Sarah McNally was âlarger than lifeâ and âa unique force to be reckoned withâ, according to her best friend Ãine Wade, who addressed the Longford nativeâs funeral congregation on Monday morning.
Thin Lizzyâs song Sarah echoed around the cathedral as those who gathered to mourn the loss of their family member, friend or former colleague awaited the arrival of the funeral cortege.
Sarah, a 41-year-old Longford native, died after a stabbing incident at the bar in which she worked in New York, on Saturday, March 30th. Her boyfriend Marcin Pieciak has been charged with her murder.
Sarah had lived in New York for more than 10 years and worked as a bartender at The Céilà House in Queens.
âSarahâs death has stopped us in our tracks. It has caused darkness to descend, especially on her family: her mother Dorrie, father Des, her grandmother Kathleen, and her aunts, uncles, relatives and extended family, and the wide circle of friends she has, both here and the far side of the Atlantic,â said Fr McGrath.
As we were welcoming the hope of Easter, he said, âthe sirens on the street if New York signalled something unwelcome and sinisterâ.
He recalled Sarahâs baptism and the âlightâ she brought to her family in December 1982.
âThose who knew Sarah best remember a vivacious young woman who loved life, her cars – her loud, souped up cars,â he said.
âFormer colleagues remember her as the one who could have invented online shopping before it became the âinâ thing.
âBut the stricter confines of a 9 to 5 office job in the civil service was never going to be enough to offer excitement for her. It was only a matter of time before she spread her wings and headed international.â
Sarahâs nature was âadventurous and generousâ, he added, with âlaughter and a sense of funâ.
Sarahâs friend recalled the âunique bondâ Sarah had with her mother, Dorrie, and the love of music she shared with her father, Dessie.
âBeing an only child made her embrace people more, and friends became family, no matter where she went in the world, especially her girls – all with us in spirit, watching in New York, Florida, Miami, Texas, Perth,â said Ãine.
âShe treated everyone, regardless of who or what they were, with no judgement, and everyone loved her. She had an extensive group of friends, at home and abroad. She was loved and treasured by all of her âamigas and amigosâ, as she called us.
Sarah was âa girly girlâ, teaching some of her friends how to put on makeup, Ãine added, but she was also âa tomboyâ, and wasnât afraid to take on any task, whether it was âhopping up on a wall to dip the tankâ, or making âthe best mashed potatoes in Longfordâ.
âShe was known for her love of cars, and she would have loved to rally Dorrieâs car when she was 15, if she could only get it past the driveway,â she said.
âOnly Sarah would have a purple car that changed colour in the sun, and she was absolutely delighted when her picture appeared in a car magazine after she went to a rally.
âShe lived the words of Tupac, which she had tattooed on her arm,â Ãine continued, ââNever stop dreaming, no one can take away your dreamsâ.â
Local publican Eddie Valentine, who owns Valentineâs pub in Longford, where Sarah worked before taking a role in the Irish Prison Service, was affectionately known to Sarah as âUncle Edâ.
On behalf of the family, he thanked all those who supported the family during this difficult time, both locally and abroad.
âSarah, you were a beautiful, unique, very special, kind and very loving girl with the most beautiful smile,â he said, in conclusion.
âYou lit up the room everywhere you went and I have no doubt you are shining bright in Heaven now.
âWe all loved you so much and we still will, all of us, and weâre going to miss you, so, so much. Until we meet again, rest in peace, Sarah.â
[ Keith Duggan: Sarah McNally moved to New York, worked in a bar: A very Irish life, cut violently short ]
Sarah McNallyâs boyfriend has been formally indicted by a Grand Jury in New York and accused of her murder.
Marcin Pieciak (36), from 76th Street in Glendale, Queens, was held in custody after the stabbing at the bar she worked at in Queens on Saturday, March 30th.
Mr Pieciak has been charged with murder in the second degree, and two counts of criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree. He is expected to enter a plea on April 19th.