Tag Archives: funeral

Family turns funeral of unvaccinated Florida man into COVID awareness event

The family of a Florida man who died of COVID-19 last month is turning his funeral into a pandemic vaccine and testing event to raise awareness of the deadly virus.

Marquis Davis, 28, died July 26 without fulfilling his last wish of getting a vaccine, according to a report. The business owner and father tested positive for COVID in late July and while he began to quarantine at home, he grew progressively worse, his wife told ABC News.

“He was losing his breath just by getting up. I was like, this is not normal, you need extra help,” said Charnese Davis, who took her husband to a local hospital where he was put on a ventilator.

Although he had been hesitant about the COVID vaccine, he told his wife that after he recuperated, he planned to get vaccinated, but it was too late, she said.

Charnese Davis said her husband Marquis planned to get vaccinated but it was too late.
Facebook

After his death, the family’s church, the Faith Temple Christian Center in Rockledge, asked if they could hold a COVID awareness event during his wake and funeral.

“Now we’re seeing things completely shift with this delta variant. [Marquis] was 28 years old, had the rest of his life in front of him, and because of COVID-19, specifically this delta variant, and he was not vaccinated, his life was cut short,” said Dr. R. Shaun Ferguson, the pastor of Faith Temple Christian Center. “Our position as a church is let’s get this cut. Let’s do this. I don’t want to see another person lose their life, period.”

Marquis Davis’ family turned his funeral into a pandemic vaccine and testing event to raise awareness of the deadly virus.
Facebook

Read original article here

Indianapolis funeral home shooting leaves 4-year-old girl in critical condition

A 4-year-old is in critical condition after being shot outside a funeral home in Indianapolis, according to reports.

The girl was one of five people hit by gunfire after an argument broke out in the parking lot Saturday afternoon.

The incident, in which a 16-year-old girl was also shot, unfolded at about 4:30 p.m. while a funeral service was being held inside, according to the local CBS affiliate.

Three of the victims, including the child and the teenager, were found at the scene, while two others later walked into a local hospital.

The violence apparently began when one man got out of his car and approached another man sitting in a vehicle in the parking lot.

One of the men started shooting when the exchange grew heated, police said, according to WRTV.

Read original article here

Indianapolis funeral home shooting leaves multiple injured, including 4-year-old in critical condition: report

A shooting outside of a funeral home in Indianapolis on Saturday afternoon left five people injured, including a 4-year-old girl in critical condition, FOX 59 reported. 

Police were called around 4:30 p.m. to the scene of a funeral service, where they encountered the 4-year-old girl, a 16-year-old girl, and a man who were all injured, according to the local news station. 

The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department tweeted shortly before 5 p.m. that the 1100 block of W 30th St. was roped off for an active investigation. 

The 4-year-old was transported to a local hospital and police were called about two other gunshot victims who were seeking treatment at a hospital, according to FOX59. 

All the victims were in the parking lot of the funeral home. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett condemned the shooting, calling it “yet another violent incident.”

“Far too many residents have borne the consequences of the combination of firearms and failed conflict resolution and I join a frustrated community in calling for an end to this cycle of violence,” Hogsett said in a statement. 

“IMPD and the City of Indianapolis will continue to try every solution, incorporate every best practice we can. But we cannot do it alone. It will take neighbors sharing information, supporting those who are hurting, intervening when someone is headed down a dangerous path.”

This is a developing story. Check back for updates. 



Read original article here

Dusty Hill dead latest – ZZ Top member Billy Gibbons says ‘show must go on’ as bassist’s funeral is expected next week

DUCK DYNASTY STAR REMEMBERS DUSTY HILL

Duck Dynasty’s Willie Robertson told Fox News on Thursday about how Dusty Hill’s passing has led him to recount the past.

Thinking about their last encounter, Robertson said: “Our beards bowed down when we got in their presence because they had been running that look way longer than we had, that’s for sure.

“When I was with them a couple of years ago, they were heading off to Europe to play for like two months or something, it was crazy.

“And I was thinking at the time, not a lot of people have their 70th birthday and then take off to Europe to keep working and keep doing what they love to do.

“And it’s just a tribute to him and their lives, their passion and what they had. They had something good and they kept it together, kept the look, kept everything.”



