The Post

‘Amazing’ Grace laid to rest at home

- Catrin Owen and Joanne Butcher

The hymn Amazing Grace opened the funeral for British backpacker Grace Millane, who was killed during her OE in New Zealand.

Millane, from Wickford, Essex, disappeare­d on December 1 after last being seen in Auckland’s central city. Her body was found a week later in the Waita¯ kere Ranges and a 26-year-old man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has been charged with her murder.

Her funeral service took place at 11.30am on Thursday (12.30am yesterday NZ time) at Brentwood Cathedral in the United Kingdom, on what her brother Declan Millane described as ‘‘Grace’s Day’’.

It opened with Amazing Grace, and included a eulogy from her dad David Millane, the BBC reported.

Friends had joined her loving family to pay their respects to the 22-year-old, following a procession from her family home in Wickford, the Basildon Echo reported.

A respectful silence fell as her coffin, carried by her brothers and father among others, was brought into the service.

The head of the New Zealand police investigat­ion into Millane’s death, Detective Inspector Scott Beard, flew to England to attend the funeral.

A police spokesman said Beard and a family liaison officer both attended as a ‘‘mark of respect to the family’’.

‘‘This was part of our commitment to provide on-going support to the Millane family,’’ the spokesman said.

Photograph­s taken shortly before the service showed hundreds of mourners attended the Roman Catholic cathedral. Many, including some of her family members, wore white ribbons, a symbol against domestic violence.

‘‘You are our sunshine. In a world where you can be anything, be kind. Let your smile change the world but don’t let the world change your smile’’, the order of service read. It was decorated with paintings which Millane, a keen artist, had created.

Millane was then buried at a private ceremony in the parish of Ramsden Bellhouse before a wake at Stockbrook Country Club.

Before leaving New Zealand with his daughter’s body, David Millane released a statement saying Grace would ‘‘forever be a Kiwi’’, and thanked the New Zealand public and police for their support.

He said his family’s world had been ‘‘turned upside down’’ by her disappeara­nce and death. ‘‘By the amount of pictures and messages we received she clearly loved [New Zealand], its people and the lifestyle.’’

Millane’s mother, Gillian, had been unable to travel to New Zealand because she was undergoing treatment for breast cancer, The Sunday Times newspaper reported.

 ?? BASILDON ECHO ?? Grace Millane’s coffin being carried into the cathedral for the funeral service.
BASILDON ECHO Grace Millane’s coffin being carried into the cathedral for the funeral service.

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