The Chronicle (UK)

Saying goodbye to priest

DEC PAID MOVING HIS BELOVED BROTHER

- By NICOLE GOODWIN Reporter nicole.goodwin@reachplc.com

THOUSANDS of people have paid their respects to Father Dermott Donnelly at a moving Requiem Mass held at St Mary’s Cathedral in Newcastle yesterday.

Fr Dermott died on July 8, aged 55, following a serious illness. He had recently celebrated 30 years of service to his parish and community after being ordained a Priest on June 27, 1992.

Yesterday, people came together to pay their respects to Fr Dermott and give thanks for his service to his faith and the positive impact he had on the lives of thousands of young people. In a tribute to Fr Dermott, Homilist Rt Rev Seamus Cunningham, Bishop Emeritus of Hexham and Newcastle, said: “Some people talk a lot and do very little, Dermott said little but did a lot.”

He described him as “always himself” with a “spirit of generosity” and a “winning smile that melted hearts” which he inherited from his mum, Anne Donnelly.

Addressing Anne, he said: “You must have been so proud of him on that day [he was ordained], but be prouder still today.”

Over 2,000 people watched the service live, which was streamed on Youtube. And hundreds also attended the cathedral and alternativ­e spaces organised by the church where people could pay their respects.

The congregati­on heard about the work Fr Dermott did to help young people, including establishi­ng the Youth Ministry Team (YMT) and the Youth Village in Consett, an outreach

TRIBUTE TO

programme aimed at introducin­g disadvanta­ged youngsters to the Catholic Church.

At least 20,000 young people benefitted every year from the work of the Youth Ministry Team (YMT).

Rt Rev Cunningham added: “We are still finding it hard to register that this is not just a bad dream from which we would like to awaken. We recognise that our sadness is only a shadow of sorrow felt by you, Anne, his mother, and his brothers and sisters and extended family.”

The service concluded with an emotional speech by his brother Declan Donnelly, who spoke about his childhood with his brother growing up in Cruddas Park, in Newcastle’s West End, as well as Fr Dermott’s

dedication to his faith and helping young people.

Dec said: “We were brought up a stone’s throw away from here, up the road in St Michael’s Parish in Cruddas Park, big up St Michael’s, where we shared a three-bedroomed house.

“Four boys in one room, three girls in the other and mam and dad in the smallest room in the middle of us two to stop us fighting.

“Dermott and I, being the youngest

boys, were assigned to the bottom bunk beds and on the occasions where my five or six-year-old overactive imaginatio­n created monsters under the bed or vampires in the closet I would run out of my bed and jump into Dermott’s bunk and he would calm me down in the middle of the night with stories that he invented like Mousey Brown, the not-at-all famous mouse detective.

“He was very calm, very sensitive and very protective of us all.”

He was very clam, very sensitive and very protective of us all

Declan

Donnelly

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 ?? ?? Declan Donnelly carrying the coffin of his brother, Father Dermott Donnelly
Declan Donnelly carrying the coffin of his brother, Father Dermott Donnelly
 ?? ?? Family and friends gather at St Mary’s cathedral
Family and friends gather at St Mary’s cathedral
 ?? ?? Father Dermott Donnelly
Father Dermott Donnelly

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