Read original article here

South Africa lets jailed ex-president Zuma attend brother’s funeral

NKANDLA, South Africa, July 22 (Reuters) – Former President Jacob Zuma, whose jailing this month led to South Africa’s worst outbreak of violence in years, was granted compassionate leave to attend the funeral of his younger brother on Thursday.

He was back in prison by the afternoon, the government said.

Zuma, wearing a dark suit and white shirt, was flanked by family members as he walked from his homestead to his brother’s neighbouring property in Nkandla, in KwaZulu-Natal province, a Reuters journalist said.

Soldiers patrolled nearby and military and police vehicles were stationed along the road.

Zuma has been incarcerated at Estcourt prison since handing himself over on July 7 to serve a 15-month sentence for contempt of court. The prison is in Kwa-Zulu Natal.

South African former President Jacob Zuma speaks to supporters after appearing at the High Court in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, May 17, 2021. REUTERS/Rogan Ward/File Photo

Read More

Zuma was granted compassionate leave as he was considered a short-term, low-risk inmate, the department of correctional services said in a statement. Zuma was not required to wear an offenders’ uniform outside prison walls, it said.

“He was accompanied by correctional officers supported by law enforcement agencies. And we are to confirm that he has returned back to the Estcourt correctional facility as we speak,” cabinet minister Khumbudzo Ntshavheni told a news conference on Thursday afternoon.

Zuma, 79, was sentenced last month for defying a constitutional court order to give evidence at an inquiry investigating high-level corruption during his nine years in office until 2018.

Protests by his supporters broke out when Zuma handed himself over and escalated into riots involving looting and arson that President Cyril Ramaphosa has described as an “insurrection”.

The unrest swept across Kwa-Zulu Natal and spread to the country’s economic heartland where Johannesburg is located. Ntshavheni said the death toll had risen to 337. read more

Thousands of soldiers were deployed to help quell the violence, among the worst since the governing African National Congress won South Africa’s first democratic elections in 1994 to replace white minority rule.

Reporting by Siyabonga Sishi in Nkandla, Wendell Roelf in Cape Town and Alexander Winning in Johannesburg;
Editing by Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo and Angus MacSwan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

Funeral held for Toronto police officer Const. Northrup killed in line of duty | LIVE – Global News

  1. Funeral held for Toronto police officer Const. Northrup killed in line of duty | LIVE Global News
  2. Toronto police officer killed in line of duty arrives at BMO Field for funeral CP24 Toronto’s Breaking News
  3. Slain Toronto police officer Jeffrey Northrup remembered as amiable, gentle giant at funeral CBC.ca
  4. ‘A gentle giant’: Toronto officer killed in the line of duty honoured at funeral CityNews Toronto
  5. Toronto Morning Headlines: Child fatally struck by car, visitation for officer killed in the line of CityNews
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Lip readers decipher what Harry, William said at Philip’s funeral

Prince William told his brother Prince Harry during their grandfather’s funeral that the service “was great” — to which his sibling replied that “it was as he wanted it,” according to lip readers who analyzed the interaction.

Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex.Getty Images

The estranged brothers were seen amiably chatting for several minutes during the televised funeral for 99-year-old Prince Philip on Saturday and then spent a couple of hours together behind closed doors with their father, Prince Charles.

Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge during the funeral of the Duke of Edinburgh.
Yui Mok/WPA Pool/Shutterstock

“Yes, it was great, wasn’t it,” the 38-year-old Duke of Cambridge reportedly told his 36-year-old brother once they both removed their masks, lip readers told UK newspaper Daily Express.

Prince Harry at the funeral in St George’s Chapel.
Yui Mok/WPA Pool/Shutterstock

“It was as he wanted it,” the Duke of Sussex replied.

The Duke of Edinburgh’s coffin, covered with His Royal Highness’s Personal Standard is seen on the purpose built Land Rover.
WireImage

Interpreters said William later told Harry: ““Absolutely beautiful service, ah, the music.”

William had personally asked not to walk side by side his younger brother, leading the two to be separated by their cousin Peter Philips, son of Princess Anne.

Prince William had personally asked not to walk side by side his younger brother, leading the two to be separated by their cousin Peter Philips, son of Princess Anne.
Sky News

That was just one example of “a great deal of frostiness” Harry faced during his first time home in the UK following the damning allegations Harry and wife Meghan Markle made against his family during their TV tell-all, sources told the Mail on Sunday.

