Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk's widow, participates in a Medal of Freedom Ceremony for late US right-wing activist Charlie Kirk in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC, on Oct. 14, 2025. Kirk was shot dead on a Utah college campus on Sept. 10, 2025, sparking a wave of grief among conservatives, and threats of a clampdown on the "radical left" from President Donald Trump. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)
"Our founders etched it into the preamble of our Constitution, and those words are not relics on parchment. They are a living covenant. The blessings of liberty are not man’s invention. They are God’s endowment."
She recalled how Charlie wrote about freedom often. "He believed that liberty was both a right and a responsibility. And he used to say that freedom is the ability to do what is right without fear. And that’s how he lived," Erika said.
"His name, Charles, literally means ‘free man.’ And that’s exactly who my husband was," she continued. "From the time I met him, sitting across from him being interviewed about politics, philosophy and theology, I saw the fire in his soul. There was this divine restlessness within him that came from knowing God placed him on this earth to protect something very sacred. He never stopped fighting for people to experience freedom."
CHARLIE KIRK'S CLOSE FRIEND PRAISES ERIKA KIRK'S 'RESILIENCE' AHEAD OF EMOTIONAL WHITE HOUSE CEREMONY
U.S. President Donald Trump posthumously awards the Presidential Medal of Freedom to late conservative activist Charlie Kirk as he presents the Medal to his wife Erika Kirk (L) during a ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House on Oct. 14, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Turning to his final moments, Erika shared: "It was written across his chest in those final moments on one of his simple T-shirts that always carried a message — this one bearing a single word: freedom. That was the banner over his life."
She said her husband never told anyone what to say but always encouraged them "to think outside of traditional political labels, anchored in wisdom and truth."
"Charlie wasn’t content to simply admire freedom. He wanted to multiply it," Erika said. "He wanted young people to taste it, understand it and defend it. He wanted them to see that liberty isn’t selfish indulgence — it’s self-governance under God."
Every day, she recalled, he lived with fearless conviction. "He didn’t fear being slandered. He didn’t fear losing friends. He stood for truth and stood for freedom. Everything else was just noise to him. And it’s because his confidence in Christ was absolute."
Erika said Charlie lived "only 31 short years on this side of heaven," but filled every day with purpose. "He fought for truth when it was unpopular. He stood for God when it was costly. He prayed for his enemies. He loved people when it was inconvenient. He ran his race with endurance, and he kept the faith. And now he wears the crown of a righteous martyr."
She told the audience, "Heaven gained what earth could no longer contain — a free man made fully free. To all watching, this is not a ceremony. This is a commissioning. I want you to be the embodiment of this medal. I want you to free yourself from fear. I want you to stand courageously in the truth. And remember that while freedom is inherited in this country, each of us must be intentional stewards of it."
Before closing, Erika shared her daughter Gigi's birthday message: "Happy birthday, daddy. I want to give you a stuffed animal. I want you to eat a cupcake with ice cream. And I want you to go have a birthday surprise. I love you."
Her young son also gave his own gift, "deciding to become the man of the house and be fully potty-trained at 16 months."
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"I know that you’re celebrating in heaven today, but gosh, I miss you," she said through tears. "We miss you and we love you. And we promise we’ll make you proud. Charlie’s life was proof that freedom is not a theory. It’s a testimony. He showed us that liberty begins not in the halls of power, but in the heart of a man surrendered to God."
She ended with a final tribute: "To live free is the greatest gift, but to die free is the greatest victory. Happy birthday, Charlie. Happy freedom day."
Jasmine Baehr is a Breaking News Writer for Fox News Digital, where she covers politics, the military, faith and culture.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/erika-kirk-honors-late-husband-charlie-emotional-white-house-tribute-a-free-man-made-fully-free