Chicagoland

Officer Ella French remembered at funeral, procession

By Joyce Duriga | Editor
Friday, August 20, 2021

Officer Ella French remembered at funeral, procession

Officer Ella French was remembered Aug. 19, 2021, during a funeral Mass at St. Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel. French was fatally shot Aug. 7 and her partner was seriously wounded after they conducted a traffic stop in the West Englewood neighborhood. Following the funeral, a procession of more than 1,000 police vehicles led the hearse to the crematory.
Chicago police officers assemble outside St. Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel for the funeral service. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Chicago police officers and children wait in the vestibule before the funeral service. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
A woman arranges flowers and memorials before the start of the funeral service. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
The casket of Chicago police Officer Ella French is brought through the vestibule before the funeral service. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Chicago police officers bring the casket of Chicago police Officer Ella French into the main church. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Cardinal Cupich, right, leads the procession as the casket of Chicago police Officer Ella French is brought into St. Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel. He is joined by Deacon Al Lopez, a retired Chicago police officer and chaplain. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Photos of Officer French flank the casket in front of the paschal candle prior to the funeral. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
A picture of Chicago police Officer Ella French is posted beside her casket as Andrew French steps up to touch the casket before the start of the funeral service for his sister Chicago police Officer Ella French, Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Chicago police officers attend the funeral service for Chicago police Officer Ella French. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
A photograph of fallen Chicago police Officer Ella French is held at the funeral Mass for French. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Chicago police officers are assembled for the funeral service. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Cardinal Cupich prays the eucharistic prayer. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Elizabeth French, white shirt, prays beside the casket of her daughter Ella French, at the funeral service. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Cardinal Cupich speaks with Elizabeth French during the funeral service for her daughter. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
The image of fallen Chicago police Officer Ella French is displayed on an officer's uniform before the funeral service for French. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool)
Students and staff line 79th Street in front of the school waiting for the procession. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Students wave to officers in the procession. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
An Illinois State Police officer waves to the students from his motorcycle. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Over 1,000 police vehicles took part in the procession. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
A construction worker holds an American flag as the procession passes by. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Officers watch the procession make its way down 79th Street. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
An officer salutes as the hearse passes by. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
The hearse carrying the body of Officer French passes by the school. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Blue ribbons were tied to light posts along the procession route. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Flowers, vigil candles, signs and balloons adorn a site on 6300 S. Bell near where Chicago Police Officer Ella French was shot and killed during a traffic stop on the night of Aug. 7, 2021. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Candles with the image of St. Michael the Archangel, the patron saint of police officers, were left at the shrine. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)

Hundreds of police officers and other first responders were on hand at St. Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel the morning of Aug. 18 to pay final respects to Chicago Police Officer Ella French, who was killed in the line of duty on Aug. 7.

They were there for her funeral Mass, which was celebrated by Cardinal Cupich. Every pew inside the church was filled and hundreds more police officers stood outside the chapel during Mass.

French was the first female Chicago Police officer to be killed in the line of duty in two decades and the first officer to be killed since 2018.

During his homily, Cardinal Cupich offered his condolences to French’s family. He also offered condolences to the members of law enforcement in attendance.

“We can only imagine how the tragic death of another colleague in the line of duty impacts you as you take up the daunting challenge of providing security and peace on our streets” the cardinal said. “Her senseless killing once again sharpens the gnawing anxiety you and your family members feel each day as you leave home, wondering if you will return safely at the end of your shift. We know and appreciate that you sacrifice a lot, putting your life on the line.”

He prayed for the intercession of St. Michael the Archangel, the patron of police officers, to watch over them and “banish from your minds and hearts any temptation that leads you to conclude that you are alone or that you have to suffer in a lonely silence.”

The Gospel reading for the Mass was the resurrection of Lazarus, which, the cardinal said, shows how Jesus reaches all of us through our grief.

“As we mourn Ella, the Lord’s words to them are for us: This is not to end in death,” he said.

Speaking to her mother, Elizabeth, he noted that French was a compassionate woman whom everyone can learn from.

“Elizabeth, you told me that Ella always understood herself as a work in progress. … Ella took the time to know others, to connect with them on the level of our common fragile humanity and understood that she too always had more to learn, that no one should pretend to put the period at the end of the sentence of a person’s life or, worse, claim they could not learn from others or change for the better,” he said.

To the wider congregation he said, “Let us all take a step back and put aside any impulse that would divide us, and instead find how connected we can be when we share our burdens, our sorrows, our grieving. ... It is in discovering how close we can be to each other in sharing our common loss that we are given the hope that we are more than any trial we face, and can trust the words we hear today, this is not to end in death.”

Referencing the Gospel reading again, Cardinal Cupich noted how, while Jesus raised Lazarus, he asked others to help him remove Lazarus’ burial cloth. We must do the same, he said.

“The message is clear: We each have a role in seeing that this moment does not end in death. That begins by claiming responsibility for each other, no matter where we live in the city. We should know and pray for the names of all victims of violence as we would a member of the family, for we are all brothers and sisters. We each need to do our part to help law enforcement as they work to hold people accountable for their actions and stem the flood of illegal guns,” Cardinal Cupich said. “We all have a role in untying the cords of injustice that keep many of our brothers and sisters bound in poverty and despair.”

Following the funeral procession, more than 1,000 vehicles from the Chicago Police Department and departments from across Illinois and other states led the hearse in a procession from the chapel to the crematory. That procession went past Leo High School, located along 79th Street, where students and staff lined the sidewalk to pay their respects.

It was the school’s first day of class.

Coming outside for the procession was natural for the school, which for the past five years has been focused on engaging with and helping the community, said Principal Shaka Rawls.

“That’s not just supporting our local community, but we support our local police officers as well,” Rawls said. “This is our opportunity to show support for Chicago’s fallen officer.”

It was especially important since Leo’s student population is largely African American young men, he said.

“I think, in particular, the narrative that young African American men are out here expressing their support in solidarity with police officers is more important than anything. We are trying to dismantle that disconnect between young Black and brown boys and the police,” Rawls said. “This is our opportunity to extend that olive branch.”

The school’s support did not go unrecognized by the officers in the procession. One of the officers driving by used his loudspeaker to say, “Thank you all! God bless you all!” to the school community. Other officers used their sirens to show appreciation for the students.

Dan McGrath, president of Leo High School, said support for law enforcement has a long history at the school and that its 2012 valedictorian is a Chicago police officer.

“After [the killing of] George Floyd, there was a lot of tumult toward police in the Black community,” he said. “We really don’t share that view. We understand it, because of course all Black lives matter. We want our boys to understand that there are conflicts, but conflicts are always resolvable. Just because someone is a policeman doesn’t mean that he’s a bad person or that he’s out to get you.”

Understanding police and their role can be a bridge to easing some of the tensions between police and young Black men, he said.

 

 

Topics:

  • chicago police

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