Prince Harry and Prince William follow the coffin during the ceremonial funeral procession.
AFP via Getty Images

Queen Elizabeth II’s daughter, Anne, and youngest son, Prince Edward, 57, failed to even acknowledge Harry before or during Saturday’s service, as did Edward’s wife, Sophie, the UK paper also claimed.

“It’s often said funerals are a time for reconciliation and that’s a scene a lot of people wanted to see, not least the family itself,” said ITN’s Tom Bradby, the Express reported.

Prince Harry is expected to jet home to his pregnant wife Meghan Markle on Monday.
Sky News

“They were talking. They were possibly overcome by emotion. They were talking – and that’s got to be a very good sign. Let’s hope that they sort their recent troubles out because the Queen needs them both,” commentator Eve Pollard said, according to the outlet.

Harry is expected to jet home to his pregnant wife on Monday.

Read original article here

Captain Tom Moore, 100-year-old UK fundraising hero, honored at funeral

Veteran Moore received a firing salute from 14 soldiers of the Yorkshire Regiment and a flypast from a World War II-era plane.

His Union Flag-draped coffin was carried by soldiers from the regiment into the crematorium in Bedford, eastern England, past empty pews due to coronavirus restrictions. The soldiers then marched out and left his close family for the service, to the sound of Moore singing “You’ll Never Walk Alone” in a charity single he recorded with Michael Ball.

In line with current coronavirus restrictions, the funeral was attended by his immediate family — two daughters, Lucy Teixeira and Hannah Ingram-Moore, four grandchildren and his sons-in-laws.

“Daddy, I am so proud of you,” Teixeira said, “What you achieved your whole life and especially in the last year. You may be gone but your message and your spirit lives on.”

Lucy said her father would be watching them at the funeral and chuckling “saying ‘don’t be too sad as something has to get you in the end.'”

Speaking of her grief, Ingram-Moore said “we have lost a huge part of our family” and “we feel your loss with a deafening silence.”

But she added “the power of the love you left allows us to stay strong.”

Alfie Boe’s performance of “I Vow To Thee My Country” and Dame Vera Lynn’s “The White Cliffs Of Dover” were played at the moving ceremony.

Once Covid-19 restrictions permit, the family will intern Moore’s ashes in Yorkshire, where he will rest with his parents and grandparents in the Moore family plot.

He died in hospital on February 2 after testing positive for Covid-19.
Known affectionately as Captain Tom, Moore raised almost £33 million ($45 million) by walking laps of his garden last year. His exploits united a country frozen in lockdown and made him an unlikely celebrity late in his life, earning him a military promotion, a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II and a number-one single.

Moore’s fundraising efforts will long be associated with the UK’s plunge into lockdown last spring, and his death made him one of the highest-profile victims of a virus that has claimed the lives of more than 120,000 Britons.

People from 163 countries around the world donated to Captain Tom Moore’s fundraiser, the celebrant conducting the funeral said. She added that they were investing “in the values that he stood for.”

Read original article here

Captain Tom Moore, 100-year-old UK fundraising hero, honored at funeral

Veteran Moore received a firing salute from 14 soldiers of the Yorkshire Regiment and a flypast from a World War II-era plane.

His Union Flag-draped coffin was carried by soldiers from the regiment into the crematorium in Bedford, eastern England, past empty pews due to coronavirus restrictions. The soldiers then marched out and left his close family for the service, to the sound of Moore singing “You’ll Never Walk Alone” in a charity single he recorded with Michael Ball.

In line with current coronavirus restrictions, the funeral was attended by his immediate family — two daughters, Lucy Teixeira and Hannah Ingram-Moore, four grandchildren and his sons-in-laws.

“Daddy, I am so proud of you,” Teixeira said, “What you achieved your whole life and especially in the last year. You may be gone but your message and your spirit lives on.”

Lucy said her father would be watching them at the funeral and chuckling “saying ‘don’t be too sad as something has to get you in the end.'”

Alfie Boe’s performance of “I Vow To Thee My Country” and Dame Vera Lynn’s “The White Cliffs Of Dover” were played at the moving ceremony.

Once Covid-19 restrictions permit, the family will intern Moore’s ashes in Yorkshire, where he will rest with his parents and grandparents in the Moore family plot.

