Toronto Star

Jack in ‘our hearts, thoughts’

One year after Layton’s death, hundreds turn out at city hall to pay tribute

- LAURA STONE STAFF REPORTER

Maheroon Mawji felt like she knew Jack Layton. He had danced with her once in 2005, at the Pakistani Community Centre on Gerrard St. E., and she remembers the night. She even has a photo of them together, screened and printed on her white shirt.

“He was so down-to-earth,” said the 72-year-old. “He was a wonderful guy.”

She felt like she knew him, and that’s why she was here, at Nathan Phillips Square, on the anniversar­y of his death — scrawling chalk messages to the man who had an uncanny ability to make politics personal.

“You r in our hearts, thoughts and prayers,” she wrote, using a drawing to represent the heart, careful not to take up too much space.

It was part of a tribute called Dear Jack, which included a concert, mark- ing a year since Layton’s death from cancer after he led the NDP to official Opposition staus for the first time.

On the curved wall outside city hall, dozens of messages were dedicated to a politician many knew from afar or not at all: You left us too soon. Young people care. Long live Layton’s moustache. The messages mimicked the spontaneou­s outpouring of public grief that happened last year when Layton died. For many, the connection clearly remains.

“Jack really touched my heart,” said Darlene Lucas, a mental health worker from Parkdale. “He cared for the average joe.”

Quotations from his final letter to Canadians — ending with a call to hope, love and optimism — were everywhere, branded on T-shirts and in literature, marked on walls and the ground.

“There’s a great yearning from people. It’s not just about Jack,” said Layton’s widow, NDP MP Olivia Chow.

“It’s the message that we can be a more loving society.”

Layton’s family and friends spent the morning at Toronto’s Necropolis Cemetery, where his ashes were interred.

“There’s a great yearning from people. It’s not just about Jack. It’s the message that we can be a more loving society.”

OLIVIA CHOW

JACK LAYTON’S WIDOW

“This morning was tough. It was pretty emotional,” said Mike Layton, following in his father’s early political footsteps as a city councillor. “At the same time, you come here and look at the messages of love, hope and optimism and it makes you feel good and it makes you feel hopeful about what tomorrow brings.” Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Stephen Harper took time out from his northern tour to reflect on Layton’s death. “I’ll just take the opportunit­y to express my condolence­s once again to Olivia, all of Jack’s family and friends. I know this is a difficult time for them,” Harper said during a stop in Norman Wells, N.W.T. And on Parliament Hill, New Democrats and their supporters gathered to pay tribute to a man who was a consummate politician.

“For Jack, there wasn’t much of a difference. Community was politics for Jack,” Robin MacLachlan, a former NDP staffer turned lobbyist, told a crowd gathered in the Ottawa sunshine.

As for the night’s event, “Jack would have loved it,” Chow said.

“Loved the music and loved the people and (then) say, OK, stop mourning and go out and make a difference.” With files from Joanna Smith and Bruce Campion-Smith

 ?? PAWEL DWULIT PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR ?? A woman looks at her chalk writing on a wall at Nathan Phillips Square during a tribute to Jack Layton on Wednesday.
PAWEL DWULIT PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR A woman looks at her chalk writing on a wall at Nathan Phillips Square during a tribute to Jack Layton on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Many shared chalk messages of hope during a tribute to Jack Layton.
Many shared chalk messages of hope during a tribute to Jack Layton.
 ?? PAWEL DWULIT/TORONTO STAR ?? MP Olivia Chow writes on a wall at Nathan Phillips Square on the first anniversar­y of her husband Jack Layton’s death.
PAWEL DWULIT/TORONTO STAR MP Olivia Chow writes on a wall at Nathan Phillips Square on the first anniversar­y of her husband Jack Layton’s death.

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