Bobby and Jackie; a modern American Greek tragedy

NEW YORK, (Reuters Life!) – The Kennedy family saga  was already the Greek tragedy of modern American history, but a  book alleging a love affair between Robert F. Kennedy and his  brother’s wife adds new pathos to the tale.

“Bobby and Jackie: A Love Story” by C. David Heymann, 64,  describes the romance between RFK and former first lady  Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy.

Heymann said it began in the months following the 1963  assassination in Dallas of U.S. President John F. Kennedy,  known as Jack, and concluded around the time RFK announced his  own run for the presidency in early 1968.

Robert Kennedy was the love of Jackie’s life, Heymann  said.
“Bobby and Jack were quite different,” he added in an  interview. “Jackie and Bobby had a much closer intellectual  liaison than Jackie and John.”

Heymann’s research for the book dates back to 1983. His  interviews focused on people close to the couple, including  Pierre Salinger, president Kennedy’s press secretary. His  search for documented evidence includes Secret Service and FBI  reports made available under the Freedom of Information Act.
The book is empathetic and recognizes that the American  power elite often play by different rules, particularly in the  decades before and after the World War Two when the press was  not as focused on the private life of the public politician.

“There was tenderness there,” said Heymann. “They were  bought together by the shared grief of losing the person they  were closest to.”

Explaining why the public is still enamored with the  Kennedy family more than 40 years after RFK was assassinated in  1968, Heymann said they were rich and attractive, and both  Kennedy brothers were assassinated at the height of their power  during a time when American society was in tumult.

“It’s an incredible story because so much happened,”  Heymann said. “One was at the pinnacle of American life, the  other was about to get there. Both were snuffed out. Both women  were there” when their husbands were killed.

Ethel Kennedy, RFK’s wife, was with him when he won the  California Democratic primary election and was by his side  after he was shot.

RFK had been devastated by the death of his brother in  Dallas,  Heymann said.
“I think in a way, (Ethel) realized Jackie could save her  husband,” Heymann said. “These are not ordinary people. They  are powerful and rich and lead different lives. In a sense they  saved each other.”
Both RFK and Jacqueline Kennedy were involved with others  while continuing their own affair, according to the book.  Jackie was linked with Aristotle Onassis, whom she married  after Robert Kennedy’s death.

Heymann said the Kennedy family had made no comment about  the book, his fourth based on the Kennedy family.

“They are immured to (their lives) being revealed  publicly,” he said. “From a public relations standpoint they  have nothing to gain. If they deny it, it only sheds more  publicity.”

Senator Ted Kennedy, the last brother, died recently,  taking what he may have known to the grave.
“He didn’t want to talk about it but said it may have taken  place,” Heymann said before Ted Kennedy’s death.

The tragedy for both RFK and Kennedy Onassis was that they  could never marry.
“It would have ended Bobby’s political career,” Heymann  said. “They were an ill-fated Romeo and Juliet.”