He died in hospital on February 2 after testing positive for Covid-19.
Known affectionately as Captain Tom, Moore raised almost £33 million ($45 million) by walking laps of his garden last year. His exploits united a country frozen in lockdown and made him an unlikely celebrity late in his life, earning him a military promotion, a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II and a number-one single.

Moore’s fundraising efforts will long be associated with the UK’s plunge into lockdown last spring, and his death made him one of the highest-profile victims of a virus that has claimed the lives of more than 120,000 Britons.

Read original article here

Thousands join in Jerusalem funeral, flout pandemic rules

JERUSALEM (AP) — Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Israelis on Sunday thronged the funeral of a prominent rabbi in Jerusalem, flouting the country’s ban on large public gatherings during the pandemic.

The funeral procession for Rabbi Meshulam Soloveitchik, who died at age 99, wended its way through the streets of Jerusalem in the latest display of ultra-Orthodox Israelis’ refusal to honor coronavirus restrictions. Police estimated that more than 10,000 people joined the procession and said they had issued dozens of tickets for failing to heed lockdown rules.

The phenomenon has undermined the country’s aggressive vaccination campaign to bring a raging outbreak under control and threatened to hurt Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in March elections. One challenger accused Netanyahu of failing to enforce the law due to political pressure from his ultra-Orthodox political allies.

Densely packed throngs of people gathered outside the rabbi’s home, ignoring restrictions on outdoor gatherings of more than 10 people. Many did not wear masks. Thousands of black-garbed ultra-Orthodox funeral-goers coursed past the city’s main entrance toward the cemetery where Soloveitchik was to be buried. A handful of police officers blocked intersections to traffic to allow participants to pass, but appeared to take no action to prevent the illegal assembly.

Israeli media said Soloveitchik, a leading religious scholar who headed a number of well-known seminaries, had recently suffered from COVID-19.

Israel’s Health Ministry has recorded over 640,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus and at least 4,745 deaths since the start of the pandemic.

Israel has recently been averaging over 6,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus each day, one of the highest infection rates in the developing world. At the same time, Israel has vaccinated over 3 million of its citizens, also one of the highest rates per capita in the world.

Health experts say it will take several weeks for the vaccination campaign to have an effect on infection and hospitalization rates. But large public funerals like that for Soloveitchik in Jerusalem, and for a prominent Arab sheikh killed in Jaffa last week, have confounded efforts to prevent the spread of the disease.

A disproportionate number of Israel’s coronavirus cases are within the country’s ultra-Orthodox minority. The strictly religious community, which makes up around 11% of Israel’s 9.2 million people, has been accounting for about 40% of the new cases.

Many ultra-Orthodox sects have kept schools, seminaries and synagogues open, and held mass weddings and funerals in violation of lockdown restrictions that have closed schools and many businesses in other parts of the country. Recent weeks have seen violent clashes between members of the ultra-Orthodox community flouting the rules and police officers trying to enforce them.

Ultra-Orthodox leaders say they have been unfairly singled out and argue the country’s secular public does not understand the importance of public prayers and religious studies in their community. They claim the scofflaws are a small part of their diverse community, and blame crowded living conditions for the outbreak.

Netanyahu has long relied on ultra-Orthodox parties for support, and critics say he has refused to antagonize his allies ahead of critical elections. Without ultra-Orthodox support, it will be extremely difficult for Netanyahu to cobble together a governing coalition — especially as he seeks immunity from an ongoing corruption trial.

But there are signs that this alliance could become a liability due to widespread public anger over ultra-Orthodox behavior during the pandemic. A poll last week indicated that over 60% of Israelis do not want ultra-Orthodox parties to serve in the next coalition.

Gideon Saar, a right-wing Israeli politician challenging Netanyahu in the elections, criticized the prime minister on Twitter, saying “the pictures from Jerusalem prove that Netanyahu has given up on enforcing the law for political reasons. This won’t happen in a government headed by me. There will be one law for all and it will be enforced.”

Israel’s Cabinet was set to extend the country’s general lockdown for an additional week Sunday evening as the infection rate remained high.

The government imposed the movement restrictions and closure of schools and non-essential businesses last month in an effort to clamp down on Israel’s runaway pandemic.

Read original article here