Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 
  Business Directory Ad  

"Gentleman" Hughie laid to rest 14.07.10

by Linda McGrory

A FLAT cap and a bingo book - the most fitting offertory gifts for a quiet, country man who loved the outdoors and whose only other distraction in life was a game of bingo in the parish hall.
Mourners at yesterday's funeral mass for Hughie Friel, 66, who died in Sunday's horror crash in Inishowen, were told that the pensioner farmer was a "lovely, quiet, pleasant gentleman" and a great neighbour who would do anything for his friends.
Clonmany parish priest, Fr Fintan Diggin said Hughie would be "sorely missed by this community in particular, and generally in our parish".
"His life revolved around working the land, helping his neighbours...a great friend to so many and his only distraction was he loved the bingo."
St Michael's Church, Urris, was packed to overflowing as friends, neighbours and relatives of some of the other seven victims of the accident, joined chief mourners, siblings, Eddie, Paddy, Denis, Sally, Bridget and his nephew Tony, to bid farewell to the kindly pensioner.

Hughie Friel's reamains are carried to their final resting place in Urris, Clonmany.
Fr Diggin said Hughie would not have wanted hurt and bitterness to come out of his death. "I know that Hughie would not have wanted the circumstances surrounding his death to heap any more pain or suffering or grief on anybody," said Fr Diggin.
He said if Hughie were alive, he would have hoped everybody could forgive and understand.
"I am sure he would have used the phrase that has been used so much these days 'there but for the grace of God go I'."
Prayers were said at yesterday's 10am Requiem Mass for the families of the other victims and for the sole survivor of the accident, who Fr Diggin said was "fighting for his life in Letterkenny Hospital".
Mass was concelebrated by Clonmany-born priest, Fr Paul Farren and Urris-born priest, Fr Michael Canny who is spokesman for the Bishop of Derry, Seamus Hegarty.
A letter was also read out to the congregation from Bishop Hegarty who offered his prayers and support to the bereaved.
Fr Diggin said the mark of the Hughie the man, was that he was of "great generosity and a forgiving nature" He also praised the generous spirit of the Friel family who attended the wakes of the other victims.
"Members of Hughie's family found it in their hearts to go to the families to sympathise with them, to offer the hand of friendship and to pray for them."
"The family have in their own heartbreak and suffering been looking out for the other families affected."
The parish priest said fishing communities in Inishowen had, over the decades, suffered many 'lost at sea' tragedies but the profile had now changed to "lost on land", namely the catalogue of multiple car fatalities to hit the peninsula in recent years.
There were poignant scenes as the pensioner's coffin was wheeled out of the small church by his heartbroken siblings.
Mourners then followed his remains to their final resting place in the adjoining cemetery under a squall of heavy rain that hinted an early end to summer for the people of Inishowen.
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home