logo
'A true ambassador of hope': Funeral takes place of Emmanuel Familola who died in Donegal tragedy

'A true ambassador of hope': Funeral takes place of Emmanuel Familola who died in Donegal tragedy

Irish Post18-05-2025

ONE of the two teenagers who died after getting into difficulty in the sea in Co. Donegal last week has been described as 'a true ambassador of hope'.
Emmanuel Familola, 16, died in the tragedy in Buncrana last week, as did his friend Matt Sibanda, 18.
Emmanuel's funeral was held yesterday at St Mary's Oratory in the town, where a vigil was held for the two teenagers last Sunday.
Parish Priest Fr Francis Bradley said Emmanuel 'had a serene magnetism to him which crossed social, ethnic and cultural boundaries, for his warmth and charisma spoke every language, touched every heart'.
Fr Bradley was joined on the altar by Fr Cajetan Apeh, a Nigerian priest based in Derry.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin was represented at the funeral by aide de camp Commandant Joe Glennon.
Also in attendance was Kate Gillen, Principal Officer for IPAS, representing Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Simon Harris.
Meanwhile, Emmanuel's school friends from Scoil Mhuire Buncrana were joined by their principal, Evelyn McLoughlin. 'In Emmanuel, they found shelter'
In front of Emmanuel's mother, Glory, and his brothers, Daniel and John, Fr Bradley said the teenager always put others before himself and was a protective force for those around him.
"It was he who looked out for other's needs, was endlessly patient and kind and so, so respectful — such an attractive personality given the plethora of gifts and talents he possessed and every one of them carried with gentle ease and good humour," he said.
"Perhaps without even being aware of it, he sought out vulnerable kids in school — or more precisely, they sought him out, drawn to his fun-loving heart, his warm smile, his sharp wit and his great, great charisma.
"In Emmanuel, they found the shelter they needed amid the storms of life and living. He will be sorely missed by so very many of his friends and contemporaries.
"He was a credit to his mother, his brothers, his family and his country. 'Devotion of heart'
"A true ambassador of hope, a witness to how we should never let the harsh experiences of life define us but rather we must always allow them to deepen or resolve and refocus our vision on being the person God himself has called each of us to be.
"Emmanuel distinguished himself by his devotion of heart, by his courtesy, calmness and sense of gratitude for anything and everything he was given."
During the service, gifts were brought to the altar to remember Emmanuel's life.
These included a collage of photos from his recent work experience with the Department of Foreign Affairs in Dublin, as well as a certificate to mark his time there, which he was due to receive earlier this week.
Also brought to the altar was a Manchester City shirt, representing his love of the club and the sport, as well as his Bible to reflect his deep faith.
Following the funeral, Emmanuel was laid to rest at the adjoining Cockhill Cemetery.
Matt's funeral is due to take place next week.
See More: Buncrana, Emmanuel Familola

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Phrase that Passeth Understanding – Frank McNally on a rude biblical euphemism
A Phrase that Passeth Understanding – Frank McNally on a rude biblical euphemism

Irish Times

time2 days ago

  • Irish Times

A Phrase that Passeth Understanding – Frank McNally on a rude biblical euphemism

When asking readers for the name or other examples of the rhetorical device used in such phrases 'a bigger bollocks never put his arm through a coat' (Diary, yesterday), I thought Shakespeare might feature in responses. I wasn't quite expecting the Bible. But there it is anyway, thanks to Charlie Goldsmith, who emails from Lusaka to draw my attention to the First Book of Samuel, verse 25:22. In the King James version, at least, that has a similar case of what Charlie calls 'aggression through circumlocution'. The context is a future King David vowing to kill all his enemies and invoking divine vengeance against any who escape him. Or as he puts it: 'So and more also do God unto the enemies of David, if I leave of all that pertain to him by the morning light any that pisseth against the wall'. READ MORE I don't recall ever hearing the last verb there mentioned at Mass. But as I now know, the phrase '[any] that pisseth against the wall' occurs repeatedly in the King James Bible. And always, it just means 'men and boys'. Walls are not the point, per se - it's more to do with the angle of urination practised by those being targeted: ie, they're not women. Even so, it reminded me of the 2016 European Football Championships, when thousands of Irish football fans, mostly male, congregated for several nights outside several neighbouring bars in Paris, where nobody had thought of proving portaloos. The walls of one local side street, Rue Pierre Haret, were turned into what the mairie called 'une pissotière géant'. Whether they knew it or not, some irritated residents were advocating vengeance along the lines of 1 Samuel 25:22, and not just as a figure of speech. *** It was less of a surprise that the late Hugh Leonard should feature in responses to my question, as he did in an email from Don Kavanagh. But by coincidence, his example covers similar ground to the Bible. It's from the memoir Home Before Night, where Leonard is returning to visit his elderly father in Dalkey (then as now, clearly, a place apart from the city that surrounds it). Despite increasing frailty, he finds the old man still fiercely proud of his independence: ''I blacked the range yesterday,' he would boast when I came to see him. 'And go out and look at the garden. Fine heads of cabbage that a dog from Dublin never pissed on'.' *** Getting back to James 'Skin-the-Goat' Fitzharris, whose 'I came from Sliabh Buidhe, where a crow never flew over the head of an informer' was the primary cause of my speculations on rhetoric, another reader suggests a sobering explanation. Gerry Gallagher doesn't put a name on the use of an apparently unconnected detail to emphasise a main point. But he suggests the avian image was not completely extraneous, having a grim origin in 'the association between crows and the gallows'. His email adds: 'The cabbie was born well within human memory of the 1798 rising and must have heard stories of the public hangings and evisceration of many of those judged complicit with the rebels.' *** It's not like James Joyce to raise the tone of a column that has been dominated by the theme of urination. But to the continuing mystery of the anonymous postcard in Ulysses, and the many possible meanings of 'U.P.: up' (also in yesterday's Diary), long-time correspondent Terry Moylan adds another layer of complexity. That too dates from the 1798 Rising, when the word 'up', as in 'risen', took on a political significance. Hence, for example, a ballad of the period, entitled 'A Vernal Ode', which might have passed for a reflection on Spring, unless you were in the know. An early verse goes like this: 'Each plant erects its pendant head/Each flower expands its cup/The very weeds in every bed/Set impudently - Up.' But later, the politics become clear: 'The progress of this rising rage/No human power can stop/Then, Tyrants, cease your war to wage/For Nature will be – Up.' That first appeared in the Northern Star newspaper in 1797 and was included in Terry's book The Age of Revolution in the Irish Song Tradition (2000). 'Up', he adds, was a password used by the United Irishmen and perhaps also by the [Catholic] Defenders. A member of both organisations was said to be 'up and up'. Among the contributors to the Northern Star in those years was the Rev. James Porter (1752/3 – 1798), a Presbyterian minister and satirist whose characters including 'Squire Firebrand', a landlord's agent, and 'Billy Bluff', a farmer who spies on his neighbours. In one sketch, the squire teaches Billy the revolutionaries password, but they both struggle to understand what the letters mean. Agreeing that 'U' must stand for 'union', they guess that 'P' might he 'power,' or 'Protestant', or 'Presbyterian'. Then the squire has a brainwave: 'Union with the Papists, now I have it.' Although of radical politics, Porter was never proven to have been a member of the United Irishmen, or to have taken up arms in the rebellion. Even so, he was 'up' before the judge, in every sense, and hanged in July 1798.

Eight international protection accommodation contracts terminated in first four months of 2025
Eight international protection accommodation contracts terminated in first four months of 2025

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • Irish Times

Eight international protection accommodation contracts terminated in first four months of 2025

Seven International Protection Accommodation Services (IPAS) contracts with commercial accommodation providers were ended in the first four months of the year for reasons including noncompliance with planning, fire safety and other regulations, the Minister for Justice, Jim O'Callaghan, has said. More than 90 per cent of all international protection accommodation is provided on a commercial basis, with hotels, B&Bs and other centres taking up contracts to provide beds for people arriving in the State seeking asylum. This reliance on private providers led to the Government spending more than €1 billion on international protection accommodation last year. The budget for this year is €1.2 billion. Concerns have been raised about standards at some private accommodation centres, which are not all subject to independent inspections. READ MORE Mr O'Callaghan has said his preference is for international protection applicants to be housed in State-owned accommodation. Figures released by his department in response to a parliamentary question from Social Democrats TD Gary Gannon show that between January 1st and May 7th last, eight contracts with private accommodation providers were terminated. This represented 140 bed spaces. The department said seven of the contracts were ended by the State side, with one terminated by the provider. 'I am informed that reasons for termination can vary but can include noncompliance with contractual terms or with regulatory requirements like building and fire regulations or planning matters,' Mr O'Callaghan said. 'In the same period, 12 new IPAS accommodation contracts have been agreed, accounting for capacity of up to 848 bed spaces.' [ International protection overhaul an 'important step' in wider reform, Minister says Opens in new window ] Mr O'Callaghan said the commissioning of emergency commercial accommodation 'will continue to be necessary' in the short to medium term, but it is being contracted on a short-term basis to allow the 'State to decommission this capacity with agility as contracts expire or demand fluctuates'. Mr Gannon said he had sought figures on the numbers of IPAS contracts that were ending following a media interview given by Mr O'Callaghan last month. Speaking on RTÉ's Today with Claire Byrne, the Minister said 'many' of the agreements with private providers were 'now being terminated'. He said this was 'because if the numbers are going down, we don't need to have as many places for accommodation as provided before'. Mr Gannon said the figures released to him showed there had, in reality, been more contracts created than ended this year. 'So, far from winding things down, the system is expanding,' Mr Gannon said. While he welcomed planned reforms such as faster processing times for international protection applications, Mr Gannon said the fairness of the system matters 'just as much' as the speed of it. 'The truth is, Ireland is already failing to meet its legal obligations. In December, over 3,000 asylum seekers were left homeless,' he said. 'In April, the European Court of Justice confirmed that housing shortages are no excuse for denying basic care. We can't afford to play politics with facts, or with people's lives. The real issue isn't too many beds, it's too little planning, too much reliance on the private sector, and not enough focus on human rights and dignity at the core of the system.' In April, the Office of the Protected Disclosures Commissioner said IPAS centres had been the subject of six whistleblowing allegations last year. It said these centres were an 'emerging theme' for the office and it raised concerns about 'the lack of uniformity of the inspection regime' for them. The Department of Justice said: 'Owing to the protected nature of protected disclosures, the department does not comment on whether such disclosures have been made in any specific instance.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store