John and Pat Hume in October 1998.RollingNews.ie

Pat Hume, the widow to Nobel Peace Prize Winner John Hume, passed away on Thursday, September 2 in her native Derry.

Hume's family said in a statement: "Pat died as she lived, surrounded by family, peacefully and generous to the end.

"Pat spent some days in the hospital in the days preceding her death and she saw first-hand the outstanding work that healthcare workers do, and the pressures that they are facing due to covid.

"She would prioritise public health at all times. Funeral arrangements will be announced in due course which will adhere to Covid guidance."

The Hume family said that her wake will be restricted to family members only, and expressed their thanks "to the doctors and nurses of Glendermott Medical Centre, Dr. Aaron Peace, the cardiology, palliative care teams and the staff of the Ambulatory Care Unit at Altnagelvin hospital, the Ambulance Service, the Foyle Hospice and all those who gave Pat such outstanding care."

Both natives of Derry, Pat and John Hume married in 1960 and had five children together. While Pat left her 25-year teaching career to manage John's SDLP constituency office, she also made her own way as a champion for victims of The Troubles and was named to the Northern Ireland Memorial Fund in 1998 after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, which her husband helped broker.

At her husband John’s funeral in August 2020, Father Paul Farren said, “when the history of Ireland is written, if Pat Hume’s name is not beside John’s, it will be an incomplete history.”

Hume's death comes less than a year after the John and Pat Hume Foundation, which aims to support and inspire Leadership for Peaceful Change, was launched last November.

Foyle MP Colum Eastwood, the head of the SDLP, which John Hume was a founder of, said in a statement on Thursday: “Without Pat Hume, there would have been no peace process in Ireland, that’s the simple truth. 

“The compassion, integrity and immense fortitude that defined her incredible character breathed life into our peace over the course of a long campaign that, at times, must have looked like it would never bear fruit. She never gave up faith.

“Pat was, of course, John’s guiding light. She was his constant companion, sharing the road and easing the burden in the most difficult of times. When they came under public pressure and attacks on their home for doing what they knew was right, she remained his rock. The scale of his achievement was made possible by the depth of her love. But she was, in her own right, a fierce champion for peace and justice.

“Pat holds a special place in the hearts of the people of this city. She would have done anything for them and in return, they loved her. Our city is in mourning tonight for a woman who showed us unconditional compassion and support every day of her life. We all live in an Ireland that she nurtured, at peace with itself and free to set its own destiny. It is an incredible legacy that will never be forgotten. 

“My thoughts are with Pat’s children Aine, Therese, Aidan, John and Mo, her beloved grandchildren, and their wide circle of friends at this incredible difficult time.”

Graham Warke, the Mayor of Derry and Strabane, said on Twitter that "behind every great man there is a great woman and this was no doubt the case with Pat Hume."

Taoiseach Micheál Martin offered his condolences, noting that her and John's work brought "peace and stability to the island."

Ireland’s Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney said he was sad to hear of Mrs. Hume’s passing:

The US Consulate in Belfast offered their condolences upon Hume’s passing: