26 September, 2013

April Jones Funeral: Machynlleth To Mourn As Machynlleth prepares to say a final goodbye to April Jones' almost a year since her death, memories of her murder remain fresh.

The funeral of April Jones is due to take place in the murdered schoolgirl's home town later.
A horse-drawn cortege will take mourners including the five-year-old's parents from her Machynlleth home to the church shortly before midday.
It is almost a year to the day since the five-year-old went missing - with her murderer, Mark Bridger, jailed for his entire life in May - but reminders of the youngster are visible throughout the town.
A memorial garden has been built on the estate of Bryn y Gog, close to the home where she lived throughout her brief life.

April's favourite colour pink has been used extensively. A bench bearing her name has been placed among the trees and next to a pink playhouse.
April Jones
April's body has never been found
Up in the Welsh hills overlooking her hometown, a tree has been intricately wrapped in knitted pink patches and below in the valley pink ribbons still adorn many of the shop fronts and houses.
But the town is different now according to Councillor Mike Williams, a friend and neighbour of April's family.
He explained: "It's the magnitude of an event in which a five-year-old girl was ripped from her family, ripped from the community, in such a vile and vicious way.


"But the town has stayed together and together we will be. We will be as one and we will be always with the family in support."
Volunteers search for April near Corris
People in Machynlleth joined the search for the missing girl
April Jones' funeral reflects the wishes of her grieving parents Paul and Coral, who had wondered for months whether it would even be possible as their daughter's body was never found apart from fragments of bone.
Two poems by a local writer - one called April and the other called An Autumn Night - are being read during the service in the parish church of St Peter's, and the words of well-known hymns have been changed to suit the family.

Vicar Kathleen Rogers told Sky News: "This is a huge thing for Paul and Coral.
"They need to be able to say goodbye to their daughter and this service will hopefully enable them to do that.
"Hopefully it will be a closing of this particular chapter. Another chapter will now open as they now start to grieve privately.
"Hopefully this service will help them a little bit on this horrendous journey that they're on."
The small town of Machynlleth lies in the Dyfi valley surrounded by hills and mountains. It is the kind of tranquil place where many people took for granted the inherent sense of safety.
But that has changed.

Everyone seems to agree that as a result of April's death parents, for example, are more cautious about their children's whereabouts.
It will take at least a generation perhaps for the lost innocence to return ... if it ever does.

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