Irish Independent

‘Kind and lovely’ Spanish teacher leaves behind two young children

- Henry Bodkin and Eleanor Steafel

AYSHA Frade was strolling across Westminste­r Bridge to collect her children from school when Khalid Masood’s 4x4 roared onto the footpath and snatched her life away.

She had just come from work, a school itself, where she dedicated herself to helping youngsters learn the language and culture of her family’s native Spain.

Yesterday, in the quiet Galician town of Betanzos, more than 100 locals, burdened by “tragedy and enormous pain”, gathered in silence to remember the 43-year-old, who died amid sirens and screams.

Back in London, the life of John Frade, her Portuguese­born husband, had “completely fallen apart”, according to a cousin.

The cousin, also called John, said: “I can’t even put it into words how he’s feeling. His life’s completely fallen apart because of what’s happened.

“They’ve got young kids. When I heard I was just shocked. I’m still just feeling terrible, it’s a terrible thing to happen and you just don’t expect it to happen so close to home in this way.”

Mr Frade now must face bringing up his children, aged eight and 11, without their mother, who was described by those who knew her as kind and “the most upstanding member of society”.

A neighbour, Patricia Scotland, said the couple had been a “lovely family”.

“I just can’t believe what I’m hearing this morning,” she said. “She was such a kind, lovely woman.”

The first of the two civilian

victims to be identified, Ms Frade died within view of the DLD College for sixthforme­rs, just off the south bank of Westminste­r Bridge, where she was a department head.

Rachel Borland, the principal, said yesterday that the death of her colleague was a “devastatin­g loss”.

“She was highly regarded and loved by our students and by her colleagues – she will be deeply missed by all of us,” she said.

Born in London to a Galician mother and Cypriot father, Mrs Frade’s gift for teaching languages runs in the family. In Betanzos, where she often spent her summers, the language centre run by her two older sisters, Silvia and Michelle, was closed yesterday as they reeled from the devastatin­g news. A cousin told Spanish radio: “I am crushed. We never expected anything like this.”

Andreas Hermida, a local politician who knows the family, said two days of mourning were declared in the town. “It’s an immense tragedy and an enormous pain,” he said. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

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