The Telegram (St. John's)

Community mourns mass killing victims

- BLAIR CRAWFORD POSTMEDIA NEWS

“We will miss you, Inuka. Love your Gr. 2 friends.”

On a cold, rainy Saturday morning filled with grief, tears and disbelief, the handmade card from seven-yearold Inuka Wickramasi­nghe’s classmates at Monsignor Paul Baxter Catholic School spelled out a community’s sorrow.

In colourful letters that soon began to drip away with the raindrops, the children shared their memories. “Fast. Kind. Intelligen­t,” they wrote. “Imaginativ­e. Good Friend. Soccer ‘payler.’ We will miss your smile.”

Overcome with emotion, Inuka’s teacher wiped his tears, then set the card among a mountain of flowers, cards, stuffed animals and flickering candles that was the centrepiec­e of the vigil for Inuka, his mother Darshani Dilanthika Ekanyake, sisters Ashwini, 4, Ranaya, 3, and Kelly, two months, and family friend Gamini Amarakoon, 40.

It was the worst mass killing in Ottawa’s living memory.

A block away, another mountain of flowers lay in front of the family’s home on Berrigan Drive, where a police officer in a cruiser still stood guard. The only survivor of the late Wednesday massacre, father Dhanushka Wickramasi­nghe, remained in hospital.

“He sees the strength. He sees that people are behind him. A gathering like this will only make him stronger,” said Naradha Kodituwakk­u, past-president of the Sri Lanka Canada Associatio­n and a director of the Hilda Jayewarden­aramaya Buddhist Monastery, which the family attended.

Kodituwakk­u visited Dhanushka in hospital on Friday and said he was recovering from the cuts and other injuries he received in the attack, but remained in shock.

Sri Lanka’s deputy high commission­er in Ottawa, Anzul Jhan, said the commission had been deluged with messages of compassion and support since Wednesday’s tragedy.

“This is only a small sample,” she said, referring to Saturday’s vigil. “People are reaching out to the high commission and the community, and we are overwhelme­d with the outpouring.”

Funerals will be held later this week and the high commission is working to expedite travel for family members coming to Ottawa from Sri Lanka, Jhan said.

Febrio De-zoysa, a 19-yearold student from Sri Lanka who was living with the family, has been charged with six counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder. He remained in custody and was scheduled to appear in court again by video on March 14.

More than 100 people attended Saturday’s vigil in Palmadeo Park, around the corner from the family’s Barrhaven home. Among them were Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, Police Chief Eric Stubbs and other senior officers, MPPS Lisa Macleod and Joel Harden along with Barrhaven councillor­s David Hill and Wilson Lo, and a dozen other city councillor­s.

“This shatters what you think of your community. It’s hard to recover from this,” Lo said. “A lot of people are reaching out to their neighbours.”

Many of those neighbours, from down the street and across the city, attended the vigil, too. Matt Hernberger was one, adding his own small bouquet to the offerings.

“It’s such a terribly sad occasion,” Hernberger said. “I want the family to know that there are more good people than bad people. Horrible things happen in this world. You just have to unite as a community to get through these things.”

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