Sinéad O'Connor's family thankful for 'outpouring of love and affection'
- Published
The family of Irish singer and activist Sinéad O'Connor has thanked the "countless kind people who sympathised and offered condolences", after her death.
She died, aged 56 in July at her home in London.
Thousands of people lined the streets of Bray, in County Wicklow, to pay their respects in August as the funeral cortege passed by, ahead of a private burial service.
In an acknowledgement in The Irish Times, , externalher children thanked her fans for the "wonderful funeral procession" and the "national and international outpouring of love and affection for Sinéad from the time of her passing".
"The prayers and thanks of the extended O’Connor family are with you all," they added.
They also thanked the President of Ireland, Michael D Higgins, his wife Sabina and the Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Leo Varadkar for coming to the funeral.
Her funeral service was led by Dingle Druid Juli Ní Mhaoileóin.
There was an interment ceremony in the garden in Deansgrange Cemetery.
The family also thanked Shaykh Dr Umar Al-Qadri and his colleagues for the "Muslim prayers and blessing of Sinéad at both these ceremonies".
Pauline Scanlon sang, accompanied by Éamonn De Barra and Donogh Hennessy and there was more music at the graveside by Síle Denvir, Nicola Joyce, Noriana Kennedy, Éilis Kennedy and Damien Dempsey.
The family thanked Northern Ireland-based charity The Kevin Bell Repatriation Trust for facilitating bringing her body back to Ireland.
They also thanked the media for respecting the privacy requested by the family and asked that this privacy continued to be respected.
The 56-year-old was best known for her 1990 single Nothing Compares 2 U, which catapulted her to worldwide fame.
The cause of death has not yet been made public but police say it was not suspicious.
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