Former business and sportsman Tony OâReilly was a man of ambition but great loyalty, who cherished his family and many friends, his funeral in Dublin was told on Thursday.
His three sons, Gavin, Cameron, and Tony, paid warm tributes to their father in front of a large congregation at the Church of the Sacred Heart, Donnybrook, with Tony recalling his father having told him 18 months ago he was happy to have lived âan amazing lifeâ.
Prominent figures from the worlds of politics, business, media and sport heard of âa titanic figureâ, with a presence that âlit up every room he enteredâ.
Cameron said his father had known âno bounds to what he could achieveâ, as he emerged from school at Belvedere College to immediately earn fame in the early stages of what would prove to be a remarkable and record-establishing rugby career, most obviously with Ireland and the Lions.
âHe took that same âno limitsâ approach into his business career,â he said.
Gavin said his fatherâs experience of growing up in the Ireland of his childhood, the son of unmarried parents, âwith all the stigma that entailedâ, contributed to the huge sense of importance he attached to relationships with the friends he made both in business and sport.
He spoke of his public displays of generosity but also the more personal interest he took in people and the âprivate gestures that defined himâ.
âHe treasured every one of these friendships,â he said.
Gavin recalled his father as has having less well known sides to him, âa collector of art, a voracious reader, particularly of history. Politicians interested him but, surprisingly, not politicsâ.
For all his many achievements, he suggested, however, his work on the Ireland Funds âmay well be his most enduring legacyâ.
âWhile others left Ireland and never came back, dad never really left Ireland,â he said. The initiative had provided members of the diaspora based in the United States and elsewhere with a way of supporting Ireland that was a world away from fundraising carried out in support of violence.
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Tony said his father was a âtough bossâ but a father who âlived life largeâ. Work took him away from his family a great deal, he recalled, and when they were all together, events like family holidays would always include trips to local supermarkets to assess the presence of Heinz, of which he became chairman in 1987, and its competitors.
Their Dublin home, he recalled fondly, was âa madhouseâ and their mother, Susan, âpretty much had to bring us single handed as Dad wasnât great around the houseâ.
âIf it sounds like weâre complaining, though, weâre not,â he said, observing that when the family gathers in the coming months for a private memorial with all of his 23 grandchildren, they will remember âan extraordinary manâ who taught them how âto look for the good in people and treat everyone the same, whether prince or pauperâ.
His daughter Justine Still-OâReilly read If by Rudyard Kipling, which, she said, was her fatherâs favourite poem.
OâReillyâs kindness for others was also recalled by the chief celebrant of the Mass, Fr Bruce Bradley, who said he had come through Belvedere College 10 years after OâReilly, who already âloomed largeâ over him and his classmates.
Fr Bradley remembered OâReilly turning up to watch one of the schoolâs under-15 teams train one wet weekend evening, then offering lifts home for the first few to emerge afterwards.
âTony OâReilly achieved so much in 88 years, but never took anything for granted. He had a lifelong concern for those around him,â he said, treasuring friendship and loyalty, âvalues that go to the heart of the Gospelâ.
In addition to his six children, also including Susan and Caroline, and other family members, the funeral was attended by the Tánaiste Micheál Martin and other figures from the political sphere including former ministers Shane Ross and Michael McDowell.
The President was represented by his aide-de-camp Col Stephen Howard and the Taoiseach by his aide-de-camp Comdt Gemma Fagan.
Another former international rugby star Ollie Campbell was among those to read the Prayers of the Faithful while former Wales international Ieuan Evans, now chair of the British and Irish Lions Board, was in attendance along with former Dublin footballer Tony Hanahoe.
There was a large contingent of senior figures, including Anne Harris, Colin McGinty, Gerry OâRegan and Michael Roche, from the then-Independent News and Media, another of OâReillyâs former business interests.
Among those to attend from the business community were developer Paddy Kelly, former U2 manager Paul McGuinness, Barry Maloney and Rory Godson.
Mr OâReilly, who was predeceased by his first wife, Susan, and his second wife Chryss, is to be cremated at a private ceremony on Friday.