Mother-of-four Martina Martin 'had an abundance of love' funeral hears

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The funeral Mass has been held for mum-of-four Martina Martin.

She had been working at the petrol station at the time of the blast.

During the service, the congenial mother was described by those who knew her as "a friend to all" who had “a very quick wit”.

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"Martina was at the front line for the community in the shop,” said Father John Joe Duffy.

"Every one of us has suffered pain and loss since her death, her colleagues, friends, family and extended family.”

As the Mass started symbols of Martina’s life were brought forward – a picture of her four children, a large coffee cup and Harry Potter memorabilia.

Her co-workers provided a guard of honour as her coffin was brought into the church.

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Representatives of Mulroy College in Milford, where two of her children attend, were also part of the honour guard.

“Martina had an abundance of love,” Fr John Joe Duffy told the congregation.

“She was sensitive to the needs of others and to those who are sensitive to the needs of others, life offers innumerable opportunities to practice the commandment of love.

“Real love requires hard work and patience. It requires doing up rotas on a board in the kitchen of the house telling you, the children, what your tasks are; emptying the bins, which I’m sure you did without fail.

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“Putting out the bins, washing the dishes, which I’m sure great care was given to, and taking Dusty, Sophie and Junior for a walk.

Martina Martin and Leona HarpurMartina Martin and Leona Harpur
Martina Martin and Leona Harpur

“Dusty being the dog and Sophie and Junior being the cats. She offered you that love, that love in helping you prepare for the realities of life, and she did it so very well.

“For real love, for her, was a way of life.

“Her quick wit, her straight talking was done and given with love and with goodness.”

The mourners attending the funeral were also told that Mrs Martin loved the people of Creeslough.

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The coffins of James Monaghan and his mother Catherine O'Donnell are carried out of St Michael's Church, Creeslough after their funeral mass.The coffins of James Monaghan and his mother Catherine O'Donnell are carried out of St Michael's Church, Creeslough after their funeral mass.
The coffins of James Monaghan and his mother Catherine O'Donnell are carried out of St Michael's Church, Creeslough after their funeral mass.

“And we, each and every one of us who knew her, very much loved her,” Fr Duffy added.

“She was very special to us. She was very special to her colleagues and she was very special to us all.

“If we were having a bad day, the quick wit would lift us up. She cared for the customers in another way.

“Martina’s friends describe her as your mother hen, your mother hen to the core, she lived for you.

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“She lived for you, her children. She never missed a birthday and loved to meet for a coffee to catch up.

“Martina was a beautiful person, her beauty inside radiated in that kind of cheeky mischievous smile which flowed out to you when you met her.

Funeral director Leo Harkins erects a sign for the wake for Martin McGill, 49, who died in the explosion at Applegreen service station in the village of Creeslough in Co Donegal on Friday, where ten people have now been confirmed dead.Funeral director Leo Harkins erects a sign for the wake for Martin McGill, 49, who died in the explosion at Applegreen service station in the village of Creeslough in Co Donegal on Friday, where ten people have now been confirmed dead.
Funeral director Leo Harkins erects a sign for the wake for Martin McGill, 49, who died in the explosion at Applegreen service station in the village of Creeslough in Co Donegal on Friday, where ten people have now been confirmed dead.

“She was the voice of reason when others were hurting.

“She never minced her words and was the kindest friend you could ever have. She was the life and soul of any night-out, she didn’t dwell on the problems she was facing, but put others first.”

Mourners were told how she worked at the heart of the community in an “exceptionally nice place”, and that customers would have met her naturally friendly face.

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“She was at work as normal, doing what she did, doing what she liked, doing what she loved, doing what was routine to us all and then, what turned out as a normal day, ended up a very different way to the way that it ordinarily would,” Fr Duffy added.

“All things changed, events outside our control, outside the control indeed of any one of us, those few seconds of time last Friday have impacted so much on you as a family and on so many other families and on all of us.

“Seconds that changed in time, that led to the changing for future generations of our village, our community and communities beyond. The events of last Friday will be forever etched in our hearts.”

He said that the community of Creeslough is growing in strength each day to get through the hours and days ahead.

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“Creeslough is a small village, but it is now more than just that. It is now a word for determination, for resolve and for togetherness and how important togetherness is,” Fr Duffy added.

“This tragedy has reignited within all of us, myself included, that each one of us are only as strong as the families we have around us, only as strong as the community that surrounds us.”

At the end of the service Fr Duffy urged people affected by the tragedy to contact local counselling services, which he said he intended to do himself.

On Tuesday, funeral services were held at St Michael's Church in the village for Jessica Gallagher, 24, and 49-year-old Martin McGill.

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James O'Flaherty, Catherine O'Donnell and her 13-year-old son James Monaghan were buried on Wednesday.

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