Lewis, 79, who endured beatings by white police and mobs during
the 1960s civil rights movement and won further respect as a
foremost black member of the U.S. Congress for more than three
decades, said he was "clear-eyed" about the severity of his
diagnosis.
"I have never faced a fight quite like the one I have now,"
Lewis said in a statement.
Lewis, an Alabama sharecropper's son first elected in 1986 as a
Democrat to the U.S. House of Representatives from Georgia, said
he would return to Washington in the coming days to begin
treatment.
"I may miss a few votes during this period, but with God’s grace
I will be back on the front lines soon," he said.
Lewis was a protégé of civil rights leader Martin Luther King
Jr. He led sit-ins to integrate all-white lunch counters, was
one of the original "Freedom Riders" who integrated buses, and
suffered a skull fracture in a beating by a nightstick-wielding
white state trooper during a 1965 march in Selma, Alabama, for
black voting rights.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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