Calgary Herald

TRIBUTES TO VAN ATTACK VICTIM.

- Nicole Thompson

• A 30-year-old woman who was among those killed in last week’s van attack in Toronto was remembered Wednesday as someone who was humble about her achievemen­ts and always worked to help others.

Anne Marie D’Amico, who was the first of the 10 attack victims to be publicly identified, was laid to rest following a funeral service at the church she attended with her family.

Her brother delivered an emotional eulogy ahead of a Catholic mass at which mourners packed the pews.

“She brought so much warmth and comfort to others,” Nick D’Amico said of his younger sister. “She would go the extra mile showing she cared. She continuall­y did things that had enormous impact because she did everything with her whole heart.”

For instance, he said, after a plate that his mother loved broke, his sister used a broken shard as a guide to hand paint the exact same design onto a new plate to give to her mother as a gift.

His sister also spent much of her vacation time volunteeri­ng, doing whatever she could to make others’ lives better, he said.

He also remembered his younger sister as a one-time pool player who once won a game with a particular­ly impressive shot — sinking two balls at once.

“The most inspiring thing was that Anne Marie never bragged or even talked about that shot,” he said. “When the cards were stacked against her, she turned to her fighting spirit. And when the time was right, she rose to the occasion with patience, courage and talent. She was always able to pull off something amazing.”

Hundreds of people — those who knew D’Amico and those who did not — filled the church and spilled into an overflow area to commemorat­e the young woman, who worked at Invesco Canada, a U.S.-based investment firm with offices near the scene of the attack.

Some wore two ribbons pinned to their chests — a white one, for victims of violence against women, and a blue one emblazoned with the hashtag “TorontoStr­ong.”

D’Amico’s family also said they were praying for the loved ones of the others who died last week, as well as for the family of the man charged in the incident.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Rocco and Carmela D’Amico follow the casket of their daughter Anne Marie following her funeral service in Toronto on Wednesday. D’Amico was one of the 10 victims of last Monday’s van attack on Yonge Street.
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Rocco and Carmela D’Amico follow the casket of their daughter Anne Marie following her funeral service in Toronto on Wednesday. D’Amico was one of the 10 victims of last Monday’s van attack on Yonge Street.
 ??  ?? Anne Marie D’Amico
Anne Marie D’Amico

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