Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Killed In Egyptair Crash Was In Paris For A Family Reunion: Daughter

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2016 12:33 PM
    A surprise family reunion ended in tragedy when a Canadian man who had flown out to join the festivities was later killed in the mysterious EgyptAir crash.
     
    Medhat Tanious of Toronto was one of two Canadians to die when Flight 804 plunged into the Mediterranean Sea on Thursday en route from Paris to Cairo.
     
    His daughter Merna said her father had flown to France to surprise his youngest sister, who lived in Australia and who was meting other family members in Paris. He was en route to Cairo to pay his respects to his in-laws at the time of the crash, she added.
     
    Merna Tanious said she, her mother Gehan Erian and sisters Marina and Mariem are seeking solace for his death by remembering his impact on others.
     
    "He had a heart of a child," Merna Tanious said in a telephone interview from Toronto. "He loved unconditionally, and he had an unbelievable ability to forgive all people that did him wrong."
     
    Medhat lived much of his life in Egypt, his daughter said. He married Erian in 1988 and the couple began raising their three girls there before deciding to immigrate to Canada in 2004.
     
     
    "He brought us here to try and give us the best life possible, and that's what he did every single day," Merna Tanious said.
     
    She declined to discuss what her father did for a living, but said he became quite active in Toronto's Coptic Orthodox Christian community.
     
    Upon learning of his death, she said hundreds of mourners filled a cathedral north of Toronto on Monday to offer prayers and share memories of a man who they felt had a gift for connecting with people.
     
    "He would cheer everyone around him. He fit into every single generation from the seniors to the teenagers," Merna Tanious said. "He can sit with anybody and make them laugh."
     
    Medhat Tanious's trip to France, undertaken less than a month after his 54th birthday, was an impromptu affair meant to surprise one of his two siblings who currently live on the other side of the world. His other three siblings have also relocated to Canada.
     
    Tanious was one of two Canadians killed in the EgyptAir crash, which is currently being investigated by international aviation authorities.
     
    The other, Marwa Hamdy, was born and raised in Saskatchewan before relocating to Egypt. Friends described her as a devoted and loving mother to her three school-age sons.
     
     
    The cause of Thursday's crash that killed all 66 people aboard still has not been determined. Ships and planes from Egypt, Greece, France, the United States and other nations are searching the Mediterranean Sea for the jet's voice and flight data recorders.
     
    Egypt's civil aviation minister has said he believes terrorism is a more likely explanation than equipment failure or some other catastrophic event. But no hard evidence has emerged on the cause, and no militant group has claimed to have downed the jet. Leaked flight data indicated a sensor detected smoke in a lavatory and a fault in two of the plane's cockpit windows in the final moments of the flight.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liberals Unveil Plan To Outlaw Transgender Hate Speech, Discrimination

    The legislation would, if passed, make it illegal under the Canadian Human Rights Act to prevent someone from getting a job or to discriminate in the workplace on the basis of the gender they identify with or outwardly express.

    Liberals Unveil Plan To Outlaw Transgender Hate Speech, Discrimination

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'
    Intense And Early Start To Wildfires This Year Could Spell A Long And Difficult Season For All Of Canada And Not Just For Alberta

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37
    The zoo says Kakinga died on the weekend of heart failure.

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg
    Halifax professor Henry Cary said historic records set off the hunt for a star-shaped or pentagonal fort that was marked on a 1753 plan of Lunenburg.

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg

    Canadian Trucking Industry Struggles To Attract Next Generation Of Drivers

    MONTREAL — After 40 years as a truck driver, Jack Fielding says it's easier to name the places in North America where he hasn't been than the ones he has.

    Canadian Trucking Industry Struggles To Attract Next Generation Of Drivers

    Alberta Government Releases Fire Damage Surveillance App

    A message from Municipal Affairs Minister Danielle Larivee warns that viewing the satellite images may be traumatic, and the number for Alberta’s Mental Health Help Line is included in her news release.

    Alberta Government Releases Fire Damage Surveillance App