Jackie’s like so
many of us young women were in the 60’s, I continued to admire her through the
years and thought I had read everything written about her. Yet in this biography I felt I was
getting to know the real person, not the public figure. I think Ms. Leaming has captured Jackie’s
thought processes and motivations for many of her actions following the assassination.
Although not always presented in a flattering light, by the end of the book, I
found myself admiring her even more, yet with a deep sorrow for what she
endured throughout her life that the public was probably not aware of.
It was often difficult reading to discover that the lady we
credit with holding the grieving nation together as the “staunch warrior” at
President Kennedy’s funeral suffered greatly for most of her life with what we
now identify as PSTD. Although the terms shell
shock and combat fatigue
described soldiers’ from previous wars, it wasn’t until the 80’s and Vietnam
that the severity of PSTD was recognized. The description of the assassination
was the most graphic I have ever read and perhaps that was intentional so we
could understand the full extent of the trauma Jackie experienced that day.
Today advanced PSTD recognizes the terrifying inability to
control the responses of body and mind to an ever-expanding network of triggers
which traumatizes the sufferer anew. In the days following the funeral she
would relate relentlessly the graphic events of Nov. 22,1963, to anyone who
would listen as she re-lived the scene repeatedly in her mind. Although she was unable to cry at the
funeral, eighteen months later she would cry uncontrollably, not able to stop. Sadly, she did not seek counseling for
many years until after the death of Robert Kennedy in June,1968. She flew to his bedside where he died,
twenty-six hours after he was shot. The body returning to Andrews Air Force
Base, of course, triggered similar sadness and memories of 1963.
Then came Jackie’s fall from grace with the American public
when she shocked the nation by marrying Aristotle Onassis in October,
1968. She went, as the author
says, from being idealized to being stigmatized. The headlines read “Jackie,
Why?” “Jackie How Could You?” “America Has Lost a Saint”. I can personally recall my moment of disillusionment
and revulsion to the news, much the same as we remember where we were when
Kennedy was shot or when the Twin Towers fell. However, as I entered her thought process of fleeing the states, seeking safety for
herself and her children following Robert Kennedy’s death, I sympathized once
again. When a close friend, Bunny Mellon, asked her point blank, “Why are you
doing this?” Jackie answered, “I have no choice. They’re (assassins) playing
Ten Little Indians and I don’t want to be next.”
Although she sought refuge in a foreign country, the
marriage encountered problems. When Onassis’ son died in a plane crash shortly
after the marriage, his daughter Christina blamed Jackie, saying she had
brought the Kennedy curse to their family. Because Jackie was not in Greece when Onassis died and
photographers caught her with a rare smile on her face in the airport on the
way to the funeral, she was once again depicted as a heartless woman who had
married a “blank check”.
The years remaining tell of her trying to re-invent her life
in New York by working at Viking Press in 1975 and later Doubleday where she
strove to earn the respect of her colleagues by working diligently, to be
accepted as a regular person with no special favors. “There had been a time when it had fallen to her to
show America that she was the good ordinary wife, ever doting on and deferring
to JFK. Now she encountered the rather difficult task of proving herself an
independent working woman. As Onassis’ wife she had known great wealth. As his
widow she waited in line at the office copy machines, made her own coffee, did
much of her own typing.”
This biography is as much about world events as it is about
Jackie. I think it is a must read for students of history and politics of the years
1960 until her death in 1994.
There is correspondence and conversations with prominent world leaders,
especially during the tumultuous sixties and insight into the people who fought
for Jackie’s alliance as they pursued her for their own political ambitions.
They believed as Jackie went, so would go the nation. A thirty-page bibliography lends
much credibility to Ms. Lemmings work.
Jackie’s comments in October, 1980, perhaps best describes
how she perceived the arc of her life.
At a dinner party, the British poet, Stephen Spender, who had not seen
her since before JFK became president, asked her what she considered her
greatest achievement. “Notably it
was not her fabled tenure as first Lady, nor the conquest of Paris, or the
myriad other triumphs of the White House years, nor her demeanor at President
Kennedy’s funeral and what it had meant to so many Americans, that Jackie
replied without hesitation, ‘I think it is that after going through a rather
difficult time, I consider myself comparatively sane. I am proud of that.’”
I think I will always be proud of Jacqueline Kennedy, even
more so as this biography reveals her strengths, her weaknesses, her
humanness. I wish she had lived
longer once she had found a way to be rid of her demons, yet perhaps fate was
kind in ending her life before she had to witness the tragic loss of her
son. A remarkable biography of a
remarkable lady.
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