National Post

Estimated 6,000 people at funeral service

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He was startlingl­y abrupt in opening his eulogy, saying: “These last few days have been really f--ked up for my family.”

Toronto Police have been guarded in their statements on the case, saying only that homicide detectives have now taken the lead in investigat­ing the “suspicious deaths.”

A source has told the National Post the Shermans were found hanging from a railing over their lap pool.

Organizers estimated 6,000 people attended the elegant service at the Internatio­nal Centre, many of them employees of Barry Sherman’s generic drug empire Apotex.

At the behest of the family, the employees wore blue — the Apotex corporate colour — and so the hall was speckled with azure scarves, navy sweaters and royal blue shawls.

Despite t he t urnout, which included Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne and Toronto Mayor John Tory, the nearly three- hour service somehow felt intimate.

The s peakers — Tor y and Wynne among them — veered away from the circumstan­ces of their deaths and instead gave portraits of Barry and Honey Sherman as regular people, far more complex then their respective public images as a cantankero­us business tycoon and a gregarious benefactor of Toronto charities.

Wynne offered a tribute to the Shermans’ wide-ranging contributi­ons to causes at home and abroad.

“Because of their dedication to giving to those in need, there are countless students and patients, children and seniors, so many people here at home and around the world whose lives were touched by Honey and Barry who don’t know it,” she said. “And I get the sense that that’s exactly how the Shermans wanted it to be.”

“I didn’t prepare well,” Honey Sherman’s si s t er Mary Shechtman said, fighting back tears. “I guess I’ve just been in a fog over the last little while. I’m standing here confused and dazed and really angry, and I’m afraid for the shock that’s going to wear off and the reality that’s going to set in.”

Shechtman reflected on her sister’s humble beginnings as the daughter of Holocaust survivors, recalling a childhood far removed from the affluence that would later come to the family as Apotex flourished.

She said she and her sister were prone to fits of laughter for no reason, and that her brother-in-law would, before giving a serious speech in public, look at her, lower his glasses and cross his eyes.

“One may have been soft, calm, brilliantl­y l ogical, staunchly atheist and unconditio­nally loving and proud,” Jonathon Sherman said, speaking of his father. “The other may have been firm, intensely energetic, brilliantl­y gregarious, silently spiritual and unconditio­nally honest and caring.

“But together they were everything and perfect.”

After Jonathon gave his eulogy — which was, in his own words, “honest and raw and from my heart” — his youngest sister, Kaelen, stepped to the podium.

“My dad used to come home every day from work and, no matter what, he would always make sure to come to our rooms to sing to us and say goodnight,” she told mourners.

“I would like to take this time to sing it back to him,” she said, then started the song, ‘ You are my sunshine.’

I’M AFRAID FOR THE SHOCK THAT’S GOING TO WEAR OFF.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, centre, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrive at the memorial service for Apotex billionair­e couple Barry and Honey Sherman in Mississaug­a, Ont, on Thursday.
NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, centre, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrive at the memorial service for Apotex billionair­e couple Barry and Honey Sherman in Mississaug­a, Ont, on Thursday